101 Reasons to move to New Hampshire

More good news for NH. Well, not really. More bad news for folks outside of NH.

http://www.thirdage.com/news/vaccines-in-massachusetts-to-be-kept-track-of-in-registry_10-05-2011

Ironically, Massachusetts, the birthplace of public vaccination programs, is one of two states without statewide registries to track who gets vaccinated, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. New Hampshire is the other state without such a registry.

So in a few months, it is expected that NH is going to be the only state in the nation with this freedom. It's pretty common for NH to be the only state without regulation X. For example, there is no requirement for adult seat belt use or auto insurance in NH. We don't even have a driving learner's permit program or as I call it, a tax on parents, in NH.
 
New Hampshire has the most liberty-minded people too! I love New Hampshire!!
 
New Hampshire not only has near the least restrictive motorcycle laws in the US (no helmet required, even for kids). Here is a map that shows NH as one of only 3 states like this.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2010-11-16-motorcycle-helmet-laws_N.htm

NH has around the most bikers per capita
http://forum.freestateproject.org/index.php?topic=24528.msg271286#msg271286

NH has near the lowest motorcycle deaths per registered bikers
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-03-26-bikehelmets_N.htm

NH has one of the largest motorcycle rallies in the US
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorcycle_rally

Also, in response to actions that were happening in another state, a bill which prohibits the acceptance of federal funding for motorcycle-only roadside checkpoints became law in NH. http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/bil...sortoption=&txtsessionyear=2011&txtsstatus=10
 
Last edited:
To be with droves of Mitt Romney supporters? And have fraudulent elections?

Mitt Romney is doing the best in many if not most states. He has been give more money from more people in more states than any of the other candidates, also.

According to this map, Ron Paul is doing best in NH
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?322939-State-by-state-polling&highlight=state+poll+map

According to this paper, Ron Paul did better in NH than any other primary state in 2008
http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~jsorens/rpvotes.pdf

As for the 2008 election in NH. Many voters were recounted and it was found that there may have been some minor fraud. However, the final results were almost the same as the initial results.

NH certainly isn't perfect. No place is close to perfect. However, NH may be the freest place in the industrial world and I do think that many of the reasons to move to NH posted in this thread are good reasons to move (especially when combined.)
 
Last edited:
There is a national trend of state government's increasing fees. However, the opposite is happening in New Hampshire where fees are being rolled back.

No doubt, without the help of liberty loving people that moved to NH, some of these roll backs wouldn't be possible.

http://www.sacbee.com/2011/10/17/3985421/a-backlash-against-rising-state.html

In New Hampshire, a legislature taken over by Republicans this year slashed most fee increases enacted since 2007. For example, the cost of a marriage license dropped from $50 back down to $45, and the cost of a saltwater fishing license slid from $15 to $10 for state residents. Businesses saw fees drop, as well. Renewal fees for meals and rooms operator licenses were eliminated. And pet stores will now pay $150 less for their initial licenses and renewal, dropping from $350 to $200.

The fee reductions took effect in September and are projected to cost the state $5.7 million for fiscal year 2012. That's roughly 0.1 percent of the state's budget. The moves came at a time when the state's overall budget was reduced by 11 percent, resulting in significant cuts to social services and highway repairs, as well as layoffs for government employees.

On the other hand, in the rest of the country,
According to annual fiscal surveys by the National Association of State Budget Officers and the National Governors Association, new fees enacted for fiscal year 2010 amounted to more than $5 billion. By fiscal 2011, the amount had dropped to $1.2 billion. For fiscal 2012, governors proposed $1.3 billion in fee increases; data on the enacted amount have not yet been released.

For example,
A sampling of fees that states have increased in the past year:

-Colorado increased the price of an annual parks pass from $60 to $70, and a lifetime pass from $175 to $300.

-Maryland doubled the fee to receive a copy of a birth certificate from $12 to $24.

-Rhode Island increased the price for parking at state beaches from $6 to $10 on weekdays and from $7 to $14 on weekends and holidays.

-Montana raised the price of an elk hunting license for nonresidents from $593 to $812.

-Ohio raised the financial disclosure filing fee for people running for state elected office from $65 to $95.

-Hawaii increased a rental car surcharge from $3 per day to $7.50 per day.

-Oregon doubled the annual application fee for the medical use of marijuana from $100 to $200.
 
To be with droves of Mitt Romney supporters? And have fraudulent elections?



I will not argue about fraudulent elections, but I am pretty sure New Hampshire is far from the 'only' one with this problem. Watch Hacking Democracy. ;) We have got to demand paper ballots with hand count. Any kind of electronic voting can easily be hacked and rigged.

I drive a lot across the state and I do not see many Romney signs. I do see a lot of Gary Johnson signs, and a few Ron Paul signs, more than Romney signs.
 
Last edited:
More Poor Kids in More Poor Places
Released: 10/18/2011 7:00 AM EDT
http://www.newswise.com/articles/more-poor-kids-in-more-poor-places

“Nearly 22 percent of America’s children live in poverty, compared with 14 percent of the total population. Poverty is scattered and geographically concentrated, and it ebbs and flows with economic cycles. However, in some parts of the country, poverty has persisted for generations,” the researchers said.

According to this new report, child poverty is lowest in NH and NH has had less issues with both poverty and child poverty than any other state for 4 decades in a row. DE also does well compared to other states although that is starting to change in DE.

In fact, if you look at the maps in the pdf file, you will notice that in every map NH does best. Additionally, the region which does best is the region surrounding NH.
http://www.carseyinstitute.unh.edu/publications/IB-Mattingly-Persistent-Child-Poverty.pdf
 
www.freestateproject.org/files/101-Reasons-to-Move-to-NH.pdf

With over 8,000 members already signed up, there is little argument against this cause. In fact the only good argument is the cold weather.

But that will be taken care of soon enough. Until we take over more regions, just how Liberty-minded are you?


www.freestateproject.org

The economy in a Republic does work as a free market when people from the socialized communist states pick up to move to the more individualistic free enterprise states. People aren't going to move though when the government continues to extend unemployment benefits and issue trillions in food stamps to keep them in place. On top of this, the financial industry ripped off the people making their homes worthless. So, people can't move if they can't sell their homes. But they now seem to be realizing that their communist state and city governments ripped them off.
You know, as we now know, you never have a communist government in terms that it works. How does it not work? Well, millions of people are about to lose their homes to a banking industry that was just bailed out by the people.
In the process, the so-called "double dip" recession that is about to happen will be the people picking up to abandon the homes they have lost to move to places where they can earn a living along with feeling more secure about the housing market located there
At least the people didn't buy into president Obama this last time when he claimed to be able to magically pull a national recovery from his hat. This means they are getting up as his audience to leave the show which is going to amount to a mass exodus of people moving from the northern and western states to the nation's interior and southern states.
Whether or not the people roll over to vote for him when president Obama slaps us on the butt is another story. We tend to like it when the fellow with the golden voice stands up to do one of his classic cock-a-doodle-doos.
 
Last edited:
NH (along with MO) is one of 2 states without a prescription drug monitoring program.

The databases track prescriptions so doctors can access patients’ records to determine whether they already have multiple orders for a narcotic. Pharmacists can flag police if they suspect a doctor or clinic is dispensing an unusually large amount of painkillers. Police can use the records to bolster their cases against “pill mills” that dispense massive quantities of pain pills with little or no examination of patients.

I'm sure we all agree that these programs are costly to taxpayers and violate civil liberties. However, it gets worse. States are starting to link their programs with other states. This is becoming a big freedom issue. A national database is forming.

In August, Kentucky and Ohio became the first states to link their databases to make it tougher for addicts in one of the states to avoid detection by visiting a doctor in the other. Those states joined with West Virginia and Tennessee in an interstate alliance to coordinate databases, laws and investigations to try to keep pill mills shut down in one state from popping up across the border.

Kentucky and Ohio have already broken the code,” says Bruce Grant, former executive director of the Governor’s Office of Drug Control Policy in Florida. “By agreeing to provide information to pursue investigation, you won’t have people jumping back and forth over state lines and doing this with impunity.”

Last month, the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy launched a database hub that allows a doctor or pharmacist to retrieve painkiller prescription data from any state linked into the hub, Executive Director Carmen Catizone says. Ohio, Indiana and Virginia have linked in and 20 other states have agreed to do so this year, he says.
http://www.dailyrecord.com/article/...50022/States-try-to-crack-down-on-pill-mills-

There are different levels of databases:
NH, MO are best because they don't have a database
Schedule II PA
Schedules II-III RI, WI (HB332, the NH bill that will very likely fail, calls for adding NH to this category)
Schedules II-IV AZ, CA, FL, IA, KS, ME, MN, NV, NJ, NM, OR, SC, SD, VT, VA, WV, WY
And the worst states on this issue are the Schedules II-V states of AK, AL, AR, CO, CT, DE, GA, Guam, HI, ID, IL, IN, KY, LA, MA, MI, MS, NY, NC, ND, MD, MT, OH, OK, TN, TX, UT, WA
http://www.pmpalliance.org/content/prescription-monitoring-frequently-asked-questions-faq

Though, NH isn't out of the woods, either. USA Today published an editorial calling for NH to enact such a law. http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinio...-painkillers-with-prescription-monitoring.htm That was horrible of USA Today but at least it allowed a former New Hampshire Liberty Alliance board member and former New Hampshire Liberty Alliance Legislator of the Year to write an opposing view. http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinio...-prescription-monitoring-in-New-Hampshire.htm

Bills to create such a horrible database have come up 3 times in the past and were defeated all 3 times, even when Democrats controlled the state. A bill this year to do so failed to leave a house committee. It will likely leave the committee at some point but likely be defeated. Let's hope so! If you live in NH, please stay informed. If you don't please consider moving to NH and helping us stop this issue next time it comes up. As a national database forms, there will be increased pressure from national groups to pass a bill in NH. Follow the bill here, http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/bil...tion=&txtsessionyear=2011&txtbillnumber=HB332
 
Last edited:
NH is #1 again :)

http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs091/1104610489644/archive/1108315118648.html
State Tax Revenues Continue Upward, Rockefeller Institute Reports

But local tax collections slide downward, while national economy clouds forecast for states
Albany, N.Y. ---- State tax revenues grew by 10.8 percent in the second quarter of 2011, and by 8.4 percent annually for the period that ended the fiscal year for 46 states ---- marking six straight quarters of growth and the strongest annual gains since 2005, according to the latest State Revenue Report from the Rockefeller Institute of Government.

For the second quarter, every state but one (New Hampshire) reported an increase in overall tax collections compared to the year-ago period, according to Institute research and U.S. Census Bureau data. Nineteen states reported double-digit percentage increases.

The reasons that state tax revenues changed are because of changes in tax policy and/ or economic changes. As for economic changes: oil and/ or gas production expanded in AK and ND so those states saw large increases in tax revenue.

As for tax policy changes:
some states increased taxes like CT and IL
some states cut corporate taxes like FL
some states changed the way corporations are taxed like NH
some states cut other taxes
 
Last edited:
A new study came out. Here are some of the NH related results.

Mathematics 2011
NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS AT GRADES 4 AND 8
http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/pdf/main2011/2012458.pdf

2011 math scores for 4th graders
US average 240
MA #1 253
NH #1 252

Least Below Basic scores
MA #1
NH #2

Most Proficient scores
NH #1
MA #2

Most Advances scores
MA #1
MN #2
NH #3

Lowest percentage of 8th grade students eligible for free/ reduced lunch in 2011
NH #1 at only 23%
 
I think the free state project is fantastic. It's clear it's made a difference. I think continuing the NH Free State Project is important. They need to reach their goal of 20,000 people/families moved.

Without taking anything away from NH, I think someone could start a Free State Project II for the state that got second place, which is Wyoming. For example, if you want to sign up to move to Wyoming you must state on the application why you aren't moving to NH.
 
Back
Top