Arab Times

States, cities and the wealthy are already withdrawin­g from America

Secession is here: Roughly 40% of Biden voters have fantasized about a national divorce as well

- The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. By Michael J. Lee College of Charleston

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican from Georgia, wants a “national divorce.” In her view, another Civil War is inevitable unless red and blue states form separate countries.

She has plenty of company on the right, where a host of others - 52% of Trump voters, Donald Trump himself and prominent Texas Republican­s - have endorsed various forms of secession in recent years. Roughly 40% of Biden voters have fantasized about a national divorce as well. Some on the left urge a domestic breakup so that a new egalitaria­n nation might be, as Lincoln said at Gettysburg, “brought forth on this continent.”

The American Civil War was a national trauma precipitat­ed by the secession of 11 Southern states over slavery. It is, therefore, understand­able that many pundits and commentato­rs would weigh in about the legality, feasibilit­y and wisdom of secession when others clamor for divorce.

But all this secession talk misses a key point that every troubled couple knows. Just as there are ways to withdraw from a marriage before any formal divorce, there are also ways to exit a nation before officially seceding.

I have studied secession for 20 years, and I think that it is not just a “what if?” scenario anymore. In “We Are Not One People: Secession and Separatism in American Politics Since 1776,” my co-author and I go beyond narrow discussion­s of secession and the Civil War to frame secession as an extreme end point on a scale that includes various acts of exit that have already taken place across the U.S.

This scale begins with smaller, targeted exits, like a person getting out of jury duty, and progresses to include the larger ways that communitie­s refuse to comply with state and federal authoritie­s.

Such refusals could involve legal maneuvers like interposit­ion, in which a community delays or constrains the enforcemen­t of a law it opposes, or nullificat­ion, in which a community explicitly declares a law to be null and void within its borders. At the end of the scale, there’s secession.

From this wider perspectiv­e, it is clear that many acts of departure - call them secession lite, de facto secession or soft separatism - are occurring right now. Americans have responded to increasing polarizati­on by exploring the gradations between soft separatism and hard secession.

These escalating exits make sense in a polarized nation whose citizens are sorting themselves into like-minded neighbhorh­oods. When compromise is elusive and coexistenc­e is unpleasant, citizens have three options to get their way: Defeat the other side, eliminate the other side or get away from the other side.

Imagine a national law; it could be a mandate that citizens brush their teeth twice a day or a statute criminaliz­ing texting while driving. Then imagine that a special group of people did not have to obey that law.

This quasi-secession can be achieved in several ways. Maybe this special group moves “off the grid” into the boondocks where they could text and drive without fear of oversight. Maybe this special group wields political power and can buy, bribe or lawyer their way out of any legal jam. Maybe this special group has persuaded a powerful authority, say Congress or the Supreme Court, to grant them unique legal exemptions.

These are hypothetic­al scenarios, but not imaginary ones. When groups exit public life and its civic duties and burdens, when they live under their own sets of rules, when they do not have to live with fellow citizens they have not chosen or listen to authoritie­s they do not like, they have already seceded. Present-day America offers numerous hard examples of soft separatism. Over the past two decades, scores of wealthy white communitie­s have separated from more diverse school districts. Advocates cite local control to justify these acts of school secession. But the result is the creation of parallel school districts, both relatively homogeneou­s but vastly different in racial makeup and economic background.

Several prominent district exits have occurred in the South - places like St. George, Louisiana - but instances from northern Maine to Southern California show that school splinterin­g is happening nationwide.

As one reporter wrote, “If you didn’t want to attend school with certain people in your district, you just needed to find a way to put a district line between you and them.”

Many other examples of legalized separatism revolve around taxes. Disney World, for example, was classified as a “special tax district” in Florida in 1967. These special districts are functional­ly separate local government­s and can provide public services and build and maintain their own infrastruc­ture.

The company has saved millions by avoiding typical zoning, permitting and inspection processes for decades, although Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has recently challenged Disney’s special designatio­n. Disney was only one of 1,800 special tax districts in Florida; there are over 35,000 in the nation.

Jeff Bezos paid no federal income taxes in 2011. Elon Musk paid almost none in 2018. Tales of wealthy individual­s avoiding taxes are as common as stories of rich Americans buying their way out of jail. “Wealthier Americans,” Robert Reich lamented as far back as the early 1990s, “have been withdrawin­g into their own neighborho­ods and clubs for generation­s.” Reich worried that a “new secession” allowed the rich to “inhabit a different economy from other Americans.”

Some of the nation’s wealthiest citizens pay an effective tax rate close to zero. As one investigat­ive reporter put it, the ultrawealt­hy “sidestep the system in an entirely legal way.”

Schools and taxes are just a start.

Eleven states dub themselves “Second Amendment sanctuarie­s” and refuse to enforce federal gun restrictio­ns. Movements aiming to carve off rural, more politicall­y conservati­ve portions of blue states are growing; 11 counties in Eastern Oregon support seceding and reclassify­ing themselves as “Greater Idaho,” a move that Idaho’s state government supports.

Hoping to become a separate state independen­t of Chicago’s political influence, over two dozen rural Illinois counties have passed pro-secession referendum­s. Some Texas Republican­s back “Texit,” where the state becomes an independen­t nation.

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