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Legitimacy
ByIf Kikuyus feel that their main loyalty should be toward the Kikuyu then there mere fact that the Kikuyu may be outnumbered by the Luos isn't going to carry much weight. In the US, pretty much everyone thinks of themselves as owing primary allegiance to the United States. But it wasn't always thus. During the Civil War, at least some Southerners agreed to abide by the decisions of their respective state governments to secede without necessarily believing that secession was the best move on the merits. These days, the number of Americans who seriously contest the legitimacy of the United States of America as a decision-making unit is trivial, which is what makes things like Orson Scott Card's Empire so preposterous.
But that sense of agreement about the legitimate level of decision-making doesn't just happen inevitably because you live in the same borders with some other people. In Iraq, clearly, you don't have it just as Chechens seem disinclined to treat "Russia" as a legitimate unit and just as how the Irish in the early 20th century didn't view their right to elect members of parliament in Westminster as adequate compensation for the absence of national self-determination.





























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