101 Reasons to move to New Hampshire

In 2010, 42% of LibertyCandidates.com endorsed candidates that were elected lived in New Hampshire
http://nhfreedom.wordpress.com/2012...tes-that-were-elected-lived-in-new-hampshire/
In 2010, LibertyCandidates.com endorsed 255 candidates for office. Of those 255 candidates, 12 were elected. 5 or 42% of the 12 candidates ran for office and won in New Hampshire.
How many candidates will LibertyCandidates.com endorse in 2012? How many of the candidates will win? How many of the winning candidates will live in the Live Free or Die state?
 
We've talked about this before, and the problem that I have with taking the feds funding on projects like this, is, in this particular case, the string attached that surveillance cameras be installed along the road.

I am totally with you. I wish the federal and state governments would stop spending money on traffic efficiency cameras and related technology. Here is a photo of what it looks like on the inside the Concord transportation management building.

555708_3973840917034_874688541_n.jpg
 
New Hampshire leads U.S. in tree cover
Published: Aug. 6, 2012 at 3:42 PM
http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2012/08/06/New-Hampshire-leads-US-in-tree-cover/UPI-30801344282163/

There is a reason millions of people drive to Northern New England every fall to look at the trees change colors.

No wonder so many people use firewood to partially or completely heat their homes in the winter in NH. Despite Northern New England being by far the most forested area in the US, you almost never hear of a major forest fire in NH. Major forest fires are common in CA, AZ, NM, TX, CO, WY and MT.

Outside of Northern New England, places with lots of tree cover include CT, MA, RI, AL, WV and PA.

Tree cover in the lower 48 U.S. states amounts to 659 million acres, more than one-third of the country, a U.S. Forest Service study has found.

New Hampshire leads the nation in percentage of tree cover at 89 percent, followed by Maine with 83 percent and Vermont at 82 percent, a Forest Service release reported Monday.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, North Dakota has the lowest percent tree cover with just 3 percent, followed by Nebraska at 4 percent and South Dakota at 6 percent, the release said.

Boring story time. Why is an area which was one of the first areas in the US heavily settled by Europeans the most heavily forested area in the US? Wouldn't people have cut down most of those trees in the 1700 and 1800s? Yes, people did cut down many of the trees. Whole areas of NH used to be used for sheep. However, in the 1800s, due to trade, sheep production moved away from NH. Many ranchers decided to plant trees on their hills. Most of those trees have been cut down and replaced, replaced with more trees.
 
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NH and best state parks in the US go hand and hand

The List: America’s 20 Best State Parks
by brendan leonard on August 7, 2012
http://www.adventure-journal.com/2012/08/the-list-americas-20-best-state-parks/

Out of the 20 state parks listed, the NH listing is the longest. NH is also the smallest state listed so it has the most top 20 state parks per square foot.
2. Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire
It would to be hard to argue for a single spot in the White Mountains that contains more diverse awesomeness: Franconia Notch State Park is home to the biggest and baddest adventure climbing in New England, an aerial tramway for less-risky sightseeing, the New England Ski Museum, trout fishing, hiking, and one of the oldest ski resorts in North America. Until 2003, it was also home to the Old Man of the Mountain, the stone face jutting out of Cannon Cliff that became a New Hampshire icon, but, like all of us, eventually succumbed to time and fell down.

This isn't just a 1 list type of thing. Another listing of the best state parks in the country lists the same NH park. On this list, the NH park also has the longest description. Again, NH is also the smallest state on the list.

Best State Parks in the USA
http://www.americasbestonline.com/state.htm
New Hampshire
Franconia Notch State Park - Franconia Notch State Park is located in the heart of the popular White Mountain National Forest. Franconia Notch is a spectacular mountain pass traversed by a unique parkway which extends from the Flume Gorge at the south to Echo Lake at the north. Franconia Notch was once the home of the famous Old Man of the Mountain, the same "Great Stone Face" immortalized by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Daniel Webster. While you are here, visit the Flume Gorge Visitor Center and walk through Flume Gorge, ride the aerial tramway at Cannon Mountain, and explore the New England Ski Museum. Also, you can swim at Echo Lake, net a trout while fly fishing at Profile Lake, ride your bike on the Recreational Trail, watch for rock climbers, hawks, and falcons on Cannon Cliffs, or hike on the Appalachian Trail.
 
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If I get to move it's Montana for me; open space, small cities and good recreation. I have been to NH, I like it but it is way too tight for me.

I did find it cool you can just walk into the NH State House without minimal security hassle. Hopefully they didn't change that, it feels nice being on equal footing with the government.
 
Privatize the parks!

IMO, NH has made more reforms towards that ends than any other state. For example, in 1991, NH became the 1st state park system to become self funding. I beleive that is a distinction NH still holds.
http://heartland.org/policy-documents/new-hampshires-self-funding-state-parks

NH was the "first state park system, for example, to experiment with differential pricing of its campsites, visitor satisfaction monitoring, and carrying capacity limits."
http://heartland.org/sites/all/modules/custom/heartland_migration/files/pdfs/4779.pdf

"New Hampshire was the first state to sign an exclusive beverage sponsorship agreement within its state parks."
http://rockefeller.dartmouth.edu/shop/prs_privatization_brief_final_062612.pdf

In 2010, HB 1378 passed.
AN ACT establishing an adopt-a-state park program in the state park system and establishing an adopt-a-forest fire tower program in the division of forests and lands.
It is an interesting bill. Check it out. http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us/legislation/2010/HB1378.html
 
Internet access, computer usage and internet speed, New Hampshire tops all 3 categories!
August 14, 2012
http://nhfreedom.wordpress.com/2012...et-speed-new-hampshire-tops-all-3-categories/
New Hampshire leads the nation in internet access, computers in homes and internet speed. According to the US Census Bureau, 86% of NH households are on the internet and 91% of NH households include at least 1 computer. On average, 76% of US households are online. See the raw data or pretty maps.

New Hampshire takes a back seat to only Delaware when it comes to internet speed. In the 1st quarter of 2012, DE had an average connection speed of 10.2 Mbps. That is only 9% faster than the average connection speed in NH according to Akamai. The average speed in the US was 6.7 Mbps. The average speed in the world was 2.6 Mbps. NH’s average connection speed is remarkable considering the population density. According to Wikipedia, the population density is 464.3 people per square mile in DE and 147.0 people per square mile in NH.
 
i am concerned with all those damn massachusetts liberals moving into the free state. Also, are Paleo-Conservatives encouraged to be in New Hampshire.

Pochy1776, I assure you, you are not the 1st person to bring this up. Heck, you are not the 1st person to bring this up in this thread :)

I am not sure how this rumor got started, but it has been shown to be false. In fact, I think I've presented the evidence more than once on this forum. The top 3 reasons people move from MA to NH are because it is less liberal, have lower taxes and in less expensive. The people who move from MA tend to be overall socially liberal and fiscally moderate. In other words, they tend to be a combination of libertarians, liberals that don't want to pay taxes and conservatives that aren't governed strongly by the pope.

However, that was when a lot of people moved from MA to NH, which happened from the 1970s until a few years ago. That stopped a few years ago. People aren't moving around very much in New England, anymore. In fact, the number of FSPers who moved to NH in 2011 is equal to about 10% of the net migration to NH that year.

As NH becomes more and more free compared to the rest of New England, expect even less liberals to move to NH. Younger liberals have been leaving NH for decades. Expect that to continue.

As for paleo-cons, 1 of the most famous political paleo-cons in the US is Pat Buchanan. In 1992, Pat ran for President and his "candidacy relied heavily on a strong showing in the New Hampshire primary." "Buchanan seriously challenged Bush (whose popularity was waning) when he won 38 percent of the seminal New Hampshire primary." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Buchanan#1992_presidential_primaries

Not only did Pat surprise the US by doing so well in NH in 1992, he actually won it in 1996. "Dole won the Iowa Caucus with 26% of the vote, a considerably smaller margin of victory than was expected. In the New Hampshire Primary, Buchanan recorded a surprising victory over Dole, who finished in second place."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republican_Party_(United_States)_presidential_primaries,_1996

NH is probably as pro-peace/anti-war as any Republican leaning state, if not more so. NH is also the most anti-tax state in the US. When it comes to abortion and gay marriage, NH is likely the least socially conservative Republican leaning state. A plurality of Republicans are opposed to both in NH, but it isn't a majority.

As for welcoming paleo-cons in NH, I would think so. Many of the towns lean overwhelmingly Republican. You would likely be very welcomed in many of those towns (Bedford, Amherst, Litchfield, Goffstown, Windham, Salem, Derry, Weare...). I would certainly welcome you as a FSPer as long as you agree with the FSP statement of intent. It goes something like, "I will exert the fullest practical effort toward the creation of a society in which the maximum role of civil government is the protection of life, liberty and property." It is basically you saying that you are at least a minarchist and will take at least some action of your choosing once you move to NH.
 
Those 8,000 people who self-identify with the FSP don't really care about liberty. Where were those 8,000 during the height of the primary season? If even half those people joined the RP Campaign to knock on doors and make phone calls, we'd have the entire state covered.

Forget about that; if those 8,000 so-called activists actually decided to get trained, we'd have a liberty governor, senators and congressman from NH by now. Instead, it seems as though NH is anything but liberty because they keep voting for people like Mitt Romney and Judd Gregg.
 
Those 8,000 people who self-identify with the FSP don't really care about liberty.

which 8,000? There are 12,000 people who have signed the statement of intent but only 1,000 have moved to New Hampshire so far

Where were those 8,000 during the height of the primary season?

If we're talking about the same group of people then they were probably in states other than New Hampshire, because only 1,000 have moved so far

If even half those people joined the RP Campaign to knock on doors and make phone calls, we'd have the entire state covered.

I did guerilla grassroots stuff, PAC stuff, and volunteered for the official campaign. Most of the early movers helped in some combination of the aforementioned realms.

Forget about that; if those 8,000 so-called activists actually decided to get trained, we'd have a liberty governor, senators and congressman from NH by now.

Who is going to pay for us to get trained and who is going to train us? I have gone attended leadership institute, campaign for liberty, and young americans for liberty training sessions with early movers before. i've always considered these to be a complete waste of time. nothing but a networking opportunity. but i'm always open to try sometthing new. all of our activism has been learning experiences. we have have politicians already with only 1,000 movers.

Instead, it seems as though NH is anything but liberty because they keep voting for people like Mitt Romney and Judd Gregg.

as keith has posted time and time again, new hampshire got more ron paul endorsements for legislators and more votes per person than any other state. nh is not perfect but performed better than any other state...
 
Best Quality of Life in CNBC's Top States For Business 2011
http://www.cnbc.com/id/43344770/Best_Quality_of_Life_in_CNBC_s_Top_States_For_Business_2011

Businesses in; Hawaii, New Hampshire, and Vermont can rest easy knowing their employees enjoy top 3 positions for the best Quality of Life, according to CNBC's Top States For Business 2011 rankings. Not so for Delaware, Louisiana, and Alabama, which all tied for worst this year.

Overall Rankings - 2011

http://www.cnbc.com/id/41666602
 
Those 8,000 people who self-identify with the FSP don't really care about liberty. Where were those 8,000 during the height of the primary season? If even half those people joined the RP Campaign to knock on doors and make phone calls, we'd have the entire state covered.

Forget about that; if those 8,000 so-called activists actually decided to get trained, we'd have a liberty governor, senators and congressman from NH by now. Instead, it seems as though NH is anything but liberty because they keep voting for people like Mitt Romney and Judd Gregg.

Hey man, I understand that you didn't want to read the whole thread. It is totally cool if you are pressed for time or whatever. I think shemdogg answered some of your questions pretty well.

As for the training part, I've attended a lot of training events but it's the real world stuff that really helps. As for political real world stuff, we got a lot of that happening in NH. We had by far the most success of any state in the country in 2011 when it came to changing the laws. The same is true for 2012. Much of the 2011 stuff is documented but I'm holding off for awhile to document much of the 2012 stuff.

As for electing pro-liberty people, it is pretty well known around here that there are more pro-liberty legislators in NH than the rest of the country combined. We also have more pro-liberty people running for office in 2012 in NH than the rest of the country combined. So yeah, people in NH are a lot more likely to vote for liberty candidates than people in other states...

As for Ron Paul, IMO, he did better in NH than in any other state in 2012 but I understand how people can disagree. It depends what factors you look at. I'm not going to post a dozen links in this thread because I've already posted the stuff again and again in this forum. I'll post 1 link and if you disagree with anything I just wrote, I urge you to check it out. Thanks.
http://freestateproject.org/intro/ron_paul
 
is NV more libertarian than AZ or NM?

To a point yes. Lived in NV for 12 years. FYI NV gets snow (Everywhere north of Clark County). The problem with NV is Henderson and Vegas have a huge control on the state, Californians have been shifting NV to a less free route, high mormon population (proves to be a bias voting block), and the government owns a lot of the land. With NV's desert and water rights issue, i would choose elsewhere for when SHTF. If i would choose a libertarian state in the west i would say Montana or Colorado over the ones you listed. Then the Dakotas.
 
To a point yes. Lived in NV for 12 years. FYI NV gets snow (Everywhere north of Clark County). The problem with NV is Henderson and Vegas have a huge control on the state, Californians have been shifting NV to a less free route, high mormon population (proves to be a bias voting block), and the government owns a lot of the land. With NV's desert and water rights issue, i would choose elsewhere for when SHTF. If i would choose a libertarian state in the west i would say Montana or Colorado over the ones you listed. Then the Dakotas.


NM has Open Carry and Medical Marijuana, doesn't it? sure, those aren't the only two things that measure freedom, but they are pretty big indicators of freedom on both sides (conservative and liberal) if you as me.

I know that Montana, Colorado, and the Dakotas might have Firearm Freedom Acts, but until they actually ASSERT them to the Feds, i don't see it going anywhere.

so, are we talking about business, tax, and property rights (water) freedom that is the deciding factor that puts NM behind the others? i mean, NM produced Gary Johnson, so it can't be all that bad, can it? but then again TX produced (or was adopted by) Paul, and while TX is better than some, its not the best either, i guess. not WORSE than Fl, though, especially considering everybody the non-stop raining and humidity (=motorcycles and homes without good AC are almost useless)
 
I know that Montana, Colorado, and the Dakotas might have Firearm Freedom Acts, but until they actually ASSERT them to the Feds, i don't see it going anywhere.

so, are we talking about business, tax, and property rights (water) freedom that is the deciding factor that puts NM behind the others? i mean, NM produced Gary Johnson, so it can't be all that bad, can it? but then again TX produced (or was adopted by) Paul, and while TX is better than some, its not the best either, i guess. not WORSE than Fl, though, especially considering everybody the non-stop raining and humidity (=motorcycles and homes without good AC are almost useless)

NM is place where liberty lovers should be leaving. It is the least free part of the Southwest (unless you include CA). NM has OK personal freedom compared to the rest of the US. So, if you love personal liberty but don't work, live 100% of welfare, and want to live in the Southwest, than NM is for you. Otherwise, it is pretty horrible.

http://mercatus.org/freedom-in-the-50-states/NM
Freedom Rankings for NM
#37 Overall
#45 Economic
#10 Personal

MT is freer than NM
http://mercatus.org/freedom-50-states-2011/MT
Freedom Rankings for MT
#29 Overall
#25 Economic
#33 Personal

TX isn't doing well but it is certainly a step up from a NM and MT.
http://mercatus.org/freedom-in-the-50-states/TX
Freedom Rankings for TX
#14 Overall
#15 Economic
#12 Personal

Anyway, NH blows all of those states away. As you can see, NH isn't perfect but it is much freer that states like MT and NM. Plus, we are making positive changes and 1000s of pro-liberty activists are either moving or NH or agreeing to move to NH in the future. That certainly isn't happening anywhere else in the world.
http://mercatus.org/freedom-50-states-2011/NH
Freedom Rankings for NH
#1 Overall
#2 Economic
#11 Personal
 
Men's Health looked at 100 cities in the US to see which cities were the best cities for dog owners.
http://www.menshealth.com/best-life/best-dog-cities

We crunched the per capita numbers of dog parks (Trust for Public Land), dog-friendly apartments (Apartments.com), vets (MyVeterinarian.com), animal shelters (Petfinder.com), and pet stores and services, along with the percentage of dog owners (both SimplyMap). Finally, we factored in state laws against animal cruelty, dog fighting, and puppy mills (Humane Society).

Manchester, NH was the only city in NH included in the study. Some states, such as CO, FL, TX, CA, NC, OH and so on had multiple cities included in the survey.

If you average all of the cities looked at in each state and than rank the states, the order is:
1. OR
2. DE
3. WA
4. NH
5. CO

Top 10 Most Dog Friendly Cities According to Men's Health
1. Portland, OR A+
2. Colorado Springs, CO A+
3. Wilmington, DE A+
4. Seattle, WA A
5. Denver, CO A
6. Tampa, FL A
7. Manchester, NH A-
8. St. Louis, MO A-
9. Pittsburgh, PA A-
10. Las Vegas, NV A-

While a couple cities in CO did really well, Aurora, CO was #16 B+ so all CO cities aren't equally as good. The same is true for FL - St. Petersburg, FL #23 B-, Orlando, FL #33 C+, Miami, FL #39 C and Jacksonville, FL #72 D+.

 
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In many states, State Representatives make $100,000+ per year, get retirement, have medical benefits, have staff, a state car and even an office. In NH, State Representatives don't have any of that. In fact, they don't even have air conditioning in Representative Hall. I know, I've been to meetings in the room and it can be hot and very uncomfortable. In fact, sometimes water is passed out so State Representatives don't pass out from the heat.

However, State Representatives do get some perks in New Hampshire. They get a salary of $100 per year. They also get to use a locker. Here is one of the more popular NH Reps showing off the locker he was allowed to use. Yes, he is pro-liberty :)
394388_434749719901613_1214118535_n.jpg
 
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