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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1142454)6/17/2019 9:30:00 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578897
 
"I'd be fine with a trade. Jefferson's statehood for D.C.'s statehood"
That's nice I'd be happy with statehood for both DC and PR.

"They won't even allow the issue on the ballot because they don't think it's a valid question"
Why don't the Jeffersonians take them to court?

Splitsville: Californians Have Tried—and Failed—200 Times to Divide The State

By Vicki Haddock

The seething Northern Californians had decided enough was enough—it was time to quit the state for good.

Rancor bubbled through the counties of Siskiyou, Shasta, Del Norte, and Modoc in 1941. Chief among residents’ grievances: Their roads were like washboards in the summer and mud baths in the winter. They felt overtaxed—steamrollered by Southern California and ignored in the capital. And so they announced their intention to secede from California, to join with rural Oregon and form a new state. The Yreka Chamber of Commerce planned to call it Mittelwestcoastia, but a newspaper contest procured a catchier alternative: Jefferson.

Soon the rifle-toting renegades were throwing up roadblocks on Highway 99, handing stopped motorists a proclamation of independence and windshield stickers emblazoned with “I have visited JEFFERSON, the 49th State.” The Jefferson state seal featured a mining pan marked with XX—symbolizing how double-crossed people felt by the California down yonder. Selecting a local judge as governor, they staged a torchlight parade/inaugural extravaganza. The San Francisco Chronicle dispatched Stan Delaplane, whose reports on the rebellion would win a Pulitzer Prize. Even Time and Life magazines and Hollywood newsreel makers covered the December 4 inaugural.

Three days later, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, and Jefferson faded into oblivion.

Well, not quite. It continues today as what locals call “a state of mind.” Several businesses still fly the double-cross flag. A network of FM stations refer to themselves as Jefferson Public Radio, and the secessionist spirit flickers on. “We have nothing in common with you people down south. Nothing,” lumber mill manager Randy Bashaw told a Chronicle reporter when the paper revisited the secessionist tale a few years ago. “The sooner we’re done with all you people, the better.”

alumni.berkeley.edu