By Tommy Acosta —
Forget about it. There is just no way around it. The Home Rule concept is one of those ideas that taps into something deeper than budgets, formulas, and government accounting.
Think about it.
Why did the American colonies rebel against England? At its heart, it was a struggle over self-government. People wanted a say in how they were governed and how their money was spent. They did not want to be ruled by a monarch across an ocean telling them what they can or can’t do.
Americans have always had a powerful attachment to freedom and governing themselves.
And that brings us to one simple word: home.
There is something deeply rooted in the human psyche about home. Think of Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz clicking her ruby slippers together and repeating, “There’s no place like home.” Think of the old saying, “A man’s home is his castle.” Think of all the songs ever written about coming home, going home, missing home, or protecting home.
Home is more than a place. It is an idea.
It is where we live. It is where we raise our families. It is where we build our lives. It is where we feel we belong.
That is why debates over Home Rule often become about much more than numbers on a spreadsheet.
Supporters see Home Rule as local control. They see it as the ability of a community to make decisions for itself rather than having those decisions dictated by formulas established elsewhere.
Opponents see things differently. They argue that government spending should have limits and that outside restraints can help prevent excess. They believe fiscal discipline is necessary and that local governments should not always be trusted to police themselves.
Both sides have arguments.
But what makes Home Rule such an interesting issue is that it reaches beyond logic and into emotion.
The word itself carries enormous weight.
Home.
People instinctively understand it. They relate to it. They connect with it.
Look at how deeply that word is embedded in American culture:
- Home plate — where every run begins and ends.
- Home run — the ultimate success.
- Home field advantage — where your tribe gathers.
- Home town — where your roots are.
- Home sweet home — perhaps the most famous phrase of all.
- Bring the troops home.
- Home of the free and the brave.
- A man’s home is his castle.
- There’s no place like home.
You can practically trace an emotional map of America through the use of that single word.
Historically, Americans have often embraced local control, local decision-making, and skepticism toward distant authority. The American Revolution itself was rooted in disputes over taxation, representation, and self-government. While the comparison isn’t exact, the symbolic appeal of “local people making local decisions” is undeniably powerful in American political culture.
Whether discussing a nation, a state, a city, or a neighborhood, most people naturally feel protective of the place they call home.
That is why Home Rule debates often become so passionate. They touch on something fundamental: the desire to have a voice in the place where you live.
Reasonable people can disagree about spending priorities, budgets, and government performance. Those debates are healthy and necessary.
But the enduring appeal of Home Rule may ultimately come from something far simpler.
Home.
So, it’s a noble effort trying to convince Sedona voters to say no to Home Rule. Well organized well discussed. Well deserved.
Logically, it all makes sense and it’s logical that one would want to curb a government that’s “gone wild” with out rules to keep it financially in check.
But logic has nothing to do with this. It’s all about heart. It’s all about feeling. It’s all about conditioning. It’s all about what we believe in. It’s all about what the subconscious mind believes is the right thing to do.
And that is to protect your home and our right to govern ourselves.

