Middling America is somewhere between the United States and 'Merica. This blog is dedicated to exploring data on the "Typical American's" views on social and political trends.
Showing posts with label South Dakota. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Dakota. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
What If: The Missouri and Crittenden Compromises
One of the more fascinating theories in modern physics is the concept of the multiverse where each decision made creates multiple universes. So, in one universe you chose strawberry ice cream today. In another you chose chocolate. In another you chose vanilla. It opens the door to wondering what if such-and-such has happened differently in another universe.
My partner is taking an American history class this semester and on a long car trip we read American history to each other. Of interest to me was the Missouri Compromise. For the past 15 years I have lived two blocks from the former home of Henry Clay, the early 19th century Kentucky master politician who guided the passage of the Missouri Compromise through Congress. I was intrigued about the geopolitical implications of this law if it had continued into later American history.
For those of you -like myself- a little hazy about the Missouri Compromise, it was a law passed in 1820 to keep the peace between the Southern and Northern states. Forty-four years after the Declaration of Independence, the North and South were quickly becoming very different Americas. Both regions economies were primarily based on agriculture, but the North was rapidly industrializing and desired a stronger Federal government that would invest tax dollars in industrial and transportation infrastructure and place higher tariffs on foreign imports. Slavery was also largely illegal in the North. The South on the other hand was politically ran by the plantation-based, export-oriented planters making up 1% of the South's population. While most Southerners were small farmers of modest means, racism, pride, and political manipulation by the very wealthy still led the white male Southern voter to support the slave economies pushed by the wealthy planters. In the South industrialization was far less advanced. Instead the Southern planters exported much of their cotton, indigo, sugar, and tobacco crops overseas to Great Britain and other European buyers. They then bought manufactured goods -and tea- from the British and other Europeans. Thus, Southerners developed a taste for sweet tea and a distaste for tariffs on foreign imports which raised their costs. Southern planters and their local allies opposed a strong Federal government which was suspected of wanting to abolish slavery.
The number of Southern Slave states and Northern Free states were about even by the early 1800s. A crisis ensued when Missouri and Maine applied for statehood. Slavery already existed in Missouri but there was a move to ban slavery in the Louisiana Purchase. After various political tussling, Henry Clay was able to broker and pass the Missouri Compromise that banned slavery in the former Louisiana Purchase north of 36 degrees 30 minutes of latitude (Missouri's southern boundary) except for Missouri. So, Missouri was admitted as a slave state and Maine as a free state. By 1837 there were an even 13 free states in the North and 13 slave states in the South. This uneasy peace lasted until 1854 when the Nebraska-Kansas Act replaced the Missouri Compromise with a system to let Nebraska and Kansas vote individually on whether to be a slave or free state.
When Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860 precipitated South Carolina and other Southern states to secede, another Kentucky politician, John Crittenden, offered a new compromise: extend the 36° 30′ Missouri Compromise line all the way to the Pacific. The so-called Crittenden Compromise failed to pass, and the Civil War ensued.
This map asks what could have happened if the Crittenden Compromise had passed and the South then not seceded. Instead, what if the same uneasy peace of the 1820-1854 had become an entrenched system. Without the South's secession to provoke Federal military action, would the horror of slavery been abolished by 2014? Would the system of admitting two states -one slave and one free- to keep the balance have continued? This map explores this scenario and is based on historical facts:
a. In the US of the Missouri and Critten Compromises, slavery is abolished largely north of the 36° 30′ parallel.
b. Without the Civil War to initiate its breakaway from Virginia, the counties that now constitute West Virginia remain part of the Virginia.
c. To even the free and slave state balance, the Dakota Territory and the Oregon Territory are admitted as single states rather than as North Dakota, South Dakota, Oregon, and Washington. And the once larger Deseret dreamed of by Mormon settlers has come into existence as the state of Deseret, the combination of Utah and Nevada. Keep in mind that some of the first white settlers of Nevada were Mormon farmers who established towns such as Las Vegas.
d. California on the other hand has been split into the free North California and slave South California roughly along 36° 30′ but actually along the Kern-Tulare County boundary.
e. Alaska has been admitted as a free state, but Hawaii and its sugar plantations have legalized human bondage.
f. Arizona, New Mexico, and Oklahoma have been admitted as slave states.
g. When the US annexed the former Mexican province of Texas (by then the independent Republic of Texas), the terms of annexation allow Texas to split into 5 states. This has happened to create North, South, East, West, and Central Texas.
h. Finally, even with 5 mini-Texases and other states, the South is still shy 3 states to have parity with the North. History, however, shows that Southern planters advocated annexing or buying Cuba and other Caribbean islands with a long history of slavery and plantation agriculture. In this scenario Cuba is now a state along with Puerto Rico and the combined US and British Virgin Islands.
The result is a nation of 54 states: 27 free states and 27 where the abomination of slavery still remains legal.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
I've been on the road this past week, so here is a newly updated marriage map with a number of changes:
a. There are now only three states without a lawsuit seeking same-sex civil marriage: Montana, North Dakota, and Alaska.
b. Georgia finally came on board the marriage lawsuit train as has South Dakota.
c. The 6th Circuit Court issued a stay on a Tennessee judge's order for the Volunteer State to recognize three same-sex couples as legally married while their lawsuit progresses.
d. One of the handful of out gay Federal judges heard a lawsuit seeking to overturn that state's anti-marriage constitutional amendment and legalize civil marriages there. The state's attorney general also feels the amendment is unconstitutional and so there is no one defending the law before the court.
e. Alaska's Supreme Court also ruled this week that the state's refusal to give the same tax exemptions to same-sex couples as it gives to opposite-sex couples was discriminatory and unconstitutional.
f. And finally an Idaho cemetery for veterans refused the request of an elderly lesbian veteran to be buried with the ashes of her late partner under the claim that Idaho's state constitution prohibited recognition of the couple as married. This woman who lived her life serving our country responded that she has spent her life being discriminated against and guess that this would not end with her death. Sad.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Same-sex Marriage Lawsuits: The Holdouts
17 states now have same-sex civil marriages. The Federal government recognizes legal same-sex marriages regardless of in which state a couple live.
In all but 9 of the other states, there are now active lawsuits seeking the state benefits of marriage and the ability to marry in these states. The 9 holdout states listed in order of 2013 estimated populations are:
In all but 9 of the other states, there are now active lawsuits seeking the state benefits of marriage and the ability to marry in these states. The 9 holdout states listed in order of 2013 estimated populations are:
- Ohio, 11.6 million*
- Georgia, 9.9 million
- Mississippi, 3 million
- Kansas, 2.9 million*
- Nebraska, 1.9 million*
- Montana, 1 million*
- South Dakota, 0.8 million
- Alaska, 0.7 million*
- North Dakota, 0.7 million
Those states with an asterisk ("*") do not currently have lawsuits directly seeking the legalization of same-sex marriage, but they do have pending lawsuits involving related issues such as listing spouses on death certificates, listing step-parents on birth certificates, recognition under workplace law, foster parenting, etc. These related lawsuits could impact marriage legalization overall.
So, the real holdouts are the couples in Georgia, Mississippi, and the Dakotas who have yet to file suit.
Labels:
Alaska,
gay,
Georgia,
Kansas,
law,
marriage,
Nebraska,
North Dakota,
Ohio,
South Dakota
Monday, February 3, 2014
Map: Where You Are Most Likely to Be Stuck in a Part-time Job
This map looks at the percentage of workers who want a full-time job but can only find part-time work. In technical terms, this map shows the highest rates of underemployment in the United States.
The Western states of Nevada, California, Oregon and Washington have considerably higher underemployment. North Dakota and South Dakota have low overall unemployment and relatively few part-time workers unable to find full-time work.
The Western states of Nevada, California, Oregon and Washington have considerably higher underemployment. North Dakota and South Dakota have low overall unemployment and relatively few part-time workers unable to find full-time work.
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