Jordan
Member
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2007
- Messages
- 4,035
I want to pose a very serious question about what the Free State Project gives the Liberty Movement as we think about new ways to libertarianize (nice word, huh?) government.
Suppose we get a good majority in the New Hampshire General Court which is made up of 400 house seats. To do so, we need at least 200 winners. That gives us control of one state.
But how much does it really help insofar as changing things on a national scale? There are a total of four federal seats that come from New Hampshire - two in the House of Representatives, two in the Senate.
Work vs. Reward
Wouldn't it be better to have candidates take local offices in other states? If we dedicate resources to a single state (New Hampshire) the best that we could get on the federal level is only 4 seats out of 535. Do we really need 200 people in the state house just to win 4 federal seats? Really?
Justin Amash and Thomas Massie both "upgraded" from state and local positions into the federal government. This should be our way of taking over DC. It seems to me that allocating resources to take over a whole state is quite wasteful - 200 people in 50 different states with Republican leaning districts seems a hell of a lot more useful than 200 people in a single state with only 4 federal positions.
Just my opinion. I'm interested in hearing the viewpoints of others.
Suppose we get a good majority in the New Hampshire General Court which is made up of 400 house seats. To do so, we need at least 200 winners. That gives us control of one state.
But how much does it really help insofar as changing things on a national scale? There are a total of four federal seats that come from New Hampshire - two in the House of Representatives, two in the Senate.
Work vs. Reward
Wouldn't it be better to have candidates take local offices in other states? If we dedicate resources to a single state (New Hampshire) the best that we could get on the federal level is only 4 seats out of 535. Do we really need 200 people in the state house just to win 4 federal seats? Really?
Justin Amash and Thomas Massie both "upgraded" from state and local positions into the federal government. This should be our way of taking over DC. It seems to me that allocating resources to take over a whole state is quite wasteful - 200 people in 50 different states with Republican leaning districts seems a hell of a lot more useful than 200 people in a single state with only 4 federal positions.
Just my opinion. I'm interested in hearing the viewpoints of others.