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Title: The Libertarians planning to take over New Hampshire
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor ... o-take-over-New-Hampshire.html
Published: Nov 21, 2014
Author: David Millward, Keene, New Hampshire
Post Date: 2014-11-21 08:50:07 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 19
Comments: 1

Thousands vow to “live free or die” in the granite state, which expects a mass migration of 20,000 libertarians to a state with a small population by early 2016

A few thousand people have decided to move to New Hampshire and make it a libertarian state A few thousand people

David Millward By David Millward, Keene, New Hampshire3:48PM GMT 20 Nov 2014 Nirvana for a libertarian in New Hampshire is a gay married couple guarding a stash of marijuana with an AK47.

“I could live with that,” said Ian Freeman, a leading light of the Free State Project and one of the pathfinders in a mass migration of like-minded people to the New England state. He left Florida and moved to New Hampshire to push the libertarian agenda in a state whose motto is “Live free or die” - one of more than 1,600 to have done so. They are the first tranche of 16,000 people who have pledged to up sticks and make the state a “beacon of liberty”.

Depending on one’s point of view the Free State Project is just a logical extension of the libertarian tradition, or a bunch of disruptive anarchists who have taken a perverse pleasure in niggling the authorities. Related Articles

Mr Freeman, 34, hosts a radio show which is syndicated around the country. He is also ran for governor on behalf of the New Hampshire Liberty Party. The Free State Project was founded more than a decade ago by Jason Sorens, who was studying for a doctorate at Yale at the time.

His dream was to trigger a mass migration of 20,000 libertarians to a state with a small population by early 2016.

The idea was to follow the example of the Mormon migration to Utah in the mid 19th century.

A number of states including Maine,Wyoming, Vermont and Alaska were considered as candidates for the movement before supporters decided on New Hampshire. The granite state, which has no sales tax or income tax - though property taxes are high - was the overwhelming choice.

“We want to create a society where the maximum role of Government is the protection of life, liberty and property,” Mr Freeman told the Telegraph.

“I like the idea of the natural law of supply and demand. I don’t have a problem with laws which say you should not harm anybody else.” But other laws should go.

“There are reams and reams of statutes which nobody can get through. I do have a real problem with restrictions on alcohol and drugs.”

It would be easy to dismiss the libertarians as eccentric, if there were not so many of them and if the belief in small government did not resonate with a sizeable chunk of American voters.

Rand Paul, a possible Republican presidential candidate in 2016, has made little secret of sympathy with much of the libertarian agenda.

His criticism of big government has led him to take positions which hardly chime with the traditional American conservative right.

Mr Paul has been fiercely critical of the police, voicing fears that it was in danger of becoming a paramilitary force.

Inasmuch as there is a common thread among the libertarians, it is an overarching dislike of authority.

It has already led to a number of stunts, generally designed to get up the nose of the city fathers.

Perhaps the best known has been what the Free Staters call “Robin Hooding”. It entails stuffing parking meters with quarters just before a traffic warden arrives to ticket a motorist as well as following the enforcement officers with video cameras.

But there have been other acts of civil disobedience, notably by 25-year-old Derrick J Freeman - he insists on the J - who moved to Keene from Philadelphia. He has already racked up 540 days in jail for an array of offences from smoking cannabis in public, to dancing in a public park and trying to film a court case. “I moved here to follow my conscience, no matter what people say I am following what is written in my heart.”

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#1. To: Ada (#0)

Big "L" libertarians are both open border freaks and "Free Traitors" and those two reasons are why their candidates typically receive app. 3-5% of the votes cast when running for office. I've been hearing about this New Hampshire effort for more than a decade and it has yet to get off the ground.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2014-11-21   8:59:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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