
Mississippi · Self-Determination
Asked plainly, nearly half of Mississippi votes to leave the union.
Nearly half of Mississippi is already there. There is just no organized movement for it here yet, and that is exactly what we are here to change.
Mississippiadults in Mississippi would back independence when the question is asked the way a ballot asks it: calm, binary, and peaceful. That's about 49% of the state.
Even the understated abstract poll counts 433,000 (19%). How we get this number →
Mississippi, if it stood alone
largest economy on Earth
$157 billion, ahead of Ethiopia.
people
More than the whole of Slovenia. A nation-sized population, governed from elsewhere.
seats in Congress
The other 529 are chosen by people who don't live here.
The only question that matters
Mississippi is already a nation in all but name.
If Mississippi were already a self-governing nation, with its own border, its own money, its own defense, everything two hundred other nations control, and the vote in front of you was not whether to leave, but whether to join the United States on the terms it offers today, would you vote yes?
Cast your vote
Mississippi was settled by people who cleared their own ground and answered to the county before they answered to anyone farther off. Self-government is not a slogan here. It is a habit. On a fair, plainly worded ballot asking whether Mississippi should leave the union, about 49% of Mississippians say yes. That is roughly 1.1 million adults, close to half the state.
That 49% is the honest number because it measures the real decision. A ballot is a quiet, private, peaceful yes or no. It is not a stranger's provocative survey question. When you ask people the calm binary way a vote is actually put, support runs about 30 points above the abstract poll. That gap is what carries Mississippi to the edge of a majority. Even the detached YouGov version already reports 19%, and that is only the floor.
Mississippi leaned Republican in 2020, and that matters less than you think, because governing yourself is not a red idea or a blue one. What is missing here is not the numbers. It is each other. We bring the playbook and the connections that link you to the largest independence movement in the country. We do not run your group and we do not touch your money. You decide what a Mississippi movement looks like, and you build it.
Cast your vote
Count Me In, Mississippi
Be findable. When the next person from Mississippi reaches out, we connect you. That is how it starts.
We don't run your group. We don't take your money. We bring the playbook, the standard, and the connections. What you build is yours.
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