We want to use “native retention rate” data to determine how populous a country needs to be to meet the needs of its people for lifelong employment & higher education, so that they won’t want to emigrate. We discover that the number is a minimum population of four million…
Understanding Lincoln’s arguments against secession helps us refute them
Northern fear that Southern secession would lead to conquest of Americans by Europeans. The fear of the North splitting into multiple federations
How conservative or liberal are your state’s laws? We graphed it.
What’s the most conservative state? Only a review of hundreds of laws can answer that, because election results only tell […]
What flag do you fly on Independence Day?
What does the American flag represent? The federal government or its state? The current inhabitants of the US? The people […]
How a federation of red states would differ from the US
Here are maps showing how a federation of red states would differ from the US. But after all the drama […]
Historical examples of ideological National Divorces
Regarding ethno-nationalism, civic nationalism, & Christian nationalism, it’s interesting that Flanders opted to partake in the Belgian secession from the […]
On “Christian Nationalism”
The principal book on “Christian Nationalism” apparently argues for a Christian ethnostate to secede from the US according to the […]
The 2020 Census included Middle Easterners as “white”; actual Anglos on track to be minority in five years
The 2020 non-Hispanic white population was 57.8%, including “Lebanese, Egyptians” etc. The Census changed the questions between 2010 and 2020, […]
If they won’t trade with you, then you’re not a part of their nation
Chase Bank, cloud companies, and other corporations are increasingly cancelling customers for their beliefs. Ali Alexander’s domain name was deleted […]
List of US States that were Independent Before Joining the US
The following link describes some US states that used to be independent countries: Vermont, Texas, California, Hawaii, Utah, and Oregon/Washington. […]