| 1. Even if you take slavery into account, I see a lot of similarities between the Civil War and CalExit. For the southern states, many wanted to keep slavery for economic reasons. It was very cheap labor, and banning slavery would have meant less money for Southern states imposed on them by outsiders who did not live their societies or work their jobs. I see the same parallels here with CalExit. Even on this thread, people bring up how California unfairly pays more net to the federal government while red states take more federal resources. CalExit doesn't have the (IMO) moral reprehension of slavery, but from my perspective I see people upset that outsiders who don't share our lives and views are dictating our bottom line. 2. I highly doubt that the federal government would let any state undergo peaceful secession. A secession by its nature is a threat to the United States. Allowing states to leave will mean the states aren't united. Furthermore, it won't just be California. Off the top of my head, states like Washington, Oregon, and New York are generally as unhappy as California in with the state of our government, and allowing one state to leave will open the floodgates for other states. This to me means the obvious consequence is violence erupts if we attempt to secede, even with peaceful intentions at first. As another user on this thread stated, California will not win an armed conflict. The US military is much stronger than our California National Guard. I understand your political sentiments, and I do agree that the current state of national politics is a major issue. However, I don't see a peaceful CalExit as either practical or realistic. |
If there were 50 different states, hopefully w/ open borders - each state could dictate their own social programs. Some could be a lot more like Denmark/Sweden.. others more like the old U.S.A. where you fend for yourself, and look out for nobody else. Each state would be able to set their own agendas, taxes, etc.. -- There would be more competition between individual states to attract the best people/talent/companies/etc... to grow their economies.
I don't think it's a matter of what if, but when.