DISPATCH FROM WINDSOR, VT.
Secession -- a Revolutionary Idea
Some in Vermont want the state to again be an independent republic. Yet many see the effort, however earnest, as only an intellectual exercise.
By Elizabeth Mehren, Times Staff Writer
September 24, 2006
Independence
(Alden Pellett/For The Times)
WINDSOR, Vt. — This is prime country-fair season, when villages roll out moon-sized pumpkins, maple-flavored everything and, here at Heritage Days, a manifesto on why Vermont should secede from the United States.
At a card table outside the tavern where Vermont first declared its independence in 1777, delegates from the Second Vermont Republic — a.k.a. the secessionists — looked just as comfortable one recent Sunday as the vendors selling goat's milk soap. The "Free Vermont" flag fluttered as fairgoers stopped to discuss whether their state should pull out of the union....
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Though the movement for Vermont secession that (Thomas) Naylor helped launch nearly three years ago is little more than an intellectual exercise, it is entirely earnest.
Its members argue that the U.S. government has lost its concern for individual citizens and small communities. They worry about global warming, the U.S. military presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, unfair trade practices, and the "tyranny of multinational corporations."...
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The 150 or so members of the Second Vermont Republic envision a country much like Switzerland — neutral and economically independent. They argue their cause at public gatherings and private events. Supporters march in parades and engage in political theater, sometimes reliving the early days when Vermont — like California — was its own republic....(T)he grass-roots secession campaign faces a major sales job. A recent study by the Center for Rural Studies at the University of Vermont showed that only 8% of respondents thought Vermont should separate from the U.S....
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-secede24sep24,0,1327170.story?coll=la-home-headlines