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As a Virginian (though born and
raised in Michigan), I would like to remind my countrymen that
Virginia is not a part of the United States. We withdrew from
the old confederacy in 1861, joined the Confederate States of
America (currently inoperative, alas), and were forcibly –
and illegally – reannexed to the United States in 1865.
By now most Virginians are
resigned to living under the US Government. Not me. Virginia
– the home of Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and Robert E.
Lee – should be free.
When the sovereign state of
Virginia ratified the US Constitution in June 1788, it did so
with this proviso: "that the powers granted under the
Constitution, being derived from the people of the United
States, may be resumed by them, whenever the same shall be
perverted to their injury and oppression." That is, the
people of the states could withdraw their consent and
"resume," or reclaim, the powers delegated to the US
government.
New York and Rhode Island
ratified the Constitution with similar reservations of the
right to "resume" or "reassume" the powers
"granted" therein. Either these conditional
ratification acts were valid, and the states retain the right
to secede, or the acts were void, and Virginia, New York, and
Rhode Island have never legally joined the United States! But
nobody at that time held that by adopting the Constitution the
states were surrendering their "sovereignty, freedom, and
independence," which they maintained under the Articles
of Confederation.
Lincoln argued against
secession on grounds that the Union is even older than the
states. A Union of what, Abe? At most, the Union can be only
as old as the states that compose it. But the federal
government didn’t spring into existence in 1776. That had to
await the 1787 Constitution.
The Declaration of
Independence, the most famous act of secession in history,
said that the former colonies "are, and of Right ought to
be, Free and Independent States" – that is, 13
sovereign powers, subordinate to nobody. Notice that it
didn’t call those states "a new nation" or even
"the Union." That kind of talk came much later.
It was long customary to refer
to the United States under the Constitution as a
"confederacy" or "confederation," as The
Federalist Papers often do. Even Lincoln sometimes called it
"this Confederacy," as I did in the first paragraph.
By definition, a confederacy is a voluntary association whose
members are free to quit.
Far from being a new-fangled
idea in 1861, the right of secession was implicit in the very
language of American politics – in the words
"state," "sovereign," and
"federal" – from the beginning. It was also
positively asserted many times, even in the North, before
1861. And an act of secession was neither
"rebellion" nor "insurrection," but the
act of the same sovereign states that had ratified the
Constitution in the first place.
It was not secession that was
unconstitutional, but the suppression of secession. The North
fought the Civil War by allowing its chief executive to
exercise dictatorial powers, raising armies and money and
suspending civil liberties without consulting Congress, and
even arresting the Maryland legislature and installing a
puppet government. This was "government of the people, by
the people, for the people"? What happened to "the
consent of the governed"?
The Northern enemies of
secession weren’t always rigid in their principles:
they did allow a pro-Union part
of Virginia to secede from Virginia. That’s how the United
States got West Virginia. Since Virginia never ceded that
territory, as prescribed by the Constitution, that was the
only real case of unconstitutional secession. To make matters
worse, the North never admitted that Virginia had legally left
the Union. How, then, could it be split without its legal
consent?
After the war, the North forced
the seceding states to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment as a
condition of re-admission to the Union it insisted they had
never legally quit. Yet most of those states had already
ratified the Thirteenth Amendment, so they were apparently
back in the Union after all.
The hypocrisy is dizzying. But
wars aren’t necessarily won by the intellectually
consistent.
Still, it’s not too late to
set things right. Just give us our liberty back.
And, while we’re at it, West
Virginia. |