You're not kidding. Doing state-by-state battle over jurisdiction and the right of each state to create its own laws would be ... interesting. I'd expect it to be very destructive overall. Not saying it would necessarily lead to an end of the union, but it's a step.
Seems to be a pattern, lately, and specific to abortion as well. The ends justifying the means, regardless of collateral damage.
What we have now has the same legal-political texture the same as the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. A state like California is compelled to assist states like Nebraska in the enactment of punishment of an act which is legal in California but which is illegal in Nebraska.
Make such assistance illegal so that Facebook doesn't have a choice in the matter. Facebook certainly has the political power[money] to successfully lobby for such a legislative change, but it doesn't have the will to do so.
It's likely that the abortion in this case would have been illegal in California. It's hard to say for sure, because California prohibits abortion after medical viability rather than setting a strict week limit, but it happened at week 23 when many fetuses are viable.
I don't want to say "similar", because chattel slavery was uniquely bad, but even in areas that wouldn't enforce the Fugitive Slave Act forced prison labor was pretty common at the time. There was also the question of what should happen to people who conspire to violate the Fugitive Slave Act, although my understanding is that in practice it was impossible to get northern juries to convict them.
It is hard to deny that this is a pretty common thought these days. I hear a lot of people making sounds in that direction, regardless of their more traditional ideological views.
We'd have to figure out how the nukes are divided up, however. Though what is it they say about possession being 9/10ths of the law...
The Lord's our shepherd, goes the psalm
When Alabama gets the bomb.
~ Tom Lehrer, "Who's next"
Well, the USSR broke up without too much fuss about who got the bombs; as far as I can see, only Russia was interested. But I can imagine a Divided States of America in which both successor states have nukes. I suspect they'd be reluctant to attack one-another. They might even both choose to disarm, depending on the nature of the break-up.
Sure. You could abolish the Union entirely, and just have states. I don't think it's obvious that that would be a terrible thing - either for USAians or for the rest of us. My sense is that a lot of USAians don't really want a Union. I suspect that many USAians think the Union was effectively a coup.
The question remains: how do you spread the nukes around?
My guess is that the residents of Wyoming could do without nukes. They have a lot of land-based nukes, that serve no defensive purpose (for Wyoming); they just make Wyoming a target. I wonder which state might decide that they need nukes, to defend themselves from someone outside North America?
Second question: how you divide up the military equipment that isn't nuclear - ships, tanks, rockets, planes etc. All that equipment carries a heavy cost - it has to be maintained, replaced, tested etc.
Belgium and the Netherlands and Luxembourg were the same country, at least for some time, then split up and are good countries to live in (probably beating the US on most quality of life metrics). Same goes for the Nordics which were at different times in various combos (Denmark-Norway, Sweden-Finland, Sweden-Norway, Iceland was a part of Denmark).
Also a bunch of other examples where the countries aren't necessarily the best to live in, but pretty much everyone is happy they split - Yugoslavia, India/Pakistan, West Pakistan/East Pakistan. Singapore/Malaysia (to be fair Singapore were kicked out).
A split of the US among the crazily politicised duopoly wouldn't be the end of the world. One part would be reactionary as hell and move time back (on social and ecological issues), the other.. who knows.
Fantasizing about the end of the world/country/whatever is a popular pastime in the US. It is reasonable to suspect that the talk is primarily the 1% loudest people and that if anything starts to look like it's getting real, the remaining majority will step on the brakes.
There's a time bomb baked into the conceptualization of mythos of the United States.
The US in many ways legitimizes itself as a government in the traditional of the "western european project," by evoking the ritual, esthetic, ideals, and historical lineage of ancient Greece and Rome. From names and architecture, to values and ritual, there is an establishment of ties, real or imagined to be real.
On one hand, this works fantastically to mentally cement the US in the greatest of greats, but we cannot ignore the visibly obvious - that ancient Greece and Rome declined and fell. By drawing a parallel to ourselves(us-centric obvs) we draw a parallel to our own decline. We we're honest with this comparison, we have to be honest about the demise of these governments too. It's not possible to separate the too.
"End of the Union" is a catastrophically bad idea and it disturbs me that otherwise intelligent people would take it seriously. I find it stunning how people who might otherwise decry things like "racism" can be in a mindstate of not understanding how close of an idea this is to "Maybe we should do the Civil War" again.
There's a fair argument that it never ended; the South was defeated, but never gave in. Or at least, part of the South didn't. Come on, isn't that the meaning of the Confederate flag? Doesn't it mean "Fuck you, Union"?
/me a brit, I don't have a dog in this race. I'd just feel massively more comfortable if the most powerful country in the world knew who it was, what it's policies are, and who it's friends are. If they can't figure that out, and have to break up, that's miles better than the USA being balanced 49% to 51% on every policy and every federal court judgement.
I'd prefer it if the USA split, rather than having a schizophrenic USA, with the biggest army in the world, that can't agree who it is, what it's economic policy is, or what it's foreign policy is. Schizo USA is screwing everyone else up.
I like the goal you're looking at, I just don't think that's a viable path from where we're standing; which is to say in reality a broken US gives you more potential chaos, not less?
I've come to believe that "nation" is somewhat of a weird and artificial concept and so that in many ways it almost doesn't make sense to compare e.g. the US and Russia. And so, while "no lopsidedly strong nation" would be optimal, from here I do think that US in its current form is a pretty good hedge against the others, for the most part.
It's going to be a real bad thing for some people in some of the states. E.g., the last time the Union was split up it was over the "right" to treat people as livestock. Or look at the use of federal civil rights laws in the ending of Jim Crow.
Yes, to me (not from USA) it looks as if would get worse for most USAians if the Union broke up. Especially marginalized people. But I think that for the rest of us, it would be cool if the US government would agree to work together, or agree to divorce. It's shit, being in the blast-radius of a marital crisis that's lasted 30 years.
You're not kidding. Doing state-by-state battle over jurisdiction and the right of each state to create its own laws would be ... interesting. I'd expect it to be very destructive overall. Not saying it would necessarily lead to an end of the union, but it's a step.
Seems to be a pattern, lately, and specific to abortion as well. The ends justifying the means, regardless of collateral damage.