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Expansionist Party of the United States
[Note: This is the American mirror site for the Expansionist Party's
website under its own domain name,
www.ExpansionistParty.org
(not case-sensitive) on an Australian webhost. We will try to keep the two
sites identical except for URLs and resulting cross-links, but in the event
of a discrepancy, the text at
ExpansionistParty.org
controls. If you find a nonworking link, please let
us know. In the case of links to another page on our own site, the alternative
URL, to our old site on AOL, should work. You would just put
"http://members.aol.com/XPUS/"
before the name of the webpage name (e.g., "Australianview.html"), and
that should work.]
[What's New (February 15, 2007)]
[Our Chairman's blog]
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[Featured Older Items]
[Stands on Many Basic
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[Introduction]
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[United States
International]
[Links] [[End]
Take our poll: How large should the
United States ultimately be?
Expansionist Party
of the United States
(XP)
Charter Member, United
States International
WORKING FOR A BIGGER AND
BETTER U.S. SINCE 1977
XP is a general-purpose political organization of the
Radical Center dedicated to geographic enlargement of the United States,
ultimately to culminate in world union under the Constitution
295 Smith Street, Newark, New Jersey 07106-2517, UNITED
STATES
Phone: (973) 416-6151
E-mail: XPUS@aol.com
"One World, Indivisible, with
Liberty and Justice for All"
If you have suggestions for issues or geographic areas
we should cover, let us know. We will entertain
contributions from people who share our values. Direct suggestions,
presentations to
XPUS@aol.com.
Expansionism is the force that made a fledgling country
east of the Mississippi, south of Canada, and north of the Floridas into
the greatest power in the history of the world.
Without Expansionism, the United States would be just one of many mid-sized
countries, incapable of absorbing tens of millions of immigrants, incapable
of defending itself against great powers, incapable of projecting its culture
and civilization worldwide. How would World War I have turned
out without an enormous and powerful U.S.? If World War II had arisen,
could the democracies have defeated the Axis of Nazism, Fascism, and Japanese
militarism? Or would Hitler, Mussolini and Tojo have won
World War II? What would the world be like today? If the Soviet Union
had managed to rally an alliance powerful enough to defeat the Axis,
could Communism have been stopped in taking over the
world?
It is impossible to imagine the world today if the U.S. had stayed
east of the Mississippi and north of the Floridas. What will the world be
like in 100 years if we stop expanding now?
Well, what is the world like today, and is it getting better or
worse? If you believe, as we do, that the bulk of this planet is
a nightmare world and getting worse, do you
see any hope in any entity or organization other than the United
States?
Is the UN going to end starvation and vast, dehumanizing poverty; end
local and regional war and ethnic cleansing; produce trillions of dollars
of development funds and field hundreds of thousands of aid workers to lift
the Third World out of its appalling backwardness? Will Japan or the nations
of the European Union transform this planet for the benefit of the poor?
Or have those countries always viewed the world as something to be conquered
and exploited, not helped?
What new Axis or Communist World Revolution lies in store for our
descendants to face, and possibly fall to?
This is a horrible, dangerous planet, whose gross and worsening
overpopulation is producing ecological devastation, mass extinctions of animal
and plant species, rainforest destruction, desertification, and other horrendous
conditions despite feeble leadership to control these problems from the U.S.
at its present size.
* * *
These are the questions XP asked BEFORE September 11th, 2001. We
tried to impress upon Americans the idea that WE ARE NOT
SECURE in "splendid isolation". But nobody wanted to hear it.
"Of course we're safe" was the view of most people. "Who could possibly attack
us? We have NUCLEAR WEAPONS! The whole world is scared to death of
us!"
No, actually, only GOVERNMENTS are scared to death of us.
Nongovernmental "terrorist" organizations have no fear of us at
all.
We call them "terrorists" because they don't wear uniforms and don't
march in step on parade grounds. They are nonetheless SOLDIERS in causes
we SHOULD recognize but DON'T. They don't see themselves as "cowards"
or "criminals", but as SOLDIERS fighting against the evil of a great power
gone hideously wrong. If they know the legend of David and Goliath (by far
most do), they see themselves as David and the United States (and
its colonial overlord, Israel) as Goliath. What an irony, huh? Arabs
see themselves as David and the U.S. and Israel as Goliath! That is
the way "Arab terrorists" see themselves, as the virtuous Little Guy fighting
against seemingly insuperable odds FOR THE RIGHT, AGAINST EVIL.
Anti-Zionist, Arab "terrorists" are only the latest in a long line of
people who have blamed the United States for their own problems. In the case
of the Arab Nation, there is very considerable justice to the claim that
the United States is specially victimizing them for reasons that ordinary
Americans do not comprehend. Americans do not understand the political
significance of the recent
recasting
of Christianity as scarcely-reformed Judaism, which imposes upon Christians
the obligation to identify as Jewish, thus "Israelite", and thus, again,
as "Israeli".
But Arabs are not the only aggrieved people eager to kill Americans.
Latin America is a region of incessant violence and endemic unfairness.
It is CORRUPT, inefficient, backward, and filled with resentment. It
hates the United States for being a success when it is a miserable failure,
and pretends that somehow the success of the United States is built upon
the bones of Latin American failure. If anyone were to try to figure out
how that could be, s/he would be stumped, because the United States has NOTHING
TO DO WITH THE FAILURES OF LATIN AMERICA. We didn't make Latin America hopelessly
elitist, classist, racist, backward-looking, and CORRUPT. We didn't
DIVIDE Latin America into two dozen separate countries that should have formed
a single federal union. We didn't tell Latin America it should spend over
180 years resenting the United States rather than working with the United
States to create a Hemisphere-wide federation, a Great American
Union.
And what of Africa? Did the United States colonize Africa? No. Latin
Americans unwilling to assume responsibility for Latin America's multitudinous
failures pretend that U.S. "colonialism" robbed Latins of initiative and
success in life. But who can blame the U.S. for Africa's multitudinous
failures?
What of Asia? Before the current wars in
Iraq
and Afghanistan, the United States involved itself deeply in only three small
parts of that largest of continents: the Philippines, Korea, and Indochina.
The hopelessness, corruption, dictatorship, and starvation of all the rest
of that enormous continent, home to more than half of all human beings, has
nothing to do with us.
In the Philippines, the U.S. agonized, in 1898, over whether to create
a colonial regime; decided the Philippines was nothing LIKE ready for
independence; then fought a horrible war to make the Philippines "American",
and followed up that war with four decades of enlightened mentorship to Filipinos
eager to learn how to run a democratic country. Filipinos and Americans fought
side by side in World War II, and suffered death at the hands of sadistic
Japanese side by side. After the war, the U.S. gave the Philippines independence
even tho the Japanese occupation, with its appalling damage to infrastructure
and monstrous predation upon human beings, combined with other factors to
make it almost impossible for the Philippines to make a success of
independence.
Still, after a period of dictatorship under Ferdinand
Marcos, the Philippines was able to reclaim its U.S.-style democracy, and
is now working with the U.S. to eradicate Islamist terrorism in Mindanao
and adjoining islands. Widespread use of English and an orientation toward
modernism are positive legacies of the U.S. presence, and there are many
Filipinos who look with fondness upon our past association and wish to reforge
the bonds between us.
In Korea, the U.S. rallied a United Nations "police action" to repel
a Communist invasion of South Korea from the North. After heavy loss of life,
the border was adjusted at much the same point as before the war, and an
ongoing U.S. military presence some 40,000 strong beyond a Demilitarized
Zone lined with minefields has kept South Korea free from major invasion,
though periodic sallies of murderous invaders from the North via tunnels
and boats have killed many South Koreans. The lunatic dictatorship of the
North has also attacked South Korean interests abroad, killing dozens of
politicians, diplomats, and public servants from Seoul. But the stability
that a 50-year commitment to South Korea has brought, enabled that troubled
country to emerge from its own authoritarian governments into democracy,
bolstered by a strong economy intimately tied to the U.S. market.
North Korea, meanwhile, has been heavily militarized rather than
industrialized or democratized. The fanatically proud and isolationistic
regime allowed a horrific famine to ravage the population without international
intervention. A
BBC News
report on August 30, 1999 said that since 1995 a minimum of 220,000 (North
Korean figure) people had starved TO DEATH in North Korea. The South Korean
government estimated 270,000. A U.S. Congressional figure is
2 MILLION. A Buddhist charity in China estimated
3.5 MILLION people died from famine
and related illnesses from 1995 to 1999!
Plainly the United States'
ongoing defense of South Korea has been hugely in the interest of
Koreans.
As regards Indochina, it is very popular among Communist-influenced,
credulous individuals to believe that the United States acted in an imperialist
and murderous way, to kill Asians for for for WHAT? None of
the critics of U.S. policy in Southeast Asia has EVER been able to supply
a REASON for Americans to kill Indochinese, especially since the history
of the region is replete with acts of everyday kindness and sudden heroism
by Americans who tried to protect Southeast Asians. No, the
accusations of war crimes and racist atrocities are propaganda by people
who learned well Hitler's "Big Lie" technique: "The great masses of the people
. . . will more easily fall victims to a big lie than to a small
one."
Now, the old men of Vietnam's Communist 'revolution' are mellowing,
or dying. Unified Vietnam is altering its hardline Communist economics and
governance, in very-late and still-unspoken acknowledgment that they
were misconceived from the beginning. Nationalism was the force that
kept the Vietnamese going for all those decades of war, but now that the
nation has been united, the faux-revolution that gave rise to the violence
is eroding away. Post-Communist but proudly nationalist Vietnam will in time,
after all the old murderers are dead, put its deadly past behind it and take
its place among the nations of the world helped in part by the opening
to the West that is the only remaining legacy of a short American occupation
of South Vietnam: millions of people who can speak and read
English.
For the rest of Asia, except for Palestine in recent decades, the U.S.
role has been trivial. Other Western powers have had much more power over
events, and in much of Asia no Western power has had any significant control
since 1950 over half a century ago. Even in the Middle East, Britain
and France were, in crucial, formative times, in charge of territories we
had no control over. They held legal "mandates" over Iraq and Palestine,
Syria and Lebanon, and are largely responsible for the mess in that region.
It is forgotten now, tho certainly should
not be, that the United States in 1956 forced Britain, France, and Israel
to break off the attack upon Egypt that produced a years-long shutdown of
the Suez Canal.
The mere fact that the U.S. had nothing to do with much of the world's
problems does not, alas, keep us from being blamed for everything that has
gone wrong in the Middle East, in Asia, in Africa, in Latin America, etc.
* * *
What we need to recognize today is that it's not just governments that
can make war, but individuals and small organizations of disciplined and
furious activists willing to die for their convictions.
In such a world, the United States must endeavor
always to be on the side of right, and always to explain
why it believes that the side it takes IS THE RIGHT SIDE. We
must, also, be willing to consider the possibility that WE'RE WRONG,
and the OTHER side is RIGHT.
What we cannot do, however, is stand aside and let whatever
is going to happen, happen without our input. "Human" beings have been
slaughtering human beings for millennia before the United States was founded,
and will continue to slaughter human beings without mercy unless we restrain
them. We can afford no naivete.
* * *
We of the Expansionist Party believe that
if the United States doesn't grow, the problems around us will
grow ever larger and ever worse, eventually to overwhelm us all and plunge
the world into a New Dark Age, a dark age in which a dozen or more
countries have nuclear weapons.
Expansionism seeks to enlarge not just the United States but also human
possibility for everyone, everywhere. We want the protections
of the U.S. Constitution to extend to everyone, everywhere. We want
the dynamics of our economy and culture to vitalize and develop the world,
all the while heeding the rights of other species in environmentally sensible
projects. Expansionism is not just for
us, in the present states, but for everyone, everywhere. Expansionism
is in everyone's interest.
Animated map courtesy of XP member Bill Lansing, Lewiston, New York
To see more about our basic approach, click
here. To see presentations on specific geographic
and subject-matter areas, consult our
indexes. To see a presentation on a
wide range of stances not specific to any geographic area, click
here.
Take our poll! Tell us, below, how big
you think the United States should ultimately be that is, 100 years
from now, 200 years, 500 years, whatever. XP takes the long view. Do you?
There's a place at the end of the poll to post brief comments. Longer
comments should be made by email. If you'd
like to share your thoughts with other visitors to this site, tell us that
you'd like your email to be considered for our
"Letters" page.
[Return to top.]
What's
New
February
15, 2007: "Australian-U.S. Union, a Personal
View" by Bill Dekmetzian of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, is our
first presentation on the question of bringing Australia (and New Zealand)
into the Union.
January 28, 2007: A new world-spanning animated map of past and
future expansion of the United States has been added to this page, above.
Textual additions have been made to the
Discussion page for accession of Britain as
up to six states of the Union, and to the Letters
Department.
Earlier
Updates
October 17, 2005: Presentation by the Formosan
Statehood Movement (FSM) on the XP website. FSM, founded by David Chou,
was the subject of a 1994 article by The New York Times about bringing
Taiwan into the Union as a state. FSM is allied with XP, and at least until
they get their own website up and running, we are hosting their presentation,
in three parts, on our site: An Ardent Appeal,
The History of Taiwan in a Nutshell, and
Our Plan and Founder.
October 17, 2005: Philippine
Statehood Group's Website Moves. "Third Option Proponents" have
moved their website to
http://www.top-party.tk/.
This move occurred some time ago but I only recently became aware that the
old one, previously indexed here, was no longer operating. Use the new URL.
April 15, 2004: New "blog": XP's Chairman, L. Craig Schoonmaker,
has created a weblog, called "The
Expansionist/The Anti-Post", in which he addresses issues of the day,
especially as raised by opinion pieces in the arch-conservative New York
Post, with which he is almost always in sharp disagreement. A "blog",
for those who aren't clear about the term, is a type of online journal, arranged
by date, in which thoughts that occur in a given day are expressed. Some
blogs are personal, some political. This one is political. In case the hyperlink
above does not work, the URL is
http://antipost.blogspot.com.
February 8, 2004: In the year 2000, XP Chairman
Schoonmaker created a
website to present
his issues for people interested in a write-in campaign. Altho that site
did receive minor attention from some presidential-election websites, it
did not make the kind of impact we believe our issues warrant. Tho we wish
we had the wherewithal to run our own candidate, we don't, and a write-in
campaign seems pointless (tho we certainly wouldn't mind anyone writing
in the Chairman's name if they can't bring themselves to vote for anyone
else; we'd rather have people for for someone than to abstain).
We cannot enthusiastically endorse any of the announced candidates. Of
the three presumptive familiar names that are to appear on the ballot in
November, Ralph Nader seems the least of evils, but we very seriously doubt
he can do more than take votes away from one major candidate or the other,
not win the contest himself. Of the two major-party candidates, John Kerry
is the lesser of two evils. We wish Americans weren't endlessly presented
only a choice between the lesser of evils, but as long as that is
the case, we must grudgingly suggest that voting for John Kerry is probably
more effective a protest against the destructive domestic and foreign policies
of George W. Bush. It is imperative that Bush be defeated. He is making the
United States a pariah among nations; has done nothing about bringing even
Puerto Rico into the Union (something his father made vague noises about
but never did anything to accomplish either); so is an actual obstacle to
national enlargement, since much of the rest of the world despises him and
has no desire to become part of a country he might still govern after
November.
As for what we wish any candidate who wins the Presidency would do, we
refer you to what Chairman Schoonmaker was thinking before he decided that
it is pointless even to try to run for President once the Democratic nomination
was sewn up by Kerry:
http://members.aol.com/Schoonmaker2000/Schoonmaker2004.
October 24, 2002: TWO Taiwan Groups
Found!
(1) Taiwan statehood group found us
(link is to a Chinese-language site). The Union Society of Taiwan recently
contacted the Expansionist Party after a break of some eight years. Snailmail
may have gone awry, inasmuch as we thought we had sent a reply to an inquiry
received in 1994 from a 'Taiwan Statehood Club', but the organizer of that
group never received a reply. He has, since we reconnected, however, said
that the government of Taiwan has been most unfriendly to the idea of Taiwan
becoming a State of the Union (as is the government of "mainland" (Communist)
China, so the letter might have been intercepted by Taiwan's
only-marginally-democratic government. The New York Times some years
ago ran a human-interest article about the founder of the Taiwan group, saying
that "he's serious" about something the Times seemed to think ridiculous.
A few weeks ago it occurred to me to try to find that Taiwan group by searching
thru Google.com, but I had remembered the organizer's name wrong, as "David
Chang" (rather than David Chou), so did not succeed. I found a link to one
article that ran in my local paper, the Newark Star-Ledger, but when
I tried that link, it didn't work. I sent email to the Star-Ledger
and a helpful person there tried to find the article, with no success. So
I wrote back to say, 'Thanks anyway. They'll find us.' A week or so later,
they did! XP has invited UST to join United States International; USI's voting
members approved the application; and we are now awaiting the text of UST's
presentation for the USI site. Alas, the bulk of the Taiwan group's materials
are in Chinese, and a recent revision to their website has apparently redirected
all attempts to reach their English-language pages thru a Chinese-only home
page!
(2) David's group referred us to the
USA-Taiwan Commonwealth Foundation,
a nonprofit educational foundation that advocates not statehood (at least
not for the present), but U.S. Commonwealth status for Taiwan. Commonwealth
is a form of association pioneered by Puerto Rico in which a territory maintains
substantial autonomy but is inside the U.S. tariff wall, uses U.S. currency,
has its foreign affairs and defense handled by the U.S. Government, and in
other ways is integrated into the United States without full rights of statehood.
After 50 years of Commonwealth, the Foundation proposes, the people of Taiwan
would vote their preference as to three options: independence, statehood,
or merger into Mainland China.
October 24, 2002:
Another Filipino statehood site
found. Marcus Mayer of Ontario USA
recently ran across a Philippine-statehood website entitled,
"Do You Want U.S. Statehood For the
Philippines?" We have not yet had
a chance to read the entire site and in fact have yet another Philippine
statehood site to check out. United States International admitted a Philippine
statehood site, whose
Manifesto
XP has placed on our own site, but that group has gone thru serious
internal-cohesion issues and is apparently not presently functioning. Tho
we hope that USA Statehood will recover, there is plenty of room for multiple
statehood groups in the Philippines, a country of over 82 million
people
2/13/02:
Alberta statehood sites found.
(1) We have been contacted by:
"the Alberta Residents
League. We are a group of Albertans dedicated to separating Alberta from
Canada and becoming a U.S. State. We are hoping that [XP] could provide us
with a link to help increase our exposure in the U.S.A. Check out our website
at
www.albertaresidentsleague.com
and please feel free to provide us with any insights you may have. It is
my hope that we can work together to achieve our common goals. Thanks.
"Ryan Cassell, President, Alberta Residents League"
Charles Kropke, member of the Chairman's Advisory Council, evaluates
ARL's program thus:
"Whereas, [ARL] may be looking too much for a lottery-like payoff, the
idea that the U.S. Government will have to make some sort of payment is very
realistic. I believe the equation would go something like this: In order
for the U.S. government to receive the title to [Canadian] Federal lands
in Alberta (National Parks, military bases, crown lands, etc.) we would have
to take the national debt of Canada, divide it by the total population of
the country, and then pay the per capita amount for the entire population
of Alberta to the Canadian government. Aside from this, we could offer a
tax incentive to Alberta or a mineral-based revenue sharing agreement like
the one that Alaska was granted upon entering the union."
ARL's own gathering of opinion and feedback persuaded them that Alberta
is not ready for statehood, but that many of its friends are inclined to
seek independence from Canada. Inasmuch as we believe that any disruption
to Canada would impel at least some provinces to apply for statehood, we
look with favor on ARL's work.
(2) The organization Republic
of Alberta has, since September 11th, taken a decided turn toward statehood
and away from separate nationhood for Alberta. Peter Brimelow, author of
THE PATRIOT GAME (a book that discussed Canada's future vis-a-vis the United
States) stated in FORBES Magazine (for which he works) that free trade areas
empower even small new "countries" to take on sovereignty with low risk,
but some Albertans understand that being Albertan Americans would be much
better in every way than being sovereign citizens of a tiny, vulnerable country
of their own. We tried recently (October 23, 2002) to find out what
Republic of Alberta is currently thinking, but its website was not accepting
visits for having exceeded its usage quota this month. That's encouraging
but we suggest they need to find another webhost so that everyone
who wants to visit, can visit.
Australian
organization expresses interest in closer ties.
"On Tue, 13 Nov 2001 10:53:25 EST, you wrote to the Society
on the subject of Australian accession to the United States as several States
of the Union.
"The views of members regarding this interesting proposition have been
canvassed, and the Society's Executive Committee has deliberated on the matter
in the light of these views. I have been directed to thank you for raising
this question, and to inform you of the Society's position, which is this:
"Australia and the USA are recogni[z]ed as having national cultures and
aspirations which are very similar. Further, there are powerful informal
bonds between the two countries. However, the large geographical distance
from the US would mean Australia's voice in Washington would be weak, and
the large physical size of Australia would make trans-Pacific federal
administration expensive and difficult. Accordingly, rather than complete
union, the Society favors increased bilateral ties between the two countries
possibly with a corresponding reduction in the multilateral covenants
to which Australia (and in somewhat fewer cases, the USA) are signatories
through the UN.
Secretary, The Public Policy
Assessment Society Inc. (PPAS)"
XP's close colleague, Lionel Berry of Oshawa, Ontario (who has relatives
in Australia), observes:
"The Australian response is very interesting in that they fear it is
impossible to govern from such a distance. Is this not the same fear we have
seen before in the US and Canada, as each country expanded its boundaries?
Although some raise the specter of separation due to distant governance,
most will not support this notion. Australia itself overcame distances and
differences between colonies to become a more cohesive and stronger unit.
I think in this modern world, distance becomes less and less a valid barrier
to good governance. Even without this technology, we might look back to the
successes of the British Empire in building distant societies. It is the
system of government and laws that makes for successful unions, and good
unions create stronger units."
We concur. It's worth remembering that at the time the original Thirteen
States formed their Union, it could take three weeks to travel by road from
one end of the Nation to the other. Now we have essentially instantaneous
communication of massive amounts of data and opinion to ease the task of
knitting together distant places.
Moreover, in the U.S. federal structure, the center doesn't really govern
very much of the day-to-day activities that people care most about: education,
garbage pickup, police and fire protection, road construction and repair,
prosecution and incarceration of most types of criminals, etc. And the people
who staff and run Federal installations in any of the states are for the
most part locals.
We can make these points to the nice people in that Australian political
society, and we intend to ask if a member of their society would like to
write or co-author a page on this topic for our website. We could, if need
be, showcase an exchange of views rather than a unified presentation, such
that the Australian points out the difficulties and we suggest solutions.
We have photo illustrations for a presentation on Australia, from Lionel
on his travels and from a Singaporean who has given us permission to use
some photos he posted on the Internet. But we haven't, to date, known what
exactly to say to appeal to Australians. Perhaps you have something to
suggest.
On October 23, 2002, we followed up with an email solicitation for
contributions to this website from member(s) of the Public Policy Assessment
Society. Should anyone accept, we will put up a page (or more) on Australia
and the United States. If you are Australian and have thoughts to offer,
you don't have to be a member of the PPAS to contact us. Speak up!
Without wanting to talk about New Zealand as tho it were a mere adjunct
to Australia, we don't want to leave visiting Kiwis with the feeling that
XP isn't concerned about New Zealand. We are, and indeed have published on
this site a presentation by a New Zealander on
how Expansionism works to advance the security of the United States and its
friends. We are told that arguments used to advance Trans-Tasman Union (Australia
and New Zealand) are the same kinds of arguments that would be debated as
regards Australia-U.S. union or, of course, New Zealand-U.S. union.
So let us offer here, now, the same deal to anyone who wishes to advocate
accession to the Union for New Zealand: we would be happy to publish on this
site argumentation in favor of New Zealand's becoming a State of the United
States.
Singapore pursues free trade with the United
States. It seems Singapore is, according
to Reuters, January 31, 2002, in "its worst recession since independence
in 1965 and suffering from investor perceptions of regional risk in turbulent
Southeast Asia", so wants a free-trade pact with the U.S. Perhaps Singaporeans
are open to other thoughts.
Singapore actually proposes that two islands of Indonesia, Batam and
Bintan, on which various electronics manufacturing operations occur at lower
cost than in Singapore itself, be included in this free-trade arrangement.
Tho that seems to be okay with Indonesia, one must wonder if it will be okay
with the U.S. Congress.
In asking permission from the Singaporean mentioned above to use some
of his photos of Australia, I mentioned that XP might someday propose that
Singapore join the Union. It would be a good fit, given Singapore's relative
prosperity and ethnic diversity.
Singapore is roughly 80% ethnic Chinese, with the remainder of the
population comprising Indians (mainly Hindu), some holdover Europeans, etc.
Singapore was a British colony for many years, and Britain might usefully
suggest to Singapore that it is very much in Singapore's interest to join
itself to the U.S. more fully. Singapore is a non-Moslem enclave of
4.3 million people surrounded north and south by 250 million Moslems.
That might be uncomfortable.
Mind you, Singapore hasn't approached the U.S. alone. Reuters reports
that
"Singapore, a free trade zealot, has signed bilateral pacts with Japan,
New Zealand and the four-nation European Free Trade Association.
"Talks with Canada began this month and are continuing with Australia
and the United States after being slowed by the presidential change in the
White House and the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon."
Tho it is easy to understand that a city-state as tiny as Singapore
should want to maximize its possibilities to improve its security, outsiders
must ask why others should grant Singapore special treatment if Singapore
is a free-trade slut. Granting tariff-free access to one's market is a special
relationship, but if Singapore is "special" to everyone, why should anyone
at all treat it specially?
1/2/02:
Nova Scotia Statehood
site found. Marcus Mayer of
Ontario USA recently found this small
website that advocates that Nova Scotia leave Canada for the United States,
whether any other province does so or not. It seems not to be actively monitored
by its creators. Certainly neither XP nor USI has been contacted after various
of our officers left messages at that site. Still, its argumentation stands,
and we hope that whoever created the site will follow up such expressions
of interest as have been posted to its message board.
(If you'd like to be notified when something
new is added to the Expansionist Party site, rather than have to check
periodically yourself, please e-mail us
and we will alert you to additions.)
Featured Older Items
Permit us to commend your attention to the following items of
special interest. And don't forget to check our
Subject Indexes for other areas and topics
you might be interested in.
NO to War Against Iraq! A c.
31,000-word essay setting forth our reasons for opposing the then-impending
invasion of Iraq and our ongoing opposition to the occupation of that devastated
country.
10/9/01: A Modest Proposal
for Redrawing the Map of Canada as Seven States and One Territory of the
United States. This page sets forth the thinking of Lionel Berry, a Canadian
colleague from Oshawa, Ontario, on the boundaries that new states to be created
from Canada should have. It is Mr. Berry's view that lines of economic and
cultural force mandate different boundaries into the future from the lines
drawn in creating Canada's provinces many years in the past. The one area
he suggests remain a territory rather than become a state to itself or part
of a larger state is Nunavut, the territory created by Canada to give Eskimos
/ Inuit self-government. XP responds to this part of Mr. Berry's program
and discusses the terms "Eskimo" and "Inuit" in a related
webpage. Further discussion of this proposal, with alternative maps,
has been added in a separate page as well.
9/16/01:
Securing the United States' Future:
View from New
Zealand. This is a summary of the
Expansionist Party's program for English-speaking (re)union as seen by a
New Zealander. We feel he has understood well the way the various 'pieces
of the puzzle' fit together to make a greater whole than the mere sum of
its parts. If in looking at the range of areas on which XP has so far produced
webpages, you haven't seen a comprehensible pattern, Gene O'Sullivan reveals
the pattern in this presentation, stitching the patchwork into a quilt.
Our
program is even grander than Mr. O'Sullivan sets forth, involving,
eventually, the whole world and including alternatives for Russia to inclusion
in an ambitious (and potentially dangerous) European Union, plus a closer
relationship with the Indian Subcontinent and other areas. But as far as
it goes, Mr. O'Sullivan's piece brilliantly encapsulates the rationale
behind the United States' defending the future by prudent geographic enlargement
now.
9/16/01: One Plan for
the Boundaries of Six British States: A British
suggestion. George
J. Carty of Durham, England, has created a map to show one possible way to
create six new States of the United States from the present United Kingdom
(less Northern Ireland, which XP proposes be reunited with Ireland as a seventh
state to be created from the British Isles). He proposes that most of the
states take historical names. That means for England, which he proposes be
divided into four states, that the three ancient Anglo-Saxon kingdoms provide
the names for three of the new States.
At that site, the map appears, with notes and some queries for readers,
at a size large enuf to enable people to read the names and boundaries of
counties, which Mr. Carty's map also shows in his preferred alignment.
Naturally it is not in either Mr. Carty's power nor ours to set such
boundaries, but this proposal does provide talking points.
Associated with this page is a second page,
for comments.
8/15/01: Acción Privada
para Unión de México y los Estados
Unidos (Spanish-language version of our presentation
"Private Action for Mexican-U.S. Union"). Esta
presentación es una traducción primitiva de una presentación
originalmente escrita en inglés (como abajo), creada primariamente
por medio del programa traductora Babelfish del servicio Internet Alta Vista.
Nosotros hemos ensayar mejorar el texto literal que este programa ha creado,
pero no somos personas de habla española. Perdone este texto tan
desmañado. Si un indivíduo bilingüe puede ayudarnos en
crear una traducción educada, por favor contáctanos. La
version en inglés es la definitiva.
4/29/01:
The Indian Subcontinent and the United
States: A Partnership In Waiting. This presentation,
about 12,000 words in length and profusely illustrated with the sights of
South Asia, addresses problems that Subcontinent nations cannot solve alone,
and suggests that the United States can provide the help, of many types,
that will enable the region to emerge from its long travail into the modern
era. Such help would not be one-sided charity but could powerfully advance
U.S. interests in, among other things, preventing a catastrophic war with
Communist China.
2/20/01:
USI:
United States International: XP has connected with a
number of other statehood-minded websites and individuals to create a new
alliance to promote the idea of statehood for various areas, worldwide. We
all hope to make people in and out of government, inside and outside the
United States, realize that many wise people believe that the common good
would be well advanced by having more of the world joined under the Constitution
of the United States. Different groups have different views, each retains
full freedom of action, and none imposes upon other members of the alliance
an obligation to back them in everything they say. But we hope to make plain
by the number of different sites from different areas of the globe that comprise
USI, that statehood for any given area is not absurd, because there
are a lot of places whose people may very well believe that joining
their region to the United States would be a great advance for humankind.
USI hopes not just to become "Statehood Central" the one place media,
politicians, and their staff look to for information on statehood movements
worldwide but also to inspire people all over the world to form new
statehood organizations in their own region.
2/27/01: "Waking from a
Nightmare World". We have slightly revised and moved
to our main site our former supplemental homepage on CompuServe, which focuses
on the horrendous conditions that make life for far too many people on this
planet a grinding misery that ends only with early death. Our other presentations
try to take a positive approach, but you can't fully understand the urgency
with which we pursue our program unless you also understand the horror
and anger with which we view the current condition
of the world. We have, alas, much to add to this bare outline of the world's
miseries, but the subject is so depressing that we may put off completing
it while we address more hopeful topics in proposals that, if acted upon,
will alleviate the miseries we deplore. The world can wake from its present
nightmare, but not without radical reorganization.
12/21/00: A visitor to our site told us of a Canadian
website that advocates merger of Canada into the United States. We have read
thru that page and its links, and are very favorably impressed, so urge all
our visitors interested in Canada to check out that site,
"United North
America: Amalgamation of Canada and the United States of
America". UNA has many links that might be especially
useful for non-Canadians who would like to know more about Canada and about
the attitudes of pro-U.S. Canadians toward moving to the U.S. as individuals
(and perhaps, by extension, into the U.S. politically, as a group). See
particularly the
"Canada's
Brain Drain" and
"Relocating from
Canada to the Twin Cities" sites and an
"Unbiased
Comparison" (of Winnipeg and Minneapolis/Saint Paul).
(United North America is a Charter Member of
United States
International.)
Another site of interest (12/26/00)
is
"American
Millennial Order" (AMO), which begins "We are world
citizens who believe that nations should join the United States of America
politically, economically, and ideologically in order to strengthen the American
constitution and promote civil liberties throughout the world in this new
millennium."
11/14/00:
An Ontario statehood group is
forming. A young businessman in Hamilton is forming a group to promote
statehood for Ontario by itself, without reference to the rest of Canada.
He believes, and a case can plainly be made that he's right, that Ontarians
would do much better for themselves as Americans than as Canadians: lower
their taxes; reduce the drain on their resources in transfer payments to
other provinces; renounce expensive and pointless bilingualism/biculturalism
and pursue their own, English-speaking culture; gain real power to affect
decisions in Washington that control key aspects of Ontarians' lives; and
resolve, at long, long last, the conflicted "identity" they have as "North
Americans" who want to be just-plain "Americans" but who were raised to be
"Canadians". He wants Ontarians to be able to pursue a positive future, stop
fighting the endless battle over "identity", and stop throwing good money
after bad in the hopeless effort to keep Canada internally united but separate
from the United States. His basic questions for Ontarians seem to be, "What
are we fighting against? Inclusion in the power center of the most powerful
nation in the history of the world? Why would anyone fight that?" Ontario
USA has a handsome and informative website but has not yet coalesced
into a working membership organization. If you are in or from Ontario and
want to help create an Ontario statehood group, contact
marcusmayer@ontariousa.org.
(Ontario USA is a Charter Member of
United States
International.)
12/11/00:
MANIFESTO of USA Statehood
(based in Metro Manila). The Philippine statehood movement, long inactive,
is reviving. (USA Statehood is a Charter Member of
United States
International.)
[Animated XP logo contributed by
Todd G. Sutherland
of Mississauga, Ontario]
Expansionist Party internal info
Membership: For people curious about what XP membership entails,
we have created (1) a short page of general
information about the nature of Party membership, dues, etc., and (2) a
membership application in printable form.
Staff: XP has no paid staff but is a small, international
organization that relies wholly upon volunteers. For more information about
the Chairman, see his personal homepage at
http://members.aol.com/Schoonmakr.
We also have a Chairman's Advisory Council of members the Chairman
especially relies upon for advice and assistance.
Here is a quick alphabetical list of geographic areas the Expansionist
Party has addressed, which are described more fully at our
Subject Indexes page:
Afghanistan
Australia
Bhutan
Britain
Canada
Cuba
Guyana
Haiti
India
Iraq
Ireland
Mideast
Mexico
Nepal New
Zealand Pacific island
territories Pakistan
Panama
The Philippines
Puerto Rico
Quebec
Russia
South
Africa South Asia
Sri Lanka
Third World development
United Kingdom
United States
West Indies
Check out a
printable flyer with tear-off tabs for posting
on bulletin boards. This, initial version deals with world union under the
Constitution. There is a more limited goal, North American union
(U.S. and Canada)
advocated at United States International's website. If you'd like to post
either flyer in your area, please (a) fold back and forth several times
on the line between the tab area and main text so that if someone rips off
a tab, a chunk of the message won't come off with it, (b) cut each tab
free from the others, and (c) put it up only in legally permissible
display areas, such as bulletin boards you are authorized to post to, public
kiosks, etc.
(If you discover any nonworking links on this site, please
tell us. Thank you.)
Flags courtesy of the FOTW
Flags of the World website.
(This is the end of the XP Home page)
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