Freedom in One State: The Free State Project

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In the last legislative session, New Hampshire cut its state budget by more than 12%, and stopped the out-of-control borrowing of the previous legislature. Over the last few years, the state has reduced bureaucratic controls on everything from beer brewing to switchblades (NH in fact has no knife laws whatsoever, thanks to state rep Jenn Coffey; the entire body of 1800s-era anti-Scotsman dirk laws has been tossed). This session, bills for everything from school tax credits to marijuana decriminalization have been introduced.

These pro-liberty political winds blew into the 2012 presidential campaign, giving Ron Paul a second-place finish in the nation’s first primary. If the Free State Project had reached its modest goal of 20,000 movers, Ron Paul would have won the first primary by a landslide and had a real shot at the nomination.
Unfortunately, like Abraham at Sodom and Gomorrah (modern-day name: “ManchVegas”), we didn’t reach our quota of righteous citizens… so instead of 20,000 activists, we have a dozen overworked state reps, a few school board members and selectmen, and a few hundred “irregulars” who show up for the Revolution’s battles when we can.
Government unions and pro-corporate-welfare politicians blame the pro-liberty storm on “Ron Paul radicals from the Free State Project”. They’re right… but what they don’t mention is how few activists it took to roll back government. 1,000 libertarians have moved to New Hampshire so far, but only a few are regular activists. Unlike pro-government forces, we all work for a living.

There are a dozen state reps and one state senator who are Free State Project movers. They have worked incredibly hard to help the pro-liberty legislators who were already here (New Hampshire was chosen because it arguably had the most pro-liberty culture of any state). This little group has terrified the government unions and the pro-corporate-welfare legislators alike.

The NHLA

The New Hampshire Liberty Alliance (nhliberty.org, or see their FB page) is the driving force behind legislative accomplishments in NH. It provides the 400+ citizen legislators (NH state reps and senators are only paid $100) with information on upcoming bills and publishes a newsletter that is distributed directly to the legislature. This newsletter, the Gold Standard, is a unique resource that gives NH government more transparency than any other state.

The NHLA also rates legislators based on their votes, using the pro- or anti- liberty bill ratings. This gives voters a way to track their representatives. Finally, the NHLA has an active PAC. The PAC is strictly nonpartisan, donating to candidates according to their fiscal conservatism and support for personal freedoms rather than party affiliation. (Yes, for two terms there was actually a pro-liberty Democrat in New Hampshire; it can happen). Of course the NHLA ratings are just as useful for “progressives” as for fiscal conservatives… for people who believe that North Korea is the ideal, they can simply vote for legislators with an “F” rating.

The Future of the Free State Project

The Free State Project has not officially even begun. The original idea from Jason Sorens was that AFTER we got 20,000 activists to sign up, then the move to the chosen state would begin.
The results of our tiny band of early movers show that the full-scale Free State Project would work if it were really tried. Libertarians and ancaps around the country should consider joining us and actually winning elections and repealing laws, rather than fighting outnumbered and unheard, or worse yet just yelling at your TVs.
With 20,000 activists, the state-level barriers to liberty would be blown away. Public “education” is the single biggest barrier to freedom in the world, and it’s controlled at the state and town level. The Drug War would be hard to implement if every state and local official opposed it. Finally, the Federal government is printing its currency into oblivion. The state governments may be a lot more important in the near future, especially in states that manage to stay solvent.

And of course, state politicians turn into Federal politicians. The next crop of NH congressmen and senators could come from the ranks of our Ron Paul-endorsing state legislators.

A state with a healthy economy that privatized education and eliminated Prohibition would be an unanswerable argument to Progressives: “Well, New Hampshire doesn’t have program “X”, yet they’re getting along fine”. (Any HONEST Progressive would want a “control group” state, and support us… let me know if anyone finds one).

That’s the benefit to the country and the world. The benefit to YOU if you move here is that your business or your job will be located in a free-enterprise-friendly area. And you’ll live among people who speak your language… and don’t expect you to give up your beliefs.
So… Just Do It!

New Hampshire is truly beautiful, if you like the outdoors. The kayaking, hunting, fishing, hiking, skiing etc. is as good as you could want. If on the other hand you don’t like bears and moose in your yard, Manchester is a fine place to live as well. Manchester airport has Southwest Airlines and short entry lines, you can get to most places from Manchester as fast as from anywhere. And the Internet looks the same in New Hampshire as anywhere else… so why not live with lower taxes and a falling level of government?

Come visit New Hampshire and try it out. Drop in on Murphy’s Taproom in Manchester. The Live Free or Die rally is lots of fun. PorcFest is “Woodstock for Libertarians” (and it is in the White Mountains, if you get policy seminar overdose you can just go hiking). If you come by the Dartmouth area, let me know and we can hike up Mount Cardigan or Ascutney.

If you have such a secure job that you just can’t leave (?), then you can still move to the Free State virtually. Contact the New Hampshire Liberty Alliance and volunteer for bill review (it helps to have a degree from Miskatonic U to do bill review, but it’s not required). Listen to Free Talk Live, the nationally syndicated libertarian call-in show out of Keene NH.

Donate to the FSP itself, or to the NHLA PAC. Or fund a pro-liberty legislator like Jenn Coffey, Seth Cohn, or Mark Warden, or one of the other ‘A’ rated reps from the NHLA ratings. You’ll be helping create a Free State where you can work or retire…. And an example of freedom for the whole country.

-Bill Walker... visit my FB page https://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Bill-Walker/222478167836386
 
In the last legislative session, New Hampshire cut its state budget by more than 12%, and stopped the out-of-control borrowing of the previous legislature. Over the last few years, the state has reduced bureaucratic controls on everything from beer brewing to switchblades (NH in fact has no knife laws whatsoever, thanks to state rep Jenn Coffey; the entire body of 1800s-era anti-Scotsman dirk laws has been tossed).

Yes, yes, yes. Welcome. Here is my Report, the 2011 New Hampshire Liberty Related Bills Report.

There are a dozen state reps and one state senator who are Free State Project movers.

In all honesty, as far as I know, the number of state reps. is higher than a dozen but there isn't a state stator that has moved, although three of the state senators in NH did endorse Ron Paul, and one may not have been elected without the help of free staters.

The New Hampshire Liberty Alliance (nhliberty.org, or see their FB page)...

I love the NHLA. I wish a similar group in any other state was even 1/4 as effective. Sadly, no other state seems to have anything even close to the NHLA.
Website, Facebook page, Facebook group

-Bill Walker...

Thanks Bill. For those not in the loop on this, Bill Walker writes at LewRockwell.com and writes at a NH Patch (including articles about Ron Paul.)
 
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The problem is, the state pretty much already chosen is New Hampshire. And people simply are not going to want to move to New Hampshire.

IT is not exactly easy to pick up and move to a new state these days either. Expect a lot of New Hampshire residences on food stamps if suddenly 20,000 people moved there with no jobs accompanying them. Unemployment would skyrocket.
 
I'd seriously consider New Hampshire, but I work in the film (visual effects) industry and just have no idea what kind of work I'd be able to find.
 
The problem is, the state pretty much already chosen is New Hampshire. And people simply are not going to want to move to New Hampshire.

And not everybody would want to move to the desert, the sun belt, big sky country, or the mid west either. NH is a great option, IMO.

IT is not exactly easy to pick up and move to a new state these days either.

Studies show that poorer peoples migrate more fluidly than richer. And of you're out of a job, why not start looking in/near NH in addition to your local area?

Expect a lot of New Hampshire residences on food stamps if suddenly 20,000 people moved there with no jobs accompanying them. Unemployment would skyrocket.

What? With more people comes more demand for consumer goods, more demand for food and goods and services. And many of the movers are bringing skills and capital with them. I'd think the more movers, the LESS welfare demands there will be on the NH govt.

If you don't like it, start brainstorming better options. Naysaying isn't helping.
 
I'd seriously consider New Hampshire, but I work in the film (visual effects) industry and just have no idea what kind of work I'd be able to find.

I know that there are visual effects artists already there.

You could try to post to the FSP boards to see if anyone could hook you up with some contacts.

You could also see about remote-working options. You don't always have to be on-site for that type of work.
 
I want to see that budget go down again. Biennial, right? Next time, make it go down by 20%.

Or 30%!

50%!

Oh, make it 100!
 
Are we trying to make New Hampshire our little "Utopia?"

Kudos the N.H. and all they have done. I would never move there, personally. But, may that state and it's residents be a beacon of freedom for the future.
 
This is a great project, I hope it does well and that others like it get organized in some of our low pop states. This method could work in a few states in the Union :)
 
The problem is, the state pretty much already chosen is New Hampshire. And people simply are not going to want to move to New Hampshire.

Then get off your ass and start a free state project in a completely different region. Maybe every 5th or 10th state should become a liberty magnet. Don't bitch about their success because they made a choice.

IT is not exactly easy to pick up and move to a new state these days either. Expect a lot of New Hampshire residences on food stamps if suddenly 20,000 people moved there with no jobs accompanying them. Unemployment would skyrocket.

This isn't the food-stamp demographic. A job is what we call work. Work is being productive with your hands, your mind, whatever you have. Jobs are not some liberal or government creation. They don't come from big business or government spending. If you don't get it, then walk into the woods, grab some wood nobody cares are about and start carving or building something (don't let TBTB see you take their wood).

There is no reason a large nationwide group of people should be unemployed. Dependency on governement destroys independence. The string pullers want these people dependent on them. That they are unemployed is unfortunate but typical of planned economies.
 
The Free State Project has not officially even begun. The original idea from Jason Sorens was that AFTER we got 20,000 activists to sign up, then the move to the chosen state would begin.
The results of our tiny band of early movers show that the full-scale Free State Project would work if it were really tried. Libertarians and ancaps around the country should consider joining us and actually winning elections and repealing laws, rather than fighting outnumbered and unheard, or worse yet just yelling at your TVs.

This.

Also, I hate NH too. Too cold, but cold weather is a very small price to pay for real, legitimate, freedom.
 
Too cold, but cold weather is a very small price to pay for real, legitimate, freedom.

It was in the 60s most of last week. It will be 73 today, 70 on Tuesday, 68 on Wednesday, 61 on Thursday, 61 on Friday, 70 on Saturday, 64 on Sunday and 63 on Sunday. This is winter in New Hampshire. It is colder than most of the country, but not substantially. For example, if a person can handle the weather in Denver, Chicago or New York City, that person should have no trouble handling the weather in Salem, Nashua or Seabrook, NH.
http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=salem,+nh#forecast

There are very free parts of New Hampshire, and they tend to be near the mountains and in colder areas. For example, Grafton, NH. Grafton is known for being one of the freest places in the world modern. It will be 63 today and 64 on Tuesday in Grafton.
http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=grafton,+nh
 
i am a signer and mover

i hope yall can join me

The main things we would move there for, more than the freedom living, is the 'strength in numbers.' Is this a big movement? Is this the way to go? Are a lot of people doing this? I don't want to get up there and be just as isolated as I am now (a drop of libertarianism in a sea of big gov't lovers).
 
I posted this is the New Hampshire subforum but I suppose it's still relevant here: :D

This woman comes from NH.....




....are you sure you still want to move there? ;)

Disclaimer: I think the FSP is a good idea and don't really think one individual speaks for an entire state.
 
The main things we would move there for, more than the freedom living, is the 'strength in numbers.' Is this a big movement? Is this the way to go? Are a lot of people doing this? I don't want to get up there and be just as isolated as I am now (a drop of libertarianism in a sea of big gov't lovers).

If you were to move now, you'd probably feel like a drop in a sea, ya. This is because people like myself, and 11,000 others like me, haven't moved there yet, and are waiting for the full 20,000 pledges.

You don't need to move now, but I would encourage you to sign the pledge, and when the FSP does reach it's full potential, you will see real changes towards freedom.

They have accomplished a lot with 1,000. I can only imagine what they could do with 20,000.
 
The problem is, the state pretty much already chosen is New Hampshire. And people simply are not going to want to move to New Hampshire.

Over 1,000 already have.

IT is not exactly easy to pick up and move to a new state these days either. Expect a lot of New Hampshire residences on food stamps if suddenly 20,000 people moved there with no jobs accompanying them. Unemployment would skyrocket.

Please read: Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt.

You can download a free pdf or audiobook version for free here: http://mises.org/document/6785/Economics-in-One-Lesson

It's a short read and really interesting. You'll find it gripping, I promise you. It's such an enjoyable read that most people (myself included) who read it once, read it over and over again. It's truly fantastic (and recommended by Ron Paul too).
 
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I posted this is the New Hampshire subforum but I suppose it's still relevant here: :D

This woman comes from NH.....

....are you sure you still want to move there? ;)

Disclaimer: I think the FSP is a good idea and don't really think one individual speaks for an entire state.

I think this video reenforced the idea that the FSP in NH is a good idea. The first interviewer is Bradley Jardis, a blogger for Free Keene, among other things. He used to be a cop. After talking with FSP movers, he joined Law Enforcement Against Prohibition as one of just a couple active duty (still a cop) members in the world. He eventually left LEAP because the organization thought he was too pro-liberty. He quit his job as a cop because he couldn't handle getting paid to mistreating people every day. He lives in NH and is engaged to a liberty activist that moved to NH as part of the FSP.

The second interviewer is Adam of Adam Vs. The Man. Adam filmed an episode of his TV show at Porcfest. He came up to do another episode partly about the NH Primary. He traveled up to Keene, NH and co-hosted Free Talk Live for a week.

In the interview, both interviewers are hostile to the woman. It isn't surprising that she is hostile to them. It isn't surprising that she supports Mitt Romney. He is the mainstream Republican candidate in NH. I prefer a culture where someone with Romney's views in the mainstream Republican candidate than somewhere where someone with Gingrich's or Santorum's views in the mainstream GOP candidate. I think the vast majority of pro-liberty people agree with that thought. Gingrich is insane as far as I can tell. Santorum acts extremely religious and frequently says he is against liberty and libertarianism.
 
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