101 Reasons to move to New Hampshire

New Hampshire has the lowest child poverty and the lowest percentage of children in lower middle class families.

Carsey Institute: More Than 16 Million Children in Poverty in 2011
Released: 9/20/2012 7:00 AM EDT
Source: University of New Hampshire

Percentage of children living below the poverty level:
1. NH 12%
2. MD 13.5%
3. AK 14.5%
US average 22.5%
49. NM 30.7%
50. MS 31.8%

Percentage of children living below 200% of the poverty level:
1. NH 28.5%
2. MA 30.1%
US Average 45%
49. NM 57.3%
50. MS 58.5%

http://www.newhampshire.com/article/20120920/AGGREGATION/120929942
 
In NH don't they have blood-sucking arthropods that stealthily hitch a ride on your body, bite you, and infect you with spirochetes that burrow into your brain doing irreversible damage and presenting with symptoms that are difficult to diagnose until it's too late?
 
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In NH don't they have blood-sucking arthropods that stealthily hitch a ride on your body, bite you, and infect you with spirochetes that burrow into your brain doing irreversible damage and presenting with symptoms that are difficult to diagnose until it's too late?

That sounds like pretty much every state in the US and 1/2 the world. Yes, there are ticks in NH. If you are talking about Lyme disease, specifically, it is worse in NH than most states :( However, once a tick infect (and the vast majority aren't) gets on you, you generally have 24-48 hours to remove it before the disease is transmitted.

I don't want to downplay ticks but NH and the region NH is in, is known as the healthiest region in the US. If you are afraid of ticks and need advice on avoiding them, I have lots of tips. For example, when you hike, do it in winter. Bam, problem solved. If you want to hike at any other time of the year, have someone spend 30 seconds looking at you for ticks, use bug spray, use protective clothing or shower within 24 hours of hiking.
 
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To better assess what you mean; please define "comfort" and "standard of living"? And which state(s) do you suggest are better in that respect?

Well I just moved to Washington state and the nature is spectacularly beautiful. Given I haven't made it through the gloomy winter yet but wondering if I will prefer it over the cold winters. Well I think one needs to weigh their personal priorities but I think good proximity to family is high on the list which I did not have there. I think there are severe issues with the law enforcement and very low intellectual capacity but I'm sure the same could be said for many places.
 
New Hampshire is the best again!
Report: NH ranks Last in protecting kids from tobacco
Summary: The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that New Hampshire spend $19.2 million a year to have an effective, comprehensive tobacco prevention program. New Hampshire does not currently allocate anything for tobacco prevention and cessation and as a result it ranks 50th among the states in the funding of tobacco prevention programs.
http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/what_we_do/state_local/tobacco_settlement/new_hampshire

Don't live in New Hampshire? Look up your state. http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/what_we_do/state_local/tobacco_settlement/

Edit: It gets better. NH is 50th in 2012. But for 2013, the US will add a whole new state just to point out how awesome NH is. For 2013, NH is 51st!
 
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New Hampshire has the 3rd lowest smoking rate. I guess the government wasting money on anti-smoking programs and people smoking aren't connected. No shock there.

Thursday, May 31, 2012
GoLocalWorcester Health Team
http://www.golocalworcester.com/news/new-massachusetts-5th-lowest-in-smoking-rates/

Utah, with only 10.4 percent of the population as smokers, garnered the top stop. California was second, with 15.7 percent smokers and New Hampshire was third, at 16 percent.

Kentucky, where more than a quarter of the population smokes, was at the other end of the spectrum, with 27.6 percent smokers. Neighboring West Virginia was second to last, with 26.8 percent smokers.
 
Colorado and Washington just dealt a pretty severe blow to NH in terms of relative level of libertarianism.
 
Colorado and Washington just dealt a pretty severe blow to NH in terms of relative level of libertarianism.

Not really. Taxes are substantially higher in Washington than in New Hampshire. Hell, WA is a socialist hell whole. CO has a decent amount of freedom, especially outside of Denver or Boulder. While no state is perfect, there are a whole bunch of reasons that NH is pretty good and they help explain why pro-liberty folks are moving to NH.

101 Reasons You Should Move to New Hampshire (If You Love Liberty)
http://freestateproject.org/101Reasons

Freedom in the 50 State
http://mercatus.org/freedom-50-states-2011
Let's check how things were in 2007.
NH #1
WA #45

Let's check how things were in 2009.
NH #1
WA #40
 
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December 08. 2012 8:47PM
Mike Cote's Business Editor Notebook: It's what in the glass that counts
MIKE COTE
http://www.unionleader.com/article/20121209/NEWS02/121209212

Granite Staters earned the crown by consuming 43 gallons per person of legal drinking age per year, compared to 28.3 gallons nationally, according to statistics recently issued by the Beer Institute, a Washington, D.C-based trade group.

Don't get too foamy over this. New Hampshire's No. 1 ranking, which we've held for a few years, comes with a disclaimer. We're overflowing in beer sales, in part because we're getting help from beer drinkers in Massachusetts and Vermont who stock up at our beverage stores to avoid beer taxes and bottle deposits.

Is everyone a drunkard in NH? It could be. However, NH also sells so much beer because of the low taxes and regulation. People drive to NH from CT, ME, VT and MA to buy beer. It proves freedom works.

NH is late getting into the nanobrewery business. However, free staters wrote and sponsored a bill to allow nanobreweries in NH. At least 3 nanobreweries have opened in just the NH Seacoast region since that law passed. Maybe next year the average NH adult will consume 44 gallons of beer.

December 08. 2012 8:37PM
'Nanobrewery' makes beer in small batches
By GRETYL MACALASTER
http://www.unionleader.com/article/20121209/NEWS02/121209227

PORTSMOUTH - A relatively new law is allowing a new crop of breweries to pop up in New Hampshire, serving small batches of specialty beers.

Earth Eagle Brewings is the latest nanobrewery on the Seacoast to take advantage of the law, which passed in June 2011. Blue Lobster opened in Hampton earlier this year along with Throwback Brewery in North Hampton, which is also focusing on artisanal brews using local ingredients.
 
Another reason New Hampshire is #1 in liberty is because it has the lowest percentage of elected lawyers of all the 50 states....

http://chronicle.com/article/Degrees-of-Leadership-/127797/

Nice find. Thankfully, there are pro-liberty lawyers in NH. For example, when pushing to get the informed jury bill passed, a couple lawyers spent quite a bit of time with some of the NH senators, explaining the current law and how the bill would change the law.

NH has the legislature which reflects the ideal citizen legislature better than any other state. NH likely also has the highest percentage of college students, burger flippers, cell phone salesmen, carpenters, and taxi drivers in the legislature of any state. You don't need an advanced degree, or any degree at all, to be a legislator in NH.
 
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I'm sure part of the reason Mother Jones thought New Hampshire did so well, I mean poorly, is because of free staters in the legislature. BTW, if you know any statists who are thinking about moving to New Hampshire, please share this list with them! Statists have every right to move to NH. Though, perhaps, after reading the list, statists will decide to move elsewhere.

For those of you worried about massholes moving to New Hampshire, please share this info with the statists. We have to be vigilant. NH is an amazing place and no doubt it is tempting to some statists.

New Hampshire has the 3rd Worst State Legislature according to Mother Jones
December 19, 2012
http://nhfreedom.wordpress.com/2012...-state-legislature-according-to-mother-jones/
 
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As the infograph shows, New Hampshire has the lowest murder rate in the US. NH is the top flag. Want to live in a state with very low crime? That's NH, especially outside of Manchester or Nashua.

You can either go to the sources or check the flags against this if you aren't sure which flags represent which states. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flags_of_the_U.S._states Generally, the more dangerous states are in the South and West.

VEmDx.png
 
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New Hampshire had the fewest children in poverty in 2011.

Fewer Utah children in poverty than most states
By Contributed
The Associated Press
Thu, 12/20/2012 - 2:10pm
http://www.standard.net/stories/2012/12/20/fewer-utah-children-poverty-most-states

New data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows that 16 percent of Utah’s children were in poverty in 2011 — the same rate as the year before.

That is the 11th-lowest rate in the country. It is also lower than the national average of 23 percent.

New Hampshire had the fewest children in poverty in 2011, while Mississippi had the most.
 
I'm sure part of the reason Mother Jones thought New Hampshire did so well, I mean poorly, is because of free staters in the legislature. BTW, if you know any statists who are thinking about moving to New Hampshire, please share this list with them! Statists have every right to move to NH. Though, perhaps, after reading the list, statists will decide to move elsewhere.

For those of you worried about massholes moving to New Hampshire, please share this info with the statists. We have to be vigilant. NH is an amazing place and no doubt it is tempting to some statists.

New Hampshire has the 3rd Worst State Legislature according to Mother Jones
December 19, 2012
http://nhfreedom.wordpress.com/2012...-state-legislature-according-to-mother-jones/

This was also covered by Daily Kos

FRI DEC 07, 2012 AT 06:41 AM PST
Strange Brew (In NH)
bysusantheFollow
9 Comments / 0 New
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/12/07/1167971/-Strange-Brew-In-NH#comments

They tried. They really tried. Despite all of the efforts of the last state legislature, NH only came in third place in a recent Mother Jones story about the worst state legislatures. Tennessee and Oklahoma took the coveted first and second place titles. In Tennessee there was a bill to outlaw saggy pants and one that defined miscarriages as murder. There were more, so many more, including the state rep who sent out an email warning constituents that President Obama was planning to stage a fake assassination attempt to prevent the 2012 election from happening.

Oklahoma had GOP state Senator Ralph Shortey’s bill to ensure that human fetuses didn’t get into food products, in “their search for artificial flavors.” He had no evidence that any company was doing this, or intended to, but he just wanted to make sure no one was going to have ramen noodles with fetus flavoring.

If you’re thinking that those made the Magna Carta bill and the WARNING signs at the NH border bill sound almost sane, you’re right. Ilya Gerner of Comedy Central described NH as: "a bunch of part-time real-estate agents throwing monkey feces at a wall." As Mother Jones points out, that’s not entirely fair. Some of them are lawyers, too.

NH’s newly elected legislators were sworn in on December 5. A number of last session’s worst offenders were not re-elected, but some were, and some new ones were added. Former Speaker of the NH House, Bill O’Brien barely squeaked out a win in a district gerrymandered to keep him in office. He was photographed sitting (ignominiously) in the rear of the House chamber on swear-in day. The former speaker should take heart, though. Gene Chandler was voted to be the House Minority Leader, proving that scandal and malfeasance have a short half-life in our state.

This bill comes from the same Free Stater who tried to get a bill passed to divert the Suncook River back to where it was before a big storm: in front of his house. Rep. Grifter’s river diversion bill would have cost the taxpayers of our state over $4 million. Dan McGuire is the ultimate poster boy for the FSP. He doesn’t want to pay his taxes, but he’ll happily use yours to feather his own nest. In the mind of Free Staters, everything is for sale, and there should be no such thing as public property. Next up: Mount Walmartshington!

NH has a new legislature, but we still have the same NHGOP, comprised of Tea Partiers, Free Staters, and John Birchers. At first glance, these may seem like disparate groups, but they are all interconnected. In fact, their origins can all be traced to the same place. Koch Industries. The Koch Brothers are the financial engine behind the Tea Party. Fred Koch was a founding member of the John Birch Society, and Free State Project founder Jason Sorens is an affiliated scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. The Mercatus Center is a think tank funded by the Koch Family Foundation. On the FSP web forum just last month, Sorens was huffy about being portrayed as having ties to Mercatus. Evil forces, apparently, are making this all up. His bio on the Mercatus Center website must have just landed there by accident. We are all defined (to some extent) by whom we take money from. He’s a guy who hates all things public, who teaches at a taxpayer-funded university. Sorens is no stranger to hypocrisy.

Many folks are surprised to find that the John Birch Society still exists. They associate the JBS with commie scares and being anti-fluoridation. These days they’ve turned their sights on the UN. Apparently the UN is the purveyor of all that is evil, and is just waiting to turn us into “one world” where we all join hands and sing kumbaya together. Or something. It was rumored that there were 12 Birchers in the last legislature. The only one to publicly acknowledge it was Norm Tregenza, whose re-election bid was unsuccessful. The others weren’t brave enough to come out as Birchers. The same is true for the Free Staters, most of whom do not acknowledge their ties to the FSP. Why? Both groups are unpopular. They also wish to avoid scrutiny. It wouldn’t help the FSP at all to have their ties to the JBS uncovered and discussed.

For those who don’t remember, the JBS opposed the Civil Rights Movement. Their president, Robert Welch, called Eisenhower a communist and a traitor. Their new hobbyhorse is the UN’s Agenda 21, and they sent a known white supremacist to Conway, to lead a discussion on a film about it.

In fact, the Northeast Regional Field Director of the JBS, Hal Shurtleff, has been turning up on the Sun’s op-ed pages and FB page. I owe my thanks to Mr. Shurtleff for his vociferous defense of a former state rep and Free Stater, which inspired me to dig for the connections between the groups. These two groups may have some surface areas of disagreement, but they speak at each other’s events and conferences. They share members. They’re two peas swimming in the same cup of libertea that the Tea Party has been brewing.
 
I want to join FSP. 3 hangups.

Wife not interested in politics. Would not be interested in moving for political reasons. Would divorce me and take the kids for sure.
Dad still alive and very tied to our family's 1850's homestead here in the Oregon Territory (Western Washington State), and the older he gets, the more he needs me.
Business doing well and well established with a steady profit flow here in my area.
 
I want to join FSP. 3 hangups.

Wife not interested in politics. Would not be interested in moving for political reasons. Would divorce me and take the kids for sure.
Dad still alive and very tied to our family's 1850's homestead here in the Oregon Territory (Western Washington State), and the older he gets, the more he needs me.
Business doing well and well established with a steady profit flow here in my area.

No need for her to move for political reasons. Nh has the lowest crime, lowest deep poverty, lowest poverty, lowest child poverty, is the most livable, has low traffic, low pollution, no income or sales taxes, property taxes on average just a little higher than in OR but lower in some towns. It is the best place to raise kids. It also has mountains, lakes, rivers and beaches like OR. The beaches are even warmer. It is a quick train, flight or bus to Boston or NYC if you wanted to visit high culture. It has the smartest people, access to the best private schools, near the best public schools in the US. It has the lowest liquor prices and near the lowest cigar prices in the US. It has low beer and wine prices and compared to OR, low gas prices.

Check out 101 reasons to move to NH. A lot of the reasons aren't political. http://freestateproject.org/101Reasons

A couple moved from OR to NH. They are both NH state reps. The wife is in her 3rd term and the husband in his 2nd. Both FSPers.

I recommend visiting NH during Liberty Forum or Porcfest. You don't have to move right away. Come visit for 3 days, talk to people and check it out for yourself. Liberty Forum is only $99 right now plus hotel and meals. If you fly into Manchester, the hotel picks you up so you don't need to rent a car. These events happen in Feb and June.

If it comes to it, you could decide to move on your own and live in NH 1 more day a year then you live in OR. For example, around 150 days a year in NH, around 149 days a year in OR and the rest of the days somewhere else. I know 2 guys that did that from FL. They still see their families the majority of the year but it involves both them and their families traveling a handful of times a year. You could sell the business, higher a manager or so on.

No need to rush into moving. I highly recommend visiting and if you like it, at least promote it a little, even if you don't move.
 
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Hm this is very interesting to me. In three years I'll be transitioning to graduate school, so maybe I'd consider one of the various top universities (for Physics) in Massachusetts and commute to there from New Hampshire. However; I'm not sure if I'd want to live there permanently. My home is Pennsylvania, and while it doesn't have the great political diversity of New Hampshire, it is my home and has been the home of my ancestors (at least some of them) since the colonial era. At the same time I'd love to help move things forward, and spending some time in another state might not be too bad, especially when it is one as awesome as New Hampshire seems to be.
 
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