- Joined
- Feb 3, 2013
There is a lowkey "Bavexit" movement in Bavaria, they want to secede from the Federal Republic of Germany and form their own nation.
Bavaria may be somewhat similar to California (with the exception of being largely conservative and not liberal/libertarian): Little raw materials, lots of light industry and agriculture, large tourism sector. Still, a secession could probably work, as the Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg and some others show that even very small nations without raw materials can function. Maintaining power and water supply is a must, of course.(Switzerland, being an alpine country, has no problems in this respect, this is also true to a somewhat lesser extend for Bavaria.)
If California constructed a large number of new nuclear plants and added desalination facilities -- as was done for some time experimentally at San Onofre NPP -- they probably could achieve water and power independence. Tourism, entertainment industry and hightech industries could keep the cash flowing. Thus, a secession might work, theoretically. It would need years of planning, building new infrastructure and creating political bodies, though. Washington DC would need to be persuaded somehow to let them go (unless they want to start a second Civil War). I think it could be possible, but it would have to be a long-term project, not something you do overnight because you dislike the current central government.
Bavaria may be somewhat similar to California (with the exception of being largely conservative and not liberal/libertarian): Little raw materials, lots of light industry and agriculture, large tourism sector. Still, a secession could probably work, as the Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg and some others show that even very small nations without raw materials can function. Maintaining power and water supply is a must, of course.(Switzerland, being an alpine country, has no problems in this respect, this is also true to a somewhat lesser extend for Bavaria.)
If California constructed a large number of new nuclear plants and added desalination facilities -- as was done for some time experimentally at San Onofre NPP -- they probably could achieve water and power independence. Tourism, entertainment industry and hightech industries could keep the cash flowing. Thus, a secession might work, theoretically. It would need years of planning, building new infrastructure and creating political bodies, though. Washington DC would need to be persuaded somehow to let them go (unless they want to start a second Civil War). I think it could be possible, but it would have to be a long-term project, not something you do overnight because you dislike the current central government.