Evolving & Reinventing The Western Hemisphere

By: James Allen Homyak

-- to think outside the box --

If the people on the Western Hemisphere land masses are to continue on in nationalisms of one flavor or another, then I propose a revision to the interrelationship between our land masses from the farthest south all the way to the farthest north and from the farthest west to the farthest east. 

Imagining that space, what do we now call it geographically? We section it off based on events from long ago.

  • Greenland;

  • North America - Canada, United States, Mexico;

  • Central America - Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama;

  • South/Latin America - Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela;

  • Caribbean - Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago;

Thinking boldly, and outside the box, if we were all nationalists, what would the list of countries be looking like, internationally speaking, if we as a people were to do something innovative with all of the area in question?

Attached is a link to my PDF which simply does this. It will allow you to download and print a list of the entire western hemisphere -- where each line item is a country, with its own flag, and its own borders and its own nationality of its people.  No longer would there be a federal government -- as we tried that once and it failed after 250 years. 

United Countries Of The Western Hemisphere - TWH

A bold new way to remake the sovereignty of 140 various countries full of people.

A people who each get a piece of this source code to run better home systems than any of us have ever had. Better than iOS. Better than Android. Better than Windows. Better than Linux. Imagine a 'FAFO-based home system' that runs on 'your language model' to achieve peace, harmony, equality and abundance amongst all the people -- without any repeat from the likes of the ancient Barbary Coast. 

~ James Allen Homyak
Minnesota, TWH