Virginia's Natural Commonwealth

By: Bernie Quigley
Published On: 2/12/2007 6:53:35 AM

There was a remarkable op-ed in The New York Times over the weekend by Gar Alperovitz, a progressive historian and scholar at the University of Maryland, whose name I often find on-line these days associated with Jim Webb. Alperovitz looks to California and its fascinating Governator, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and asks if the country has not reached the point where it is ungovernable as a single unit.

He writes: SOMETHING interesting is happening in California. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger seems to have grasped the essential truth that no nation - not even the United States - can be managed successfully from the center once it reaches a certain scale. Moreover, the bold proposals that Mr. Schwarzenegger is now making for everything from universal health care to global warming point to the kind of decentralization of power which, once started, could easily shake up America's fundamental political structure.

"Governor Schwarzenegger is quite clear that California is not simply another state. "We are the modern equivalent of the ancient city-states of Athens and Sparta," he recently declared. "We have the economic strength, we have the population and the technological force of a nation-state." In his inaugural address, Mr. Schwarzenegger proclaimed, "We are a good and global commonwealth."
I wanted to point out to Virginians how this idea of regional commonwealth and independent city-state has partially evolved in the public mind in recent years. At the very beginning of the war on Iraq an ad hoc group called The Acadian Alliance, consisting of a very small number of citizens from the three northernmost New England states, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, made the claim that under Jefferson's view of the Constitution, the states had the Constitutional right not to participate in the invasion.

Furthermore, we claimed that if the United States no longer wanted to be part of the United Nations, then we would like to send our own observer to the UN.

In an article in The Nation this last year Alperovitz included an idea somewhat along these lines in an article on "bold new ideas" for the new century.

From my point of view (and I was the one who started The Acadian Alliance), I'd been writing about Jefferson's view of a republic compared with Hamilton's. Here in New England, I'd been trying to convince New Englanders that we have political advantages through the Jefferson view that are our birth right and that when we abandoned the Jefferson view (and it became outlawed during the Civil Law) we lost our identity as New Englanders. We also lost our ability to resist the federal government, as the state is our natural package of rights in a republic and groupings of states form our identity. The states and the natural cultural regions they form over time are our natural defense against federalist wrong doing.

The idea began to catch on, but not in New England, as we have largely become since 1865 a provincial extension of New York. But it began to catch on in California and the Pacific Northwest.

My own thinking was based on Tolstoy's ideas of a "natural state" or a natural commonwealth. New England formed a natural commonwealth before 1865. California, as Schwarzenegger points out here, forms a natural commonwealth today.

The South - or the upper states in the South - formed a natural commonwealth under colonial conditions as did New York and the middle states around Pennsylvania. And recent economic patterns advancing wealth in the North Carolina region express a new reemergence of a natural commonwealth in the North Carolina/Virginia region.

When I lived and worked in Virginia and North Carolina I felt that the states of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia and South Carolina formed a natural Appalachian Commonwealth. In Tolstoy's view, much like Jefferson's, a natural commonwealth is a place not held together by doctrine or a set of dominating ideas, but which organically evolves through the natural relationship of people to each other in their natural surroundings.

Alperovitz's articles here are helpful in understanding this. The "community tier" of business he speaks of should be advanced. All countries in the world except our own have "community tiers" within their borders - they are customs and ways of doing things locally that don't necessarily transport globally, but which make us what we are as a people.

Community economies stabilize people and culture over a long period of time. A farmer in Sweden, for example, has been running a farm which has been in his family for a thousand years. Families together like this is the Jeffersonian vision; they build communities that last and nurture generation upon generation, after hedge funds, mutual funds, Wall St., stock options and globalization are long gone with the wind.

Community economies form within federations and in no way challenge federalism.  But Governor Schwarzenegger's declaring California "a good and global commonwealth" directly challenges the kind of federalism we have practiced in this country since the early 1800s.

To review, there are two approaches to American federalism, Alexander Hamilton's and Thomas Jefferson's. Historian Frank Owsley explains the difference in his 1930 essay, "The Irrepressible Conflict."

Owsley writes: "In the beginning of Washington's administration two men defined the fundamental principles of the political philosophy of the two societies, Alexander Hamilton for the North and Jefferson for the South. The one was extreme centralization, the other was extreme decentralization; the one was nationalistic and the other provincial; the first was called Federalism, the other States Rights, but in truth the first should have been called Unitarianism and the second Federalism."

Being raised here in New England we were taught that the Civil War was about slavery, period. The states rights component is never explained to us and is always denied by historians. But in denying the issue of states right we New Englanders have lost our own protections against federalism gone amok - as we see it's free-form arc light random in the world today - granted to us by Jefferson. We have also lost the abilities to build and form our own communities. Instead, we watch them yield invariably to the forces of the info-entertainment industry and Madison Ave. - the way of the corporation aided and advanced by a dominating central government, as per Hamilton's instruction.

It was this breach between Hamilton and Jefferson, writes Owsley, that formed a "war of intellectual and spiritual conquest" in early America and forced contention between North and South. It continues to do so today in "red state" and "blue state" cultural warfare.

But now the season is changing. And now, the very same issue which divided us for centuries North and South, begins to divide us East and West.

Now, for the first time since Jay's Treaty in 1794, when Washington teamed up with the New Yorker, Hamilton, in opposition to his fellow Virginians Jefferson and Madison, putting us on Hamilton's corporate path for more than 200 years, we are beginning to see awaken again Jefferson's vision of a federation in Arnold's "good and global commonwealth"; a federation of commonwealths and free and varied peoples.

And in the long and conspicuous absence of Ulysses S. Grant and Tecumseh Sherman, who do they think they are going to send up against the Governator to stop him in this new wave of contention? Dick Cheney?

Alperovitz NYT's essay "California Split" at http://www.nytimes.c...

Other articles by Alperovitz at http://www.bsos.umd....

Article on the rise of "red state" economies from John Parker at "Good Work" in NC at http://www.ncpolicyw...


Comments



Interesting thoughts... (Chris from ASL - 2/12/2007 11:42:47 AM)
As someone who visits Maine (and I mean Northern Maine) frequently, I have always thought the character of the area was drastically different than say in Massachusetts, or even in Vermont.  Politically, Maine (I can only speak for Maine) is more conservative than Massachusetts or Rhode Island. 

A true "Acadian" alliance would also have to include the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick(home of a lot of Acadians), Nova Scotia(home of the original Acadia), and Prince Edward Island(in the neighborhood). There is a language link (French/English bilingualism, especially on the border counties) as well as mannerisms are similar.

As for Virginia's "natural commonwealth," I would have to argue that it is a stretch for us to incorporate with South Carolina, Tennessee, or even Kentucky. Our areas bordering Tennessee or Kentucky have similar characteristics to their adjoining areas in the neighboring states.  Looking at where our population is located and where our economic growth is located, I would substitute Maryland, DC, and Delaware for South Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky.  I agree with North Carolina, as they have a high powered growth corridor, a farming area, and an area struggling with the change from a manufacturing economy to a service economy. 



Eastern Provinces of Canada (Bernie Quigley - 2/12/2007 6:40:04 PM)
Yes, the eastern provinces of Canada form a natural commonwealth with Maine and New Hampshire above Portland and Manchester and below Quebec Province - Vermont is something else, but it has connections as well. There could be "commonwealth considerations" for local businesses in the border regions - Bill Weld, Mass. gov., and Howard Dean and (I believe, Angus King, the Virginian governor of Maine a few years back) tried to enhance these connections and "regionalize" the states and provinces in terms of business. Contention, however, between Quebec and Ontario is fierce & Quebec seems to get along better with New England (possibly because many Boston Irish like myself have a few hundred Quebecois cousins, as Irish Catholic married French Catholic in early days). There might be separate legislative considerations for commonwealth and global economy - the border fight over pine in recent years became nationalistic as Canada refused to follow Bush into Iraq. The main problem is bears in the yard and 40 below zero four weeks at a stretch (as it was the third winter back): We are just too rural to have any kind of advance commerce at all. Northern Maine is very conservative and so is New Hampshire. New Hampshire is commonly called a "Southern state."


Good points (Chris from ASL - 2/12/2007 9:14:55 PM)
My family is from Northern Maine, we know exactly what you are talking about. Conservative, yes...but pro-union as a lot of the towns up there have some factory component to them.  It is somewhat unique. Socially conservative but pro-union.  I do know that the Dems have had to work to get Maine and New Hampshire in recent elections (even losing NH in 2000).


Have you heard of the Northeast Regional Economic Development Proposal? (Chris from ASL - 2/12/2007 9:26:08 PM)
It is aimed at the particular region...Northern Maine, NH, Vermont, and upstate New York?  It is a bill to create an Appalachian Regional Commission style agency aimed at economic development in these areas. 


Wes Clark (Bernie Quigley - 2/13/2007 6:59:12 AM)
I volunteered for Wes Clark up here in the primary and am still a "featured writer" for WesPAC. Wes won a large majority at Dixville Notch and was very popular up here toward the top of the state while John Kerry won at the bottom. That is characteristic of the NH region. The Northeast Regional Economic Development Proposal is the kind of visionary thing I am talking about. I thought Dean, Weld and King were on the avant garde of these kind of ideas a few years ago, then something happened. I'm going to send this article to Angus King if I can find him. I think he was a leader in this in Maine but I live on the opposite end of the state - about a half mile from Vermont - and was not able to watch all that closely.


We should have a chance with this (Chris from ASL - 2/13/2007 10:20:15 AM)
Mike Michaud of Maine has been pushing the idea through Congress these last few sessions...it has a chance this time around. Rumor has it that one of the reps from NH may take the lead on this one for this upcoming session.


Carol Shea-Porter, I hope (Bernie Quigley - 2/13/2007 1:04:29 PM)
She's a great new rep. fropm NH. Was endorsced by Wes Clark who came up and spoke on her behalf.


States rights, regionalism, rural v ubran (Teddy - 2/12/2007 12:28:44 PM)
are all interesting but limiting concepts, which ebb and flow with the tides of history: i.e., splintered groups are followed by amalgamation, followed by splintering groups, followed by coordination and consolidation, followed by...

A continental country like the US is not governable? That question has been raised at every stage of growth by human society... but to meet the challenge we have developed increasingly rapid forms of communication and transportation which obliterate the difficulties of stretching dominion over larger and larger territories. I will agree that tribes and provinces have always existed (which is why we have human language developing into splintered dialects which proved increasingly unintelligibile to each other), and we see some of the results today right in Iraq and in Africa, where artifical colonial states are unnatural commonwealths and are busy sorting themselves out. All this has given us so-called sectarian violence. And of course this regionalism also explains the break-up of the Soviet Union.

I do not believe that the US is in  a similar situation; splitting the US up at this point makes very little sense and is counter-productive politically and economically. Doing so would only protect and encourage the parochial dominance of certain historical local elites, especially in the South, where they are hanging on to their privileges and fear losing the last remnants of their special situation if the South has less influence nationally.  Civil War all over again? Let's not go there.

My family background is exactly half Northern and half Southern. True Federalism is the answer, in my opinion, to regional differences. As a woman, I fully understand that civil rights have never been achieved against an entrenched local elite without the support of a larger civil power like the federal government. The doctrine of states' rights was invented at the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention in order to get the slave holding states to agree to a national government; states rights today is still the way local cultural elites try to maintain their grip and their privileges. Bah, humbug.