The Breakup of the United States
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
Recently
by Michael S. Rozeff: International
Banking Colossus in the Making
As the dissatisfactions
of Americans with their national government grow, so does the likelihood
of the breakup of the United States. I believe that most Americans
can improve their well-being by ending the national government,
that is, ending the Union. I believe that this goal should shape
politics if politics is to do much good.
I don’t think
Americans are going to be the first people in the modern era to
initiate a large-scale anarchy. But Americans might conceivably
move back to a federal form of government something like that under
the Articles of Confederation. If so, the problem is how to proceed.
Many Americans feel (and are) trapped and thwarted by government
power.
I see two paths.
Americans can do this either acting as individuals formed into a
body politic of 300 million Americans or as 50 body politics organized
by state. I think action by state has a better chance of success.
To act as one
body, Americans would have to alter their Constitution. The divisions
among Americans make this highly unlikely. Even if it were pursued,
the results would be highly uncertain.
I like to think
of federal programs being made optional at either the state or the
personal level, but that means ending the Constitution or radically
amending it. This takes me back to the other path of change: the
States. This path looks more viable.
We the People
created the Constitution through state legislatures. That is a quasi-legal
path to undoing the Constitution and thus breaking up the United
States. This begins a process by which Americans take back their
own government. I say "begins" because most states are
also candidates for restructuring. Many local governments are also
out of control.
I don’t think
Americans can improve their lot by participating in national politics
under the current rules of the national game. I think they have
to change the rules. They have to end the Union and get out from
under the existing Constitution, which is now entirely controlled
and interpreted by the national government.
Since there
is no consensus for going back to the original Constitution and
since it would have to be rewritten and renegotiated, which is a
process of uncertain outcome and which is impractical anyway, this
leaves one viable path: ending the Union and ending this Constitution.
Rather than
thinking in terms of national politics, which at best can only produce
marginal changes and which plays into the hands of the national
powers-that-be, it would be far smarter to have no national or federal
government at all. Although this involves significant political
restructuring, We the People and the States can always retain or
exercise options to form federated organizations for specific and
limited purposes if we so desire.
But by what
means can Americans undo the Union?
A viable means
is the withdrawal of consent by Vermonters or Texans or Alaskans
or Arizonans or Californians or the citizens of any state to the
U.S. government. People gain leverage and power against the national
Leviathan by acting as citizens of their respective states. They
need to act through their state legislatures, not as citizens of
the United States. In the old days of whaling, the method of bringing
down the whale was by several crews working together in several
boats. It was not by individual whalers rowing around by themselves
and confronting Leviathan on their own.
The states
entered the Union. Secession once before almost ended the Union.
The states are the political entities by which the Union and its
burdens and injustices can be ended.
Action through
one or more states is one of the few and maybe the only viable political
means by which the Union can be broken up.
Contrast this
with a national tax revolt, something that I believe is not a viable
means of achieving a significant and lasting change in our politics.
A tax revolt movement that seeks redress at the national level will
not cause the U.S. to break up. That is the politics of accommodation
and adjustment. It doesn’t challenge Congress itself. It doesn’t
challenge the United States. It doesn’t challenge the Constitution.
It leaves the power structure intact. As soon as such a movement
is tossed a few crumbs, it loses its momentum. The national government
divides it and conquers it. The national government lives on. It
can regain its dominance over time by any number of means, such
as by invoking some imaginary emergency.
A tax revolt
that works from and through the state legislatures directly undermines
the Union. It directly challenges the power of Congress to tax.
That’s a far stronger political platform for restructuring the United
States.
Outright secession
is one political measure in a spectrum of possible actions by which
one or more states stand up to the U.S. government. Nullification
is another. Withdrawal from the banking system is another. A separate
payments system at the state level is a fourth. Refusal to obey
any of hundreds of U.S. directives is a fifth. The formation of
alliances among states is another.
In fact, there
are so many possible ways by which one or more states stand up to
the Union that, given enough time and the right conditions, a breakup
is all but assured. The same cannot be said of any movement that
seeks to work change by confronting Americans as one large group
with their national government.
All that has
to happen at present is a spark lit by one or more States and the
Union will go up in smoke. The Empire will fall. The tinder is very
dry right now. One bolt of lightning will set the U.S. ablaze.
The breakup
can start small. Momentum will do the rest. There will be a bandwagon
effect. The accumulated dissatisfactions with the monumental corruption,
power-mongering, waste, and totalitarian nature of the United States
government will seek and find channels of political relief.
The number
of potential actions that can set off a chain reaction is very large.
Once one or more of the States throw down the gauntlet, the downfall
of the U.S. will be sparked.
This will come
through the financial markets. The value of the United States paper
currency depends critically on the taxing power of the United States.
Anything that undermines U.S. tax collections undermines the U.S.
dollar.
To bring down
the U.S. government, all it may take is for one state to declare
that its citizens need no longer pay taxes to the U.S. government.
No matter what the national government does next and no matter what
complex sequence of political tit for tat ensues, the uncertainty
will balloon.
The financial
markets will do the rest. A flight from the U.S. dollar will set
in. Flight from the dollar will torpedo and sink the national government.
The Chinese
and other foreign lenders will be very unhappy about their investments.
So will anyone who is a creditor of the U.S.
Financial market
prices at present are not factoring in even a small chance of this
happening. Lenders to Uncle Sam act as if everything is hunky-dory.
U.S. government bonds even look attractive to those who believe
further and deeper depression is imminent.
No break up
is visible in the short run. This seems to confirm such thinking.
But boiling beneath the surface is a rising stream of heated discontent.
Major political change is far more likely than it may seem to superficial
observation.
Greek bond
prices fell very sharply when the government went into crisis. They
only recovered when the rest of Euroland decided to bail out the
Greek government and bondholders.
There is no
external bank or government that can or will extend credit to the
U.S. to save the dollar once the perception spreads that its tax-collecting
power is permanently impaired.
The Federal
Reserve can’t save the dollar or the U.S. government by extending
credit. The markets will see right through that. In a politically
fragile situation where the tax-collecting power of the national
government has sunk, the Fed is powerless to save the national government.
Once enough
people in a given state gain the conviction that they will be far
better off by shutting off the flow of their incomes to Washington,
then they will get their legislature to stand up to Washington’s
dictates. This will encourage citizens of other states who are in
a similar situation.
There does
not have to be a shot heard round the world as on April 19, 1775.
A Declaration of Tax Independence will take its place.
Even if such
a process of one state standing up against Uncle Sam fails, even
if it elicits responses from the national government that thwart
immediate success, experience will be gained. The national government
is bound to show its true oppressive colors in such an episode.
The game changes. A game-changing event or series of events is what
is needed.
The government
of the United States markets itself as the nation’s defender. It
advertises that it provides security nationwide for We the People.
It claims that it provides military security, economic security,
and social security.
These are all
false claims. More and more Americans recognize these claims as
false. More and more Americans recognize that the United States
government has reduced their security in all its many forms.
The United
States government has succeeded in entangling Americans in an endless
succession of foreign wars. It has succeeded in retarding and even
reversing standards of living. It has succeeded in raising medical
care costs and reducing the quality of medical care. It has perpetuated
a Ponzi scheme of social security that is doomed to fail. The United
States government is responsible for reducing American freedoms,
for spying on Americans, for searching them, and for turning travel
into a nightmare.
More and more
Americans realize that promises of security do not create security.
More and more Americans realize that the United States government
creates insecurity and disorder.
The
United States government does not deserve the tax dollars it collects.
This is the fundamental bread-and-butter reason for ending the Union.
The Constitution allows massive tax collections for purposes enunciated
by Washington. There is no way to stop this process, which is killing
the country, except by undoing the political foundation by which
it is enforced.
The stream
of tax dollars flowing to Washington can be turned off by the action
of one or more state legislatures who act on behalf of their citizens.
When that source of financing is halted, the United States government
will be well on its way to breakup. This is the great gift that
we should bestow on ourselves and future Americans.
Americans will
remain. America will remain. The nation will remain. The People
will remain. The country will remain. The United States government
is none of these things. It will go. With that burden lifted from
our shoulders, we can once again make our way to better lives. We
can renew a process of liberation and liberty that has been frustrated.
July
26, 2010
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
He is the author of the free e-book Essays
on American Empire.
Copyright
© 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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