Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Should Arizona remain a state?

Some folks seem to think that it needs to be two states. One for liberals and one for conservatives. Seems that idea has been around before and based along similar lines as I recall. As it concerns dividing the nation into two groups, the sensible and the insane? I say go for it. and we may as well begin in Arizona.

Maybe if Pima county and the southern bowels of Arizona are allowed to create their own state? We may actually be able to erect a workable wall between America and Mexico. and once the Mexican cartels take over Pima county? Who will really care what happens to "Baja Arizona" anyway.

A long-simmering movement by liberal stalwarts in southern Arizona to break away from the rest of the largely conservative state is at a boiling point as secession backers press to bring their longshot ambition to the forefront of Arizona politics.

A group of lawyers from the Democratic stronghold of Tucson and surrounding Pima County have launched a petition drive seeking support for a November 2012 ballot question on whether the 48th state should be divided in two.

The ultimate goal of the newly formed political action committee Start our State is to split Pima County off into what would become the nation's 51st state, tentatively dubbed Baja Arizona.

Backers have until July 5 next year to collect the 48,000 signatures required to qualify for a spot on the ballot. If they succeed, it would mark only the first hurdle in a long, circuitous process that even the most determined of supporters readily acknowledge has little chance of bearing fruit.

"We at least need to get it on the ballot, as a nonbinding resolution, to ask the people of Pima County if they want to be a part of Arizona," Tucson attorney Paul Eckerstrom, a former Pima County Democratic chairman who launched the campaign, told Reuters. "All the stars would have to align for this to happen, but it could conceivably happen by the fall of 2013."

U.S. history is replete with efforts to carve one state from another -- from the creation of Kentucky and Tennessee in the 1790s to more modern misfires like proposals to partition Long Island from New York or to split California in half.

The last successful intrastate secession movement was the formation of West Virginia during the Civil War.

2 comments:

XtnYoda said...

I suggested a couple of years ago that we divide the US into 2 nations using the Mississippi River as the dividing point. Conservatives all move to one side and liberals all move to the other. Wouldn't matter which went which way ... just agree to one or the other.

Then in 100 years take a look at the two and what do you think you would find?

Fun thought.

Prime said...

Yeah. They can have the left coast.