The first session of the legislature (to be held one time each year, no more than two weeks in length) was probably among the shortest on record, anywhere. Major Voltan, a spokesman from the second district, summed it up.
“Why are we meeting?” he asked. “Our laws are set, they can only be changed by a clear mandate from the people. No one in my district wants anything changed.”
Nor in any of the other districts, it seemed.
“The Constitution states we must meet once a year in session.” Ben spoke.
“To do what?” a farmer spokesman inquired.
“To debate issues,” Cecil said.
“What issues?”
There were none.
“Like the Congress of the United States?” a woman asked. “We're supposed to behave like they do?”
“More or less,” Cecil said.
“God help us all.”
Laughter echoed throughout the large room.
“I move we adjourn so we can all get back to work and do something constructive,” Voltan said.
“Second the motion.”
“Session adjourned,” Ben said.
Tri-states’ laws, the liberal press said, and even after a nuclear war the press was still controlled by liberals, constituted a gunpowder society.
They were correct to a degree.
But those reporters with more respect for their readers and viewers—and they were outnumbered by their counterparts—looked at Tri-states a bit more closely and called it an experiment in living together, based as much on common sense as on written law. Most of those reporters concluded that yes, Tri-states could probably exist for a long, long time, and it was no threat to America. And, yes, its citizens seemed to be making the Tri-states’ form of government work, for they were of a single mind, and not diversified philosophically.
But could this form of government work with millions of people? No, they concluded, it could not.
And they were correct in that assumption ... to a degree.
But most people can govern themselves, once basic laws are agreed upon;
That a people must be bogged down in bureaucracy; beset by thousands of sometimes oily, rude, arrogant, and frequently hostile local, state, and federal “civil servants"; licensed, taxed, and harassed; ruled by a close-knit clan of men and women whose mentality is not always what it should be and whose weapons are power; be dictated to by judges who are not always in tune with reality; and yammered at year after dreary year that a couple of senators and a handful of representatives have the power to decide the fate of millions ... is a myth.
And Tri-states proved it.
There was not much pomp in Tri-states. Ben's governor's mansion was a split-level home on the outskirts of Vista. In good weather he rode to work in a Jeep.
Ben was on the road a lot, visiting the districts, listening to grievances, if any; and they were few. But of late, the one question asked, the one question paramount in the minds of Tri-states’ residents was: what happens when we open our borders?
The residents had met in open town meetings (something that was required by law before any decision affecting the lives of the citizens was initiated) and finally had decided to open their borders to the public, if any persons wanted to visit. They had been wholly self-contained for almost six years. Maybe it was time.
But most viewed the border openings with highly mixed feelings.
The Tri-states’ communications people contacted the major TV and radio networks, and the major papers, asking if they would like to cover the opening of Tri-states’ borders.
All did.
“Now the shit really hits the fan,” Ike projected.
The driver of the lead bus brought it to a hissing halt and motioned for the chief correspondent of CBN to come to the front. “Take a look at that, Mr. Charles.” He pointed to a huge red-and-white sign that extended from one side of the road to the other, suspended twenty-five feet in the air. Other buses and vans stopped and discharged their passengers. Cameras focused on the sign and rolled, clicked, and whirred.
“It hasn't been up long,” a reporter from Portland said. “I've been out here a half-dozen times during the past six months and this road has always been blocked. And no sign.” He looked at the message.
WARNING—YOU ARE ENTERING THE TRI-STATES. YOU
The international symbol for “danger—keep out” was on either side of the huge sign.
“I think I want to go home.” A young lady grinned. In truth, a mule team could not have dragged her from the area.
The knot of press people, sound people, and camera-persons laughed. Clayton Charles put his arm around the young woman's shoulders. “Come, now, Judith—where is your sense of journalistic inquisitiveness?”
“Well, the nuke and germ war came so fast no one had a chance to cover it. So, maybe this will do.”