‘New California’ Wants to Break Away From ‘Tyranny’ of California, Create 51st State
17 January, 2017
Over
the years, there have been several secession efforts in California
aimed away at breaking away from the U.S. government, including one
that gained steam following Donald Trump’s election in 2016. So
far, none have been successful, but a new declaration from rural
communities are now seeking independence not from the U.S., but from
California itself.
The
State of New California declared its independence from the Golden
State this week, citing Article IV, Section 3 of the U.S.
Constitution as well as the Declaration of Independence. “The
current state of California has become governed by a tyranny, which
rivals those expressed in the above documents,” the movement
writes.
The
founders of the new proposed state are committed to following the
government’s rules.
“We
have to demonstrate that we can govern ourselves before we are
allowed to govern,” said founder Tom Reed.
According
to the group’s press release, “After years of over taxation,
regulation, and mono party politics the State of California and many
of it’s [sic] 58 Counties have become ungovernable.” They cite a
decline in the quality of essential services, including “education,
law enforcement, fire protection, transportation, housing, health
care, taxation, voter rights, banking, state pension systems,
prisons, state parks, water resource management, home ownership,
infrastructure and many more.”
“There’s
something wrong when you have a rural county such as this one, and
you go down to Orange County which is mostly urban, and it has the
same set of problems, and it happens because of how the state is
being governed and taxed,” said founder Robert Paul Preston.
The
group asserts it is the “Duty of the People who are suffering the
long train of abuses and usurpations at the hands of a tyrannical
government to abolish and make New a Government by the People and for
the People under GOD.”
Despite
the fact that many of their grievances also apply to the U.S.
government, the New California effort is only concerned with
separating from the coastal urban regions of the state.
To
be sure, the California government is highly corrupt and inefficient.
To name just a few examples, the state legislature is overwhelmed by
special interests, the debt stands at $283.3 billion as of last year,
the government has imposed massive taxes on cannabis amid
legalization, and agencies throughout the state have failed to
represent the people, often siding with corporations that have
wreaked havoc on communities and the environment.
Nevertheless,
if escaping tyranny is the goal, remaining under the rule of U.S.
government may not solve the problem. The newest effort does,
however, highlight growing divisions within American society, whether
between broad regions of the United States or other segments, such as
rural versus urban demographics. These growing divides suggest
centralized authority and governance is increasingly difficult to
maintain, impractical, and often sows internal contempt.
Regardless,
the New California proposal is in its earliest stages, and its
organizers told CBS-Sacramentothey won’t be prepared to start
engaging with the state legislature for another ten to eighteen
months. They would need the approval of both the California and U.S.
governments and are currently working to gain the interest of at
least 40 counties.
However,
this division would mean that old California would have no source of
water for our cities without buying it and being subject to
regulation of it from the new state. One of the reasons the inland
counties are trying to do this is that the farmers don’t like
having to share water with the cities. With the ongoing threat of
drought, we need to come up with a better system of supply and not
penalize the residents of cities and towns with exorbitant prices,
which is no doubt what the farmers would do in an effort to cut down
usage by the rest of us. Or they would just ration so little that the
cities and towns would be unable to provide even a minimum amount of
water to the residents and businesses. Either way, it would create an
untenable situation.
They
need to go back to the drawing board and come up with a better plan.
The
founders of the new proposed state are committed to following the
government’s rules.
“We
have to demonstrate that we can govern ourselves before we are
allowed to govern,” said founder Tom Reed.
According
to the group’s press release, “After years of over taxation,
regulation, and mono party politics the State of California and many
of it’s [sic] 58 Counties have become ungovernable.” They cite a
decline in the quality of essential services, including “education,
law enforcement, fire protection, transportation, housing, health
care, taxation, voter rights, banking, state pension systems,
prisons, state parks, water resource management, home ownership,
infrastructure and many more.”
“There’s
something wrong when you have a rural county such as this one, and
you go down to Orange County which is mostly urban, and it has the
same set of problems, and it happens because of how the state is
being governed and taxed,” said founder Robert Paul Preston.
The
group asserts it is the “Duty of the People who are suffering the
long train of abuses and usurpations at the hands of a tyrannical
government to abolish and make New a Government by the People and for
the People under GOD.”
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