Posted on 09/01/2008 6:47:25 AM PDT by billorites
Nearly five years have passed since the Free State Project adopted New Hampshire as its home base and began the task of convincing 20,000 activists to commit to uprooting their lives and moving here.
They would come in droves, the plan went, overwhelming the sparsely populated state and ultimately changing the way big government works by limiting its power through free-market solutions.
There would be tax reductions; regulations such as being required to have a drivers license to get behind the wheel of your own car would be relaxed or scrapped; power would be restored to the people and the Granite State would become the Free State, a model for the rest of the country and even the world.
That hasnt happened yet, and only 8,558 people have committed to making the move since the projects inception, according to its Web site.
But its the 558 people who have actually made the move who have spurred a slight shift in the projects aim and kept it pushing ahead.
Realizing that some people wanted to make the move immediately, and already had, project coordinators came up with a three-year goal to have 1,000 recruits in the state by the end of this year. They exceeded that goal by more than 30 commitments.
Ian H. Bernard, a project member, self-styled free marketer and host of Free Talk Live, a Keene-based, nationally syndicated radio talk show, said the first 1,000 will be known as hardcore activists who paved the way for the other 19,000 Free Staters.
Its been real slow going trying to get people to uproot their lives, he said in a phone interview Saturday. That being said, I think the project has still been tremendous. These are the best freedom activists in the word that are coming here. The moving aspect is a good screening process.
Free State Project Director Varrin Swearingen said in an e-mail interview that sponsoring Free Talk Live and taking out advertisements on the Internet and in print have helped to attract new members every year. Project members also reach out to potential members at events known to attract large numbers of pro-liberty activists, he said.
This week, for example, the Free State Project has sent a team of people to Minnesota for outreach at the Republican National Convention and Ron Pauls Rally for the Republic, he said. Also, each year, we operate two world-class pro-liberty events here in New Hampshire the Porcupine Freedom Festival in the summer, and the New Hampshire Liberty Forum in the winter.
Swearingen, who works as a commercial airlines pilot, moved with his wife and their two children from California to Keene in 2004, two years after reading an advertisement about the project and researching it online. Hed been a Libertarian since grade school, and felt his efforts to exact political change in The Golden State were futile.
The Free State Project appealed to us because it represented a real opportunity to work together with a high concentration of people who really valued freedom something that simply doesnt exist in California, he said.
The Free Staters who have come to New Hampshire are not directed to choose a particular city, town or county. They can live wherever they please, and engage in whatever type of activism that best suits them, Bernard said.
The project only exists to encourage people to make the move and be an activist when they get here, he said. Concord is obviously a good place for politics. There is a big mix of non-cooperative activists and political activists in Manchester. In Keene, we have a larger concentration of non-cooperative, market-based activists.
Non-cooperative activists are people who have decided they cannot change the system from within. They shun politics and do not vote. Instead of running for political office, they conduct peaceful protests meant to draw attention to a particular issue, Bernard said.
The non-cooperative activists have played penny poker in downtown Keene gambling is illegal under state law and plan to sell hot dogs in response to a street vendors recent and ongoing struggle with the city to sell his food late at night.
They are forced to show their hand, to show that they are the violent organization of men and women they really are, or ignore us and hope we go away, Bernard said of the police. If they ignore us, we win. If they arrest us, we win.
After listening to Bernards talk show on the Internet, Samuel E. Dodson decided to become a Free Stater and move from Plano, Texas, to Keene before the end of the year. Dodson said he was captivated by what Bernard had to say.
The more I listened the more the message started to make sense, he said in a phone interview Saturday. I just kind of got hooked on it. Over the last two years, Ive come to adopt the messages and principles of liberty into my own life.
Eight months ago, Dodson launched the Obscured Truth Network on YouTube, a video-sharing Web site, in which he posts video interviews of him questioning police and other government officials about the constitutionality of their work.
Dodson said hes had a difficult time finding other like-minded activists in his current hometown.
Im all alone here and its tough, he said. People are scared of the judges. Theyre scared of the police. Thats the level of fear people have of this government thats designed to protect them.
Once hes moved to the Elm City, Dodson said he hopes to rent an apartment near Central Square and eventually build a cob house, which is constructed of sand, clay and straw.
I dont know if Ill be able to get away with it because of the planning boards, but Ill do it anyway, he said. Ill look at land that the city has said is unsuitable for building and Ill build my cob house there.
Dodson may become a weekly co-host on Free Talk Live and aims to start up a voluntary ID system that would rival the governments one-size-fits-all card and allow users to divulge information about themselves at their discretion, he said.
Theres also a possibility of doing something with Cheshire TV and Ive thought about taking some film classes at Keene State College, he said.
In June, Dodson, who said hes in his 30s but declined to give an exact age, came to check out Keene and ended up joining Bernard for a ride-along through the city with Keene police Lt. Shane C. Maxfield.
Maxfield had reached out to the Free Staters earlier this year through one of their Web sites and invited them all to ride with him in his patrol car or call him at the station with any questions they may have.
Im really encouraged by the fact that at least were communicating and sharing ideas behind the scenes, Dodson said. Its not something you see very often.
A handful of other Free Staters will be making their way to Keene this year, Bernard said, and hes pleased by the steady trickle of new transplants, even if it wasnt the tidal wave of change that some had hoped for.
As far as the organization goes, the only success or failure is whether people are moving here or not, he said. People are moving here and I would call that a success.
Influx of Massholes has nullified this project.
The Free State Project appealed to us because it represented a real opportunity to work together with a high concentration of people who really valued freedom something that simply doesnt exist in California, he said.
Well he got that right at least.
When a Libertarian said to me that Govt should not get involved in marriage even if that means a father marrying his daughter or a woman marrying her dog
well that was the time I just went off the Libertarian party
NH is a beautiful state and does have a live free or die attitude to many but many liberals are trying to change NH as well.
I hope conservatives get to keep that state as it truly is a beautiful state
I’ve met a few of these folks and suffice it to say that they’re a little....off.
That’s just what I was going top point out. The MA state will get there first as they have the numbers on their side.
I live in New Hampshire, just 12 miles from Keene.
Sorry to say that there are a lot more communists moving up here from Massachussetts and Connecticut than there are Free-Staters.
I had to laugh at the part where the Free-Staters were playing penny-poker in Keene, thereby breaking the law. Such laws are broken ALL THE TIME all around here, and nobody notices, least of all, the police. They have much larger fish to fry.
However, Law Enforcement here in the “Live Free or Die” state is politically motivated. If you are on the opposite side of the political fence from the zoning board members, and they know about it, you will have BIG trouble getting zoning permits that are no problem for anybody else.
Is that why NH now elects Democrats? It was always reliably Republican. But the numbers of Massachusetts residents moving must have been enormous to have impacted the entire state. You’d figure maybe a few counties within commuting distance of Boston, but not the entire state.
Can you enlighten me?
I know a Free-Stater couple who moved their family from SC to NH ... they barely made it through the first winter and returned home after a year. It’s a noble idea but I think, like most organizations, is fraught with internal politics. I lost interest when the organizers started fighting behind the scenes. Maybe they fixed that. Does anyone know?
Anyone remember Robert Ringer’s books from the 70s? “Looking Out for No. 1”, for example. Ringer was a libertarian and he made a great deal of sense. Today however, libertarians appear more like reactionaries—kneejerk critics of anything having to do with govt, regardless of success. The substitution of anarchy for freedom makes for a truly dishonest argument.
Picking a New England state was a bad choice. Arkansas, Alaska, Kansas, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska would all have been better choices.
I can’t see this working. It’s a great idea, but as taxes drop and life gets freer, the communists in MA will say, hey, that’s great- move in and vote in Ted Kennedy libs.
They did it here in FL. The NYers move down because of the low taxes, then proceed to wail about less services and vote in superlibs like Wexler, who raise taxes.
Yep. Why can’t they pick a state in the Mountain West that has a libertarian culture already?
A lot more are planning to come...but dude they can’t grow as much weed in NH... and dude I like forgot...dude I got the munchies.
How would Wyoming be better than New Hampshire?
Hell...even Tennessee would have been better.
I totally agree.
I live in Virginia and we (along with our neighbor NC) are getting an influx of liberals from WI, MI, NJ, NY and elsewhere.
It's mind-boggling that they moving here for jobs that were eliminated in their states, and for a more affordable cost-of-living and reasonable property values and lower taxes...etc. Then, they vote for tax-raising/spending-big-government-Librturd Democrats.
In other words, they are going to end up turning Virginia and North Carolina into the very same thing that they were forced to leave.
Mountain west state, already liberty oriented, natural resources, and primarily.....no overflowing Massachusetts next door to dilute your effort, none of the New England blue state effect. Better self-sufficiency chance in agriculture and ranching. Downside.....winter is not as pretty and less maple syrup.
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