Are the Seeds Already Sown For Another Civil War?
GAINESVILLE, Ga. / April 12, 2011 — On the east coast, the State Commander of the
League of the South says, “The United States is not a country. The empire is over. It’s just a matter of time” (Canada, April 11, 2011). On the west coast, California Governor Jerry Brown says the nation is facing “regime crisis,” and that the U.S. “hasn’t been this divided since the Civil War” (CBS Los Angeles, April 10, 2011). Legislators in at least 16 states have proposed forming their own separate currencies (The “Constitutional Tender Act”).
Analysts at the Georgia-based Socionomics Institute say declining social mood is fueling secession sentiment worldwide, threatening the ties that bind nations, and groups of nations, together. In a study of secessionism (available here), Alan Hall says the current feelings of anger are just the beginning — and could get much worse. “Secessionism springs from the bear-market impulse to polarize and separate…it often leads to skirmishes with other nations. In the absence of an external foe, anger turns inward in the form of secessionism.”
Note to Media: For copies of the studies or to arrange an interview with a researcher from the Socionomics Institute, contact Alexandra Lienhard at (770) 536-0309, alexandral@socionomics.net.
* * * * *
About The Socionomics Institute
The Socionomics Institute, based in Gainesville, Ga., studies social mood and its role in driving cultural, economic and political trends. The Institute’s analysis is published in the monthly research review, The Socionomist. Work by the Socionomics Institute and other socionomists has been covered by The Atlantic, Barron’s, Esquire Magazine, The Futurist Magazine, MarketWatch, Mother Jones, Nature, New Scientist, Science, USA Today and others. Learn more at http://www.socionomics.net.