
South Carolina · Self-Determination
Asked plainly, nearly half of South Carolina votes to leave.
The support is here. The organized movement to carry it is not, and that is exactly what we are building in South Carolina.
South Carolinaadults in South Carolina 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 782,000 (19%). How we get this number →
South Carolina, if it stood alone
largest economy on Earth
$350 billion, ahead of Chile.
people
More than the whole of Ireland. A nation-sized population, governed from elsewhere.
seats in Congress
The other 526 are chosen by people who don't live here.
The only question that matters
South Carolina is already a nation in all but name.
If South Carolina 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
South Carolina was its own thing before it was anyone's junior partner. It ratified independence early, printed its own currency, ran its own ports, and argued about governing itself louder than almost any place on the continent. Ask South Carolinians the fair question, the one a real ballot would ask, calm and binary and peaceful, and about 49% say they would vote to leave the union. That is close to 2 million adults.
That 49% is the honest number because a ballot is not a mood. It is a yes or no, and it is peaceful, so people who would never say the abstract word out loud will still mark the box when the choice is real and put plainly. That gap runs about 30 points, which is why the calm poll floor of 19% understates so badly and why the true figure lands within reach of a majority. South Carolina is right at the edge.
What South Carolina is missing is not the numbers. It is each other. Nobody has organized the people who already agree, so they sit apart and assume they are alone. We bring the playbook and the connections from the largest independence movement in the country. We do not run your group and we do not take your money. You build what South Carolina's movement looks like.
Cast your vote
Count Me In, South Carolina
Be findable. When the next person from South Carolina 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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