101 Reasons to move to New Hampshire

What really make Places like Idaho and Montana more free than NH is population density. The most freedom is gained by being far away from government authority. They can't police vast areas like they can little bitty states like NH.
 
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What really make Places like Idaho and Montana more free than NH is population density. The most freedom is gained by being far away from government authority. They can't police vast areas like little bitty states like NH.

:confused:

Roger that.

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What, pray tell, is a "good job" at policing?

I was more making the point that you're never out of their reach.
And you whole premise is off the point I was making. You get by with living your life a lot more free when you don't have law enforcement patrolling every day. Vast area with low numbers of enforcers see to that. It is not about whether you are completely out of reach. I know that better than you do.
 
What really make Places like Idaho and Montana more free than NH is population density. The most freedom is gained by being far away from government authority. They can't police vast areas like they can little bitty states like NH.

Sure they can. People tend to live in clusters in cities and town central areas. That's even more true in the West with ranches over a mile in size and water is harder to come by than in Northern New England. A lot of the land out West in owned by the federal government and has no or almost no people living on it, anyway. I really don't understand your point at all.

Here are the places where the vast majority of people live, especially in the West (the clusters).
http://www.census.gov/geo/maps-data/maps/pdfs/thematic/2010ua/UA2010_UAs_and_UCs_Map.pdf
 
Not only to some British think of libertarian when they think of New Hampshire, but people in New Hampshire are more likely to Google Ron Paul than people in any other states. See a pattern?

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What do people in New Hampshire Google the most? Cats, Fireworks, Ron Paul, Free Kittens, Ellen DeGeneres and Live Free or Die.

Analysis: You can pet New Hampshire’s cats when you pry them from our cold, dead hands!
Look up what the people where you live Google more than the people of any other state. http://blog.estately.com/2014/05/yo...ica-from-each-states-internet-search-history/

Some British people were asked to describe each of the United States. The words used to describe the states were put on regional maps. Only one of the following words was used: Liberty, Freedom, Free and Libertarians. The word was only used once. It was used to describe New Hampshire.

All of the regional maps.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/tomphillips/the-stereotype-map-of-every-us-state-according-to-british-pe

Here is the regional map that includes New Hampshire.
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When I hear that the FSP has a totally confidential system where you register your email & cell numbers along with your battle rifle caliber, which can be activated at a moment's notice to respond to the type of shit we see daily on this site with a Bundy style confrontation, then I'll consider it to be an effective organization.
 
When I hear that the FSP has a totally confidential system where you register your email & cell numbers along with your battle rifle caliber, which can be activated at a moment's notice to respond to the type of shit we see daily on this site with a Bundy style confrontation, then I'll consider it to be an effective organization.

Fisharmor, that's not at all what the Free State Project is about. It's just about encouraging 20,000 liberty activists to move to New Hampshire. That's the whole point of the FSP. Think of it as a bus designed to concentrate 20,000 additional liberty activists in 1 low population state that is already somewhat liberty-leaning. The idea was that everything else that had ever been tried failed so why not try something new. The top liberty activists in the nation voted on which state and New Hampshire won.

Once people move to New Hampshire, it's up to them. Lots of networks are being built in New Hampshire to help facility different activities, and so on. It's already the liberty media capital of the world and has the most jury outreach of any state. NH also has the best activist phone/voice communication system, already. There is talk of starting an alternative 911 system. There still isn't enough concentration of liberty activists in the area to get that off the group, though. That's Porc411 and it's already spreading to other states :) http://porcupine411.com/

Of course, there also isn't the problem of an insane amount of federal land of little value in NH (or anywhere in the East) that may or may not be leased to ranchers. If you are big Bundy supporters, though, you might be aware that NH had the 2nd most people out there of any state. Also a couple from NH got marriage there (a non-government marriage). Additionally, the person that ran the defenses there for over a week is a 9/12 organizer in New Hampshire. He isn't a free stater and as far as I'm aware, none of the many NH folks at the ranch were free staters. That's just the type of people we have in NH.
 
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Best, worst states to retire

If you plan on retiring soon, New Hampshire is the best state to retire in, and Nevada the worst. You can stop reading now and save yourself some time, or read on to find out more about the latest of many such lists of the best and worst places to retire.

10 best states for retirement:

New Hampshire. It's a safe and cheap place to live. Its cost of living is 89% of the national average and the average state and local tax burden is 7.6%, putting it among the lowest in the U.S. in both categories. The state ranks 48th in the nation in violent crime and in property crime. The only criteria it didn't score well in was climate.
Hawaii. Best climate and highest life expectancy, at 80 years, although the temperature probably isn't too far off that number. Hawaii has the highest cost of living in the country.

-- http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/09/23/best-worst-states-to-retire/


Pretty hard to beat Hawaii! But somehow New Hampshire did it!
 
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