'The actual filmmakers were never far behind.' (Civil War/A24)

Over the past few years, journalists and political scientists have begun competing with screenwriters to produce fictions about a second American Civil War. “Could the United States be headed for a national divorce?” asks one recent publication from Chatham House. “Imagine another American Civil War, but this time in every state,” instructed NPR, in advance of the 2022 mid-term elections. “The next US civil war is already here,” responded The Guardian.
The actual filmmakers were never far behind. This week, the movie Civil War will be released, which will show Washington, D.C. under attack by a rebel alliance of… Left-wing California and Right-wing Texas. Yes, you read that correctly.
In reality, of course, the 2022 mid-term elections came and went, leaving Congress divided between Democrats and Republicans — and without a single state seceding. But the manufactured alarm about a new civil war continues to be stoked by speculative polling. A quarter of Americans apparently support some form of secession or national division along state lines, the Washington Post reported late last year.
This talk can’t be blamed on the hysterical age of Trump — for Obama-era Democrats, there was Chuck Thompson’s Better Off Without ‘Em: A Northern Manifesto for Southern Secession. But Trump certainly prompted a renewed flurry. In 2017, the New Republic published “It’s Time for a Bluexit”, making the argument — an odd one, from the point of traditional New Deal liberalism — that inter-regional transfers of wealth from rich people in Democratic states to the poor in Republican areas, transacted through programmes such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, were unfair to affluent Democratic taxpayers. In the essay, this latter group was also referred to as “the residents of what some people like to call Blue America, but which I prefer to think of as the United States of We Pay Our Own Damn Way”.
Such talk is matched on the Right these days, with Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene the most recent to suggest that states opposed to Biden’s immigration policies might secede from the Union. And there is a history of fictional fantasies pitched towards this end of the political spectrum, with militia types and survivalists on the Right. Who else would be the target audience for America’s rich tradition of trashy novels in which God-fearing patriots overthrow the secular humanist tyrants of the coastal cities? A gentler vision of American Balkanisation was provided for the hippie counterculture by Ernest Callenbach in his 1975 novel Ecotopia, which posited a utopia created in the year 1999 by the secession and merger of the north-western states of Northern California, Oregon, and Washington.
How seriously should we take this talk of a new American civil war? Not very. It is best understood as a symbolic allegory for conventional politics, in which the bullets cast by the two sides merely symbolise votes, in the same way that the giant mutant ants or alien invaders in Fifties science-fiction movies symbolised communism or corporate conformity. But even as allegory, it gets modern America dead wrong. Because though our political divides are as vicious as ever, they would not manifest themselves as a civil war between states — but instead as civil warfare within them.
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