Discussion about this post

User's avatar
cdh's avatar

I wonder about how within-state political differences would affect the divorce. In terms of how unhinged they are, from greatest to least, I would rank (1) my home state govt; (2) the federal government; (3) my ideal level of government unhingedness. There are probably sizeable groups of people in my state that would rank them in the opposite way or with our state govt or their ideal govt in the middle. So there would be several different groups within each state, making it difficult for two sides to coalesce on the divorce decision in each state. For instance, in each state there might be (1) a red-coded divorce from state/stay in US faction, (2) a blue-coded divorce from state/stay in US faction; (3) a red-coded divorce from state/divorce from US faction; (4) a blue-coded divorce from state/divorce from US faction [admittedly this would be a wildly far-left contingent in my state, although it wouldn't have to be as far-left in, say, Lincoln, Nebraska]; (5) a red-coded stay with state/stay in US faction; and (6) a blue-coded stay with state/stay in US faction.

I guess my point is that a true national divorce would require A LOT of people to move geographically to an unhinged (in their view) state before there was a critical mass to get a divorce going, unless everyone stayed put, there was a national referendum, and the divorce dissolved all previous states, yielding one huge red-coded rural/suburban agglomeration for Nation 1 and 50-100 tiny blue-coded urban-suburban enclaves/exclaves for Nation 2.

(FWIW I'm not advocating for a divorce--just pondering how one could work).

Expand full comment
cdh's avatar

Minor nitpick: Germany has a larger population than every U.S. state. At around 80 million, it's more populous than California and Texas combined (~70 million).

Expand full comment
15 more comments...

No posts