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D

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Nov 19, 2007, 3:04:53 PM11/19/07
to American Secession Project
I want to help. What can I do?
- D

Matthew.Cember001

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Nov 20, 2007, 1:31:48 PM11/20/07
to american-sece...@googlegroups.com
I want to help. What can I do? - D

At this stage in the game, I believe that reading books, participating in things on-line, and educating yourself and the others around you are absolutely enough. That's just my opinion though. We all (myself too) need to have more awareness of what is going on with our local governments.

winmail.dat

webm...@davrie.net

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Nov 20, 2007, 8:53:55 PM11/20/07
to American Secession Project
Matt.Cember has the best advice, but I would also add that it would be
helpful to survey the secessionist movements existing in North America
today. Your e-mail address suggests that you might be from Michigan,
which had a movement that is now dormant, which you might want to
investigate.

Otherwise, look at the Middlebury Institute site (http://
www.middleburyinstitute.org/), their registry of North American
secessionist organizations (http://www.middleburyinstitute.org/
registrynorthamericanseparatists.html), and a very comprehensive list
of secessionist and seditionist movements in North America at
http://www.angelfire.com/nv/micronations/usa.html .

Harold D. Thomas
The Ohio Republic
http://ohiorepublic.blogspot.com .

Mik Nichols

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Nov 21, 2007, 1:30:32 AM11/21/07
to american-sece...@googlegroups.com
I'm actually in DC, but i'm originally from Detroit. Where should I look to find a DC group (or northern VA/MD)? Is there a centralized movement yet? If so what can I do to help recruit and if not what would it take to create one?
- D

 

webm...@davrie.net

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Nov 21, 2007, 7:48:05 AM11/21/07
to American Secession Project
Mik:

Realistically, I don't think you're going to find any secessionist
groups in DC or Maryland, and the only shot that I know of for
Virginia would be one of the Confederate reconstructionist groups like
League of the South (www.dixienet.org), which I also imagine would be
a very hard sell in Arlington or Alexandria. (I lived in the DC area
35 years ago, but I doubt it has changed much with respect to
secessionism).

In Washington, the two best things you can do are to contact Carol
Moore, a secessionist theorist (www.carolmoore.net) -- caution, site
looks chaotic because she has a lot of interests... and consider not
so much how DC or Northern Virginia is going to secede, but how best
to promote Federal policies favorable to secession.

Harold
http://ohiorepublic.blogspot.com

On Nov 21, 1:30 am, "Mik Nichols" <mich...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm actually in DC, but i'm originally from Detroit. Where should I look to
> find a DC group (or northern VA/MD)? Is there a centralized movement yet? If
> so what can I do to help recruit and if not what would it take to create
> one?
> - D
>
> On 11/20/07, ohrepub...@davrie.net <webmas...@davrie.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > Matt.Cember has the best advice, but I would also add that it would be
> > helpful to survey the secessionist movements existing in North America
> > today. Your e-mail address suggests that you might be from Michigan,
> > which had a movement that is now dormant, which you might want to
> > investigate.
>
> > Otherwise, look at the Middlebury Institute site (http://
> >www.middleburyinstitute.org/), their registry of North American
> > secessionist organizations (http://www.middleburyinstitute.org/
> > registrynorthamericanseparatists.html), and a very comprehensive list
> > of secessionist and seditionist movements in North America at
> >http://www.angelfire.com/nv/micronations/usa.html.
>
> > Harold D. Thomas
> > The Ohio Republic
> >http://ohiorepublic.blogspot.com.
>
> > On Nov 19, 3:04 pm, D <mich...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > I want to help. What can I do?
> > > - D- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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