The Montpelier Manifesto
by
Thomas
H. Naylor, Kirkpatrick Sale, James Starkey, and Charles Keil
Recently
by Thomas H. Naylor: The
Principality of Liechtenstein: A Model of Self-Determination for
a World Filled With Chaos
Recently
by Kirkpatrick Sale: The
Decline of the American Empire
Petition
of Grievances
We, citizens
of this American land, haunted by the nihilism of separation, meaninglessness,
and powerlessness, subsumed by political elites who use corporate,
state, and military power to manipulate our lives, pawns of a global
system of dominance and deceit in which transnational megacompanies
and big government control us through money, markets, and media,
sapping our political will, civil liberties, collective memory,
traditional cultures, sustainability, and independence, and as victims
of affluenza, technomania, cybermania, globalism, and imperialism,
do issue and proclaim this:
Document
of Grievances and Abuses
Governance
- A government
too big, too centralized, too undemocratic, too unjust, too powerful,
too intrusive, and too unresponsive to the needs of individual
citizens and small communities.
- One that
is too big and corrupt to be fixed or reformed, certainly not
by such fantasies as campaign finance reform or corporate-personhood
amendments.
- One that
has lost its moral authority, is corrupt to the core, and is owned,
operated and controlled by Wall Street, Corporate America, and
their political lackeys.
- One run
by a single brain-dead national political party on life-support
systems, sustained by national and Congressional elections that
are sold to the highest bidder, disguised as a genuine two-party
system.
- One that
relies on and fosters the illusion that only the U.S. government
can solve all or our problems all of the time, in the face of
the fact that it is the U.S. government that is the problem.
Economy
- A collapsing
economy, with a moribund housing market and a staggering number
of mortgage foreclosures, and high unemployment because of jobs
lost to China, India, and elsewhere over the past three decades
of globalism.
- Stagnant
real incomes for all but the super-rich, resulting in an ever-widening
gap between the rich and the poor and an increasing rate of poverty,
homelessness, and inadequate insurance.
- A $15-plus
trillion national debt and unfunded mandate obligations of $43
trillion, a staggering burden only added to by stimulus spending,
tax cuts, and "quantitative easing" (printing money),
none of which is restoring economic growth but does make us increasingly
and dangerously dependent on China, Japan, and other foreign countries
buying our treasury bonds.
- A central
bank which has, by monetizing the growing national debt and providing
cheap credit to bail out banks, increased the money supply to
the point where the future value of the dollar and the rate of
inflation are highly uncertain.
- A financial
system based on "tricks and traps" rather than customer
service and a financial regulatory system which favors predatory
and ruthless Wall Street mega-banks at the expense of ordinary
citizens.
- An economic
system absolutely dependent for survival on consumption and affluenza
(the illusion that the accumulation of more stuff, provided by
big-box stores fostered by government globalization policies,
can provide meaning to life), despite the knowledge that unrestrained
growth in a world of finite resources is unsustainable and unworthy
of pursuit.
- Public and
private sector labor unions which have been under open attack
by the government since the Reagan administration, by hostile
anti-union private employers such as Wal-Mart, and more recently
by some Republican governors.
- Corporate-owned,
government-subsidized agriculture with its use of toxic pesticides
and fertilizers, anti-biotics, genetically-engineered seeds, systematic
animal cruelty, and virtual absence of food safety regulations
creating a menace to public health, the environment, and small
farmers.
Foreign
Policy
- An immoral,
often clandestine and illegal, imperial system based on full-spectrum
dominance, military overstretch, might-makes-right, and the proposition
that the world wants to be just like us, leading us to provide
support to dictators and authoritarian regimes in the Middle East,
North Africa, and elsewhere in the world.
- A dependence
on military might, based on a multi-trillion dollar budget, 1.6
million American troops stationed at over 1,000 bases in 153 countries
(including 80,000 in Europe, 36,000 in Japan, and 30,000 in Korea),
Special Operations strike forces (Seals, Delta Forces, Rangers,
Green Berets) deployed in 120 countries, and a proliferation of
pilotless drone aircraft worldwide for reconnaissance and stealth
attacks, sometimes killing civilians, including Americans.
- Immoral,
illegal, undeclared wars in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen,
and (via Israel) Palestine, the threat of war with Iran based
on our deliberate acts of provocation, and the endless "war"
on terror largely aimed with racial overtones at Muslims.
- The hammerlock
hold of the Israeli Lobby over American foreign policy that forces
us to support an Israeli-inspired war on terror against Muslims
and keeps us from any real commitment to an Israeli-Palestinian
peace process.
- The Cuban
embargo.
Civil Liberties
- The highly
intrusive, inept, ever-growing, money-guzzling Department of Homeland
Security, together with other intelligence agencies, using the
Patriot Act, the Military Commissions Act, the Detainee Security
Provision of the National Defense Administration Act of 2011,
and other covers for citizen surveillance and suppression of civil
liberties.
- The disgraceful
(and expensive and useless) Guantanamo Prison, prisoner abuse
and torture, and the illegal rendition of terrorist suspects.
- A president
who can order the assassination of anyone, anywhere, anytime (including
U.S. citizens) whose name happens to appear on the White House
"kill list."
Criminal
Justice
- Six million
people under "correctional supervision" (more than were
in the Gulag Archipelago under Stalin), including more black men
than were in slavery in 1860 and 50,000 men in solitary confinement
in "supermax" prisons.
- A failed
international war on drugs that costs billions, ruins more lives
than it saves, has spawned corruption and violence, an entrenched
bureaucracy, and which has had no impact on drug use in the United
States.
Social Services
- The most
expensive health care system in the world, driven by fear of death
on the demand side and greed on the supply side, that ranks 37th
in the world according to the World Health Organization, now tied
to Obamacare, which remains fatally attached to a private health
care system that is in a death-spiral of rising costs and declining
health outcomes.
- An education
system dominated by the Federal government, committed to a one-size-fits-all
corporate model, to the dumbing-down of America, and to a race
to the bottom, which is why it ranks 18th in the industrial
world, according to the OECD.
- A higher
education system that is becoming so expensive that only the rich
will be able to attend college; all others look forward to debt
slavery.
- A social-welfare
net that, despite being enormously expensive, is woefully inadequate
to those it serves and has proven incapable of serious reform.
Infrastructure
- A widespread
aging and collapsing infrastructure, including highways, bridges,
tunnels, airports, dams, levees, and public water systems, now
costing America $129 billion a year, according to the American
Society of Civil Engineers, and will take an expenditure of $206
billion a year for the next 20 years to fix, sums which are simply
unavailable.
- Transportation
crises, including the obsolete and inadequate air-traffic-control
systems and railroad passenger train systems, and a Federal highway
system now 60 years old falling into disrepair across the country.
Redress
of Grievances
"Whenever
any form of government becomes destructive… it is the right of the
people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government…
as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness,"
says the Declaration of Independence. Alteration and abolishment
include the right to disband, or subdivide, or withdraw, or create
a new government.
Let us
therefore consider ways peaceably to withdraw from the American
Empire by (1) regaining control of our lives from big government,
big business, big cities, big schools, and big computer networks;
(2) relearning how to take care of ourselves by decentralizing,
downsizing, localizing, demilitarizing, simplifying, and humanizing
our lives; and (3) providing democratic and human-scale self-government
at those local and regional levels most likely to effect our safety
and happiness.
Citizens,
lend your name to this manifesto and join in the honorable task
of rejecting the immoral, corrupt, decaying, dying, failing American
Empire and seeking its rapid and peaceful dissolution before it
takes us all down with it.
To be
presented at the Third Statewide Convention on Vermont Self-Determination
on September 14, 2012 to be held in the Vermont State House in Montpelier.
September 4, 2012
Thomas H.
Naylor is founder of the Second
Vermont Republic and Professor Emeritus of Economics at Duke
University. He is the author Secession:
How Vermont and All the Other States Can Save Themselves from the
Empire, The
Vermont Manifesto: The Second Vermont Republic and co-author
of Ajjluenza, Downsizing
the USA, and The
Search for Meaning.
Kirkpatrick
Sale [send him mail] is
the author of a dozen books, including Human
Scale and Rebels
Against the Future: The Luddites and Their War on the Industrial
Revolution, and is the Director of the Middlebury Institute
for the study of separation, secession, and self-determination.
James Starkey
is Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Rhode Island.
Charles
Keil is Professor Emeritus of American Studies at the State University
of New York at Buffalo, and the author of Urban
Blues.
Copyright
© 2012 Thomas
H. Naylor
|