Free State Wyoming, a free state for Westerners and those who can't move to New Hampshire

I visit regularly for hunting. If I could find some good bottom land at a reasonable price, I might think about it.
 
Must you be registered to view the forum ? It says "sorry guest, you are banned from using this forum ". I've never visited this site, how can i be banned :)
 
Must you be registered to view the forum ? It says "sorry guest, you are banned from using this forum ". I've never visited this site, how can i be banned :)

Only libertarians would think the way to grow an activist movement is to start it in the middle of nowhere. I drove through Wyoming once. It was the most desolate place I've ever seen. Ice and rocks dotted with sheet metal villages and factories belching smoke, and maybe the occasional ranch. That was just the part you can see from the interstate. It made Nebraska look exciting and civilized.

Why doesn't someone start a migration movement in a place that people actually want to be in? Washington or Oregon?
 
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Wyoming has desolate parts if you are driving through it because it is a large area of land. Can you tell me what part you drove through. There are many cities in Wyoming you just probably didn't drive through them. A migration movement would never work in Washington or Oregon because of statist population centers eg. Portland and Seattle. You would hardly be able to scratch the surface of their governments unless you had huge influx of libertarians. Wyoming has about 550,000 people in the whole state concentrated in a few counties. Imagine how easily it will be to influence the politics with these small populations who are already anti-authoritarian anyways.
 
Wyoming has desolate parts if you are driving through it because it is a large area of land. Can you tell me what part you drove through. There are many cities in Wyoming you just probably didn't drive through them. A migration movement would never work in Washington or Oregon because of statist population centers eg. Portland and Seattle. You would hardly be able to scratch the surface of their governments unless you had huge influx of libertarians. Wyoming has about 550,000 people in the whole state concentrated in a few counties. Imagine how easily it will be to influence the politics with these small populations who are already anti-authoritarian anyways.

The interstate on the most direct route from Cheyenne and Laramie to Ogden, UT.

I like what the FSP is doing and it's certainly worth a shot, but there are just so damn many people that aren't libertarians in any state. Concentrating us in a certain area is a good move as far as coordination and trying to establish a culture goes, but the idea that we have the numbers to take over an entire state... well I suppose we'll see. Keep doing what you're doing.
 
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I visit regularly for hunting. If I could find some good bottom land at a reasonable price, I might think about it.

I've visited Wyoming a couple of times. I love it there! I've read that Dick Cheney is from there, so be careful when hunting :)

I was actually fishing with my dad when I visited. He was driving. On the way, he stopped at a tavern out in the middle of nowhere. He handed me some cash and said "go get two whiskey drinks to-go". I was thinking really? Okay. I went in, asked for two drinks to-go. Paid for them, and off we drove. As far as I know, that never happens in the state where I live.
 
I've never been to Wyoming, but I think if I went I would fall in love with it. There are some parts of the state, especially around the Big Horn/Washakie County area, that are awe-inspiringly beautiful.

I'm also super-amped about the idea of a Free State Wyoming, especially after reading Molon Labe. I think I'd do it if my family and I were a bit more financially stable.
 
The interstate on the most direct route from Cheyenne and Laramie to Ogden, UT.

I like what the FSP is doing and it's certainly worth a shot, but there are just so damn many people that aren't libertarians in any state. Concentrating us in a certain area is a good move as far as coordination and trying to establish a culture goes, but the idea that we have the numbers to take over an entire state... well I suppose we'll see. Keep doing what you're doing.

I was thinking you were taking the I80 and I guessed right, that was the first of Wyoming I saw too but between SLC and Laramie you are right there is nothing. There is alot more in northern Wyoming. Keep in mind that NH has a population more than twice as large as Wyoming so it will be alot easier to have an influence on govt in Wyoming. I like the FSP too but I am a California native and being a 10 hr flight from family isn't too appealing.
 
I've lived in Casper and Sheridan. I loved Wyoming! There is a lot of flat deserty land, but the mountains are beautiful.
 
It should be Idaho, not Wyoming!

First of all I think the choice of New Hampshire was a disaster. It makes no sense to take libertarians out of the west where they are concentrated and move them east where even the conservatives love big government, besides the fact that its a harder move.

I think Idaho makes a lot more sense than Wyoming. I've never been to either but I dream of moving to Idaho and dread the thought of going to Wyoming. Idaho is probably the most libertarian state in the country in terms of concentration, even if it doesn't have the best state laws(it has very good ones relative to most others). Those who I've met that lived there say it is the most beautiful state in the country - towering mountains and glorious forests throughout. It has a very small population, which is why it makes sense over Oregon or Washington.
 
It should be Idaho, not Wyoming!

First of all I think the choice of New Hampshire was a disaster. It makes no sense to take libertarians out of the west where they are concentrated and move them east where even the conservatives love big government, besides the fact that its a harder move.

I think Idaho makes a lot more sense than Wyoming. I've never been to either but I dream of moving to Idaho and dread the thought of going to Wyoming. Idaho is probably the most libertarian state in the country in terms of concentration, even if it doesn't have the best state laws(it has very good ones relative to most others). Those who I've met that lived there say it is the most beautiful state in the country - towering mountains and glorious forests throughout. It has a very small population, which is why it makes sense over Oregon or Washington.

Idaho is about a quarter mormon and a quarter evangelical in terms of population which makes it hard for me to imagine the state not being socially conservative. The population is also twice as high as Wyoming's which makes it even harder to dilute the social conservative vote.
 
I personally think you should all take the bottom Ozarks in Arkansas, but that is my personal preference for location, so I'm biased.


I love Wyoming. "Oh, give me a home, where the buffalo roam, where the deer and the antelope play", that song was written about Wyoming. It's the most diverse and beautiful land I've seen yet. When you're driving to Yellowstone, you go by these rocks on the side of the road that are bigger than your house, jutting out of the ground at an odd angle. They came from Yellowstone all those years ago, when it blew the frick up. And the badlands on the way there, spectacular. Gotta hit Custer state park too.

It's like Arkansas. It's God's country.
 
As a somewhat socially conservative libertarian, Wyoming or Idaho sound like heaven to me.
 
I have lived and worked in both Wyoming and Idaho several times over the years. They are both great states with beautiful parts and desolate lonely parts. The people are rugged individualists. But the winters in both states are long and cold. Real cold. Makes self sufficiency very difficult. That said, I love that country anyway. Good places for tough people who want privacy.
 
It's without doubt north Dakota guys.... Been paying attention to what's going on there? Jobs booming, low population.
 
With regards to overwhelming the population of any state with sheer numbers... Wyoming has the smallest population of any state. You would have to get 50,000 libertarians there just to outnumber the Mormons, and they've been there breeding for over a century. Being a religion, they're also a whole lot more coordinated as a social group than libertarians are. I think a better approach to these projects is to pick a place that's nice and that many people with a variety of different job skills and tastes would want to move to regardless of population. Being around a group of like-minded people for networking, moral support and social/cultural activities is more beneficial than the pipe dream of trying to overwhelm the electorate of an entire state. Of the things libertarians as a subculture have got going for them, numbers isn't one of them.
 
First of all I think the choice of New Hampshire was a disaster.

How exactly has it been a "disaster"? Dozens of libertarians have been elected to the state legislature where they have not only stopped bad legislation but have actually rolled back government in several important arenas. The FSP has been an enormous success thus far and it is becoming a bigger one every day.
 
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