November 22, 2009
UTNE READER

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An independence movement arises in Vermont

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American history, mathematically speaking, has been a story of constant addition. When the Declaration of Independence was signed, there were 13 colonies wanting to break free of British domination. They eventually teamed up, and the sum of United States kept rising at a steady clip until 1912, when Arizona entered the union as the 48th. That was the final tally until 1958, when, in the midst of the Cold War, we added Russia's neighbor across the Bering Strait as number 49. The next year Hawaii joined to make a round 50.

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Thomas H. Naylor, a retired Duke University economics professor and corporate consultant, thinks it's time for Americans to do some subtraction. At an antiwar rally last spring, he proposed that Vermont leave the United States, and he was surprised at the enthusiastic reaction. Since then he has spoken around the state, advocating that Vermont's citizens elect a special convention to explore the idea of establishing its own republic. "I am dead serious about this," he says, noting that Vermont was an independent nation with its own money, stamps, and legislature from 1777 to 1791. He outlines ideas for a Second Vermont Republic in The Vermont Manifesto (Xlibris), a surprisingly compelling argument for applying the small-is-beautiful philosophy to the United States itself.

Naylor doesn't believe he's being unpatriotic or subversive; indeed, he sees this emerging movement as a way to honor the true spirit of America. A Vermont Declaration of Independence, issued in September, opens with nearly the exact words Thomas Jefferson penned to make the case for American independence: "When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bonds which have connected them with another . . ."

"America is no longer a sustainable nation-state, economically, politically, socially, militarily, or environmentally," Naylor writes in The Vermont Manifesto. "The only way America can possibly save itself is by becoming smaller, less centralized, less powerful, less intrusive, less materialistic, less high-tech, less globalized, less militarized . . . and more responsive to the needs of individual citizens and small communities."

And what better place to show us a different kind of future than Vermont? Naylor proudly asks. It already stands out as a unique corner of America. It is famous for the direct democracy of its town meetings (indeed, according to Naylor, citizens in seven towns voted to secede from the United States as early as 1990).Two of its three seats in Congress are held by independent legislators who don't belong to either major political party. It has no defense installations, and it was the last state to be invaded by Wal-Mart.

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