Introduction
Americans have finally dared to start whispering about state secession. Others propose “nullification” by states, where they refuse to implement certain odious federal edicts. Citizens more openly quote Thomas Jefferson on fertilizing the tree of liberty with the blood of patriots. The number of Citizens pushed toward radical solutions is now staggering.
The recent mid-term elections revealed broad dissatisfaction with both major political parties, and the formation of the tea party as a non-party.
The recent mid-term elections revealed broad dissatisfaction with both major political parties, and the formation of the tea party as a non-party.
These solutions to the country’s problems all fall short. The line-drawing of nullification is slow and narrowly focused, and state succession is political suicide. The fever of Washington’s spending has never successfully been turned back. Even in Reagan’s revolution its growth was only slowed. And forget succession; It will never be allowed by the federal government, as the events of 1860-65 proved.
We propose a real solution to the ever-growing federal monster that is both Constitutional and more likely to actually succeed in restoring liberty to those who value it. It lets citizens live in these United States under the US Constitution, but outside the grasping reach of Congress and the Courts: a state dedicated to freedom can convert to an American Territory.
We envision the ultimate startup venture in the form of an Organized Incorporated Territory, created from an existing state or states. The entity would remain in the union, but would be a re-boot of an old American idea – territorial self-government.
This status could be established by individual states, who could vote to create or join a modern-day territory, or citizens could migrate within the U.S. to a state where the formation of such a territory was likely. These territories would still be part of the United States, fully subject to the U.S. Constitution, and protected by its Bill of Rights. This political structure would create a path for those who remain loyal Americans, but who want more autonomy and Constitutional fealty, and who see true reform at the ballot box as unlikely.
Such a venture would give those liberty-minded Citizens a chance to prove, or to fail at, the ideas about limited government which they promote.
The Current Problem
It is hardly necessary to catalog the ailments which plague the country, most of which have been brought on by excessive government power, regulation, wars, taxation, and intrusion. What makes those things objectionable is that they displace citizen’s control over their own lives, families, and finances, and substitute government control over these personal matters.
If we ask the question, “What should government be doing for the people,” we will always get the wrong answer – a growing list of costly programs. “Necessity is the plea of every infringement of human freedom,” argued British Prime Minister William Pitt in 1783, just as we were struggling to perfect our split from his government.
We must ask the opposite question: How much control do Citizens keep over their own lives? That is the vantage point of our Bill of Rights. Framing the question this way gives a uniquely American answer: Citizens must directly control the vast majority of their lives. That is the Constitutional mandate, and the core of the freedom that Americans have fought and died for.
The Wrong Fix
We recognize the forces driving the discussion of secession, namely legitimate concerns about the intrusion and burden of our government. But secession didn’t succeed in 1861, nor would it succeed today. Nullification is indirect, risky, and slow. The reality is that our President would respond to these strategies as did his mentor Abraham Lincoln, with overwhelming force to keep the union whole and under the federal thumb.
The good news is that the problem can be resolved both peaceably and constitutionally. This article will lay out a macro view of the concept of the American Territory. Further refinement will be needed to apply these ideas to the complex new venture, but that is the process in any start up: it goes from initial vision, to strategy, to details.
The Solution: “Incorporated Organized Territory”
The key to this change is to travel a known political path - to be, as President Johnson described, “easy to lift”.
Since the U.S. founding, there have been numerous political arrangements to govern land not part of the original thirteen colonies, as the country has gone from an English outpost to the current fifty states. Some regions have gone through non-homogenous political structures prior to becoming states. Others have settled into varying degrees of territorial sovereignty, such as Puerto Rico and Guam. Still others have come into the orbit of the U.S., such as the Philippines, and left to become self-governing countries.
Thirty-one of the current states were originally Incorporated Organized Territories of the United States. Each was created by an organic act of Congress, and while they fell under the U.S. Constitution, each had some variant of local governance.
The Constitution Does Not Prohibit States From Changing Form
Article IV, Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution regulates the admission of new states and the control of territories:
New States may be admitted by the Congress into this Union; but no new State shall be formed or erected within the Jurisdiction of any other State; nor any State be formed by the Junction of two or more States, or Parts of States, without the Consent of the Legislatures of the States concerned as well as of the Congress. The Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States; and nothing in this Constitution shall be so construed as to Prejudice any Claims of the United States, or of any particular State.
Our understanding of this constitutional provision, and the U.S. Supreme Court cases interpreting it, is that a state could take its own vote to become a “territory”, and thereafter would petition Congress to enact an organic act to enable the creation of the territorial government.
Such a territory would be governed by its own semi-autonomous legislative, executive and judicial branches, paralleling the structure described in the U.S. Constitution. The US Congress would predictably intervene in some unpleasant ways, but territories have worked out many arrangements over the years. It may be messy, but all start-up efforts require a willingness to confront and resolve ambiguity.
While this arrangement creates a type of political entity well-known under the American system, no state has ever reverted from statehood to the status of a territory. While we are proposing a new path to this political form, the core entity is tested and found to be constitutional. By working with a political structure that is defined by precedent, law, and custom, we make it possible to achieve what the authors perceive as the goals of the freedom movement: living under the US Constitution, on US soil, but with a government that they judge as more firmly aligned with the intent of the Founders.
Would They Allow a State to Become A Territory?
So why would the current U.S. administration allow its power to be so reduced by loosening its grip on a state? Politicians of all stripes want to grow their power. Our current president Obama adds to that a dream of “transforming America” into the liberal's idealized state.
This plan may appeal to both the U.S. President and to Congress because it will likely increase their power, counterintuitive as that may sound.
Advocates for territorial restructuring can offer Mr. Obama two powerful tools for reaching his goal, namely to be able to increase federal power and control and to impose “fairness” upon all.
First, these new territories are likely to attract freedom lovers who oppose Obama’s policies. These 'trouble makers' are “the impediments to progress” he often cites, and his political opposition in the remaining states will be robbed of key leaders and motivated inner circle followers who inspire and lead the opposition to Mr. Obama, once they move out to the new territory.
First, these new territories are likely to attract freedom lovers who oppose Obama’s policies. These 'trouble makers' are “the impediments to progress” he often cites, and his political opposition in the remaining states will be robbed of key leaders and motivated inner circle followers who inspire and lead the opposition to Mr. Obama, once they move out to the new territory.
Second, by draining away the voters who support those liberty-minded “trouble makers”, the formation of the new territories hands Mr. Obama more secure electoral victories in marginal states and a Congressional majority to implement his Marxist ideals into policy.
Some on the side of increased individual freedom will oppose a plan which would drain resources from their hometown or home state, feeling that this cedes much of America to the radical left. They feel, rightly, that this is their country, and to be herded into a few states or regions is to admit defeat, to accept that liberalism has won the day.
Perhaps they are correct, but the example of a successful territory, whose freedom opens tremendous opportunity and widespread economic growth, is the only path to create pressure in the remaining states to emulate that freedom. Freedom spreads more effectively by example than by force.
How to Move Forward: New American Territories
What motive would a state governor and legislature have to participate in such a plan? The same: Money and power. Their domains would be substantially increased by adding new, highly productive citizens, and vast new wealth creation would inevitably follow such a migration, as it transformed the territory into a low tax, high productivity region.
If a territory allowed capital to move freely without government interference and control, and without confiscatory taxation on its profits, a breathtaking quantity of capital would immediately flow to such a region. This money would be invested in infrastructure, employees, start-ups, investments, and would produce taxable profit. The Territory would almost immediately become the Hong Kong of the west.
There are endless numbers of questions to be considered when contemplating a new venture of this sort. The market will answer many, if not most of them, and the most vexing problems, as usual, will be how to deal with the U.S. Government. The new territory will begin with all current U.S. laws in place. This will reduce disruption and uncertainty, and give some comfort to the existing power structure in the main country.
This article can only summarize this concept – we have developed an action plan and time line to get us to this “promised land” as we head towards that shining city upon the hill. Many specific policy initiatives which would complement and enhance a freer political entity are already well known among scholars of freedom, and could be implemented by skilled leaders.
Issues of “federalism” would have to be negotiated as well, particularly the amount of power ceded upward to local, territorial, and U.S. governments by the citizens. Many significant social questions would arise, such as how to handle a sizable class now dependent on government largess for their support, most of whom could not remain in that dependency relationship to government. Would former U.S. residents still be entitled to social security? What about government pension commitments? What happens to U.S. possessions in the territory, such as interstate highways and national parks? Answers will come.
Americans are not prisoners – not yet at least. However, because of the extraordinary power of the federal government, they have not been able to effectively vote with their feet by going to a state which offers substantially more freedom. The "laboratory of democracy" concept has been nullified by the vast imbalance of power to the feds.
This is a new experiment that has the potential to restore that balance, and one whose outcome is by no means assured. However, it can work if we can ride forward with our eyes on the north star divined by our Founders – that of individual freedom and responsibility, unhampered by tyrannical government.
This is a new experiment that has the potential to restore that balance, and one whose outcome is by no means assured. However, it can work if we can ride forward with our eyes on the north star divined by our Founders – that of individual freedom and responsibility, unhampered by tyrannical government.