Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Ryan's avatar

I'm struggling to understand how the author can claim that secession is an act that runs counter to the founding of the US when the US was started by an act of secession.

And claiming "We just need a return to federalism" is like the colonists dismissing pursuit of independence by claiming, "Listen, we don't want to simply throw away the Enlightenment values of the British empire. We just need a return to the concept of representation."

Conservatives have been pushing, pleading, demanding a return to federalism for 50+ years and gotten scorn and greater centralization as a response. When it becomes clear that the differences of the people of a single society are intractable, peaceful dissolution is the best option. You know, "When in the course of human events..." and all.

Expand full comment
Bruce Sheridan's avatar

The problem with the author's scenario is that Trumpists increasingly reject it in favor of Soviet-style central control. They would brand this federalism formula as "leftist" and dismiss it out of hand. The author's blueprint is indeed the best course for America, but Trumpists would never support it and would continue to sow Kremlin-backed discord around the nation. The only way to make it work is to let the former Confederacy secede, let all the authoritarians move there to build their whites-only Utopia, and let the rest of us thrive with the author's classical federalist model, where true conservatism can flourish again out from under the orange blob that tried to smother it.

Expand full comment
36 more comments...

No posts