Define freedom and your plan to "take freedom for ourselves". If you feel there is a 90/10 ratio against freedom, what makes you believe that having 20,000 people in NH (1.5% of the state's population) is going to make a significant difference? How do you see one's life being significantly different on a day to day basis if you accomplish your goal?
NH is significantly further along that any other state. In NH, despite it being the most competitive and important primary/caucus state, by far, 4.5% of the population voted for Ron Paul. That's correct, there were 44 candidates on that ballot, yet 4.5% of the population voted for Ron Paul. The next closest state was Vermont which has an open primary (NH doesn't) with only 1 candidate on the VT Democratic Primary and only a handful of candidates on the Republican Primary ballot with 2.3% of the population voting for Ron Paul. No other state was even in the same ball park as NH, not even the open state primaries where lots of Democrats voted for Paul, like in VA.
If NH had an open primary and Democrats were allowed to vote in the NH Republican Primary, we would have targeted Democrats (like people did in VT, VA, SC...) and maybe 6% of the population would have voted for Paul. There was a total of only 2 choices in VA and Paul had just 1.3%. Yet NH could of had 6% with 44 choices. Do you see the massive difference?
In 2008, with around 1/2 as many FSPers in NH, NH was 2nd in the nation at 1.4% but still significantly below it's current amount.
Percentage of total state population voting for Ron Paul in the Republican Primary or Republican Caucus, ranked highest to lowest (and the 2008 percentage):
1. New Hampshire 4.3% + 0.2% in the Democratic Primary as write-ins (1.4%)
2. Vermont 2.4% (0.4%)
3. South Carolina 1.7% (0.4%)
4. Virginia 1.3% (0.3%)
5. Michigan 1.2% (0.6%)
6. Ohio 1% (0.5%)
7. Iowa 0.9% (0.4%)
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showth...state-population-voting-for-Ron-Paul-compared
That isn't the point though. Sure, people in NH may be significantly more inclined towards freedom than people in any other state. Sure, people have been moving to NH for more freedom for 100s of years. That is old news, though. The important part of the FSP is that the people moving aren't voters, they are activists. Otherwise, how do you explain just over 1000 movers to NH and yet 14 state Reps.? How do you explain FSPers holding key leadership positions in the 3 most powerful groups when it comes to the NH House of Representatives (The Republican House Alliance, the New Hampshire Liberty Alliance and the New Hampshire Republican Liberty Caucus)? Free staters have started TV shows, popular blogs and radio shows in NH. It isn't about voting or being a voter. It's about convincing 5 people or 20 people to more liberty inclined per free stater. It is about 5 free staters helping with a special election so that the most pro-liberty candidate wins. It's about 40 free staters working together to stop a bad bill, like that bill to create an adult seat belt law in NH that we led the effort to defeat. It's about free staters writing bills, sponsoring those bills, speaking to the NH House and NH Senate on those bills and then having those bills pass, like happened last year.
In some of the small towns in NH, over 1/3 of the voters are already pro-liberty right now. Towns like Dalton, Grafton and Croydon are already part of the way there. 25-100 new activists in town and it is a game changer in those towns. For example, in Dalton, not only are taxes low and regulations weak, but there is a gun group that gets together with there guns on at a bar regularly and no one things this is odd. In Grafton, liberty Republicans, Democrats and Libertarians hold many of the key positions in town and in Croydon the majority of the school board is pro-liberty. Things are moving along nicely in NH. We just need more activists to truly achieve something close to actual freedom up here. Thankfully, activists keep moving on up
