In
the world of scenario planning, the fact that something is
unthinkable should not prevent us from considering it. The breakup
of the Soviet Union was unthinkable almost until the day it
happened. At the same time, of course, not every impossible thing
will happen.
Among the most unthinkable scenarios for most Americans is the
unthinkable idea that the United States could become the disunited
or turn into divided states. Even though this union accumulated
very slowly in the first place, and against all odds -- in other
words it was not inevitable -- the fact that the USA will not
always be as united, or at least united in the way it is now, is
considered, well... unthinkable.
But
as Juan Enriquez notes in his amazing
PopTech talk, based on
his book
"The Untied States of America: Polarization,
Fracturing, and Our Future", no US
president has ever died under the same flag that he was born under.
That is, the borders of the United States has constantly shifted
even in modern times. The last state was added in 1959 (after I was
born!) and more could be added still. Americans are comfortable
ADDING states, but it might not take much to subtract one. The
outcome of the US Civil War has biased Americans to disbelieving in
subtraction, but that might change.
In
past decades bold American thinkers have imagined how the US might
break up, but these were more thought experiments indicating the
cultural differences within this large country. There's no shortage
of maps showing the alternative arrangements of North American
countries. One of the finest is Joel Garreau' s 1981 scenario of
the
Nine Nations of North America.