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Yale libertarian plans drastic 'Free State Project'
Yale Daily News ^ | Wednesday, October 23, 2002 | EMILY ANTHES

Posted on 10/23/2002 1:04:07 AM PDT by Roscoe

Frustrated by the Libertarian Party's failure to make progress nationally, Jason Sorens GRD '04 decided the best course of action would be to take over Wyoming. Or maybe Alaska.

The plan, which Sorens calls "The Free State Project," is ambitious. It calls for moving 20,000 people -- including the one additional Yalie who has signed on so far -- over the next nine years to a sparsely populated state where they would take to the ballot boxes in order to repeal most drug and gun laws, eliminate the income tax, and privatize most government-run industries.

So in July 2001, he posted an essay on the project on the Internet. Within a few days, he had over 200 e-mails from people who were interested.

"The response was positively overwhelming," he said.

(Excerpt) Read more at yaledailynews.com ...


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To: nopardons
Okay, I'm gbreaking what I last said to you ; however, you are so blinkered, that you can't see what's in front of you and like a three year old, just keep right on digging your little heels in, claiming that you're right and that facts don't mean a damned thing. How about using facts, for a change ? This is a L-I-B-E-R-T-A-R-I-A-N proposition. You want to ignore that. Ignoring it, you still couldn't get 20 million cretins, to go off to some nonexistant, mythical UTOPIA, and reinvent the wheel !

Not at the moment, no. But we're on that path if Democratic corruption and the march toward socialism isn't curbed soon.

Said 20 million, would NOT have every job / profession / expertise represnted therein.

Yes they would.

Neither could you get any major business to move in / subsidize the new nation.

Ask the Bahamas about that.

There is no way on earth, that you could buy enough gold, to back whatever currency " NEW TINFOILIANIA " would use. And on and on and bloody on !

If everyone traded in their dollars for gold and silver coins and used those for currency, that's all the backing that's needed. The backing would be in everyone's pocket.

Wanna play games ? Okay ... here's the game, we get every single FREEPER and every member of their extended families and all of their friends and fly off to ... ?

It could happen if events of the last ten years continue. It's happened through history time and time again. I hate to break the news to you but most likely your ancestors lived in Europe 600 years ago.

Oh, never mind, this is fantasy for little children, so let's just say that we take over the USA. I become " QUEEN OF AMERICA " and have every non-Conservative arrested, lined up and shot.

Nope, I'm not with you there. My idea is better.

What , people complain because some of their mothers/ fathers/ husbands / wives / children / whatever are in that group ? TOUGH. next, to make you happy, we're back on the Gold Standard.

The U.S. already has it's credit established with the military to back it up. A fledgling nation would need real money at least until credit was built.

No, wait, I don't care about that, so that's out. But, I'll revamp education, from top to bottom ( and YES, I am VERY knowledgeable about this topic and could do it brilliantly !) and get rid of all unions.

I could go for that.

This isn't what you want to hear, I know , but it makes a lot more sense than anything you've written. You don't know the level of people's anger / disgust with the world, after WW II, any more than you know about corruption and what's wrong with things today.

I haven't made any claims as such. I asked you and you won't answer.

Are you even 30 yet ? How many advanced degrees do you have ? If you have any, they aren't in history, economics, politics, pyschology, sociology, government, or English. LOL

Engineering. I'll engineer a new nation. LOL

Of course you don't see any " solutions " from me ; that's NOT what this thread, or even your very off topic rants are about. Since you've asked ( finally ) , I'll give you the shortest answer. Influence everyone you know and ever run into, to vote GOP, get at least 80 % of all Dems ousted from every single, local, state, and Fed Gov offices, then, work on getting moderate GOPers out of office.

We've been doing that since 1932 and the nation is more socialist and there are more crimes committed by Democrats than ever. The people that make up this country aren't the same people that were here in the late 1800s. Too much unselective immigration is driving conservatism down.

That's just for starters ; however, it would go a long way in turning things around. Unlike your juvenile, purile, delusional mental masturbations, this would actualaly do something concrete. :-)

Why isn't it working?

My homepage tells the story. Rural areas red, urban blue. Who's been populating the blue areas in the last 100 years? The people we let in recently, that's who. Therein lies our mistake. We let socialists ecaping from socialism come in in too many numbers only to try to turn their new home into their old home. This isn't a racist statement either. The anti-Castro Cubans have been good immigrants relatively speaking. We got lucky they were the ones in prison that came in on the boatlift. All it takes is a little bit of selectiveness. A freedom test. Genes and chromosomes can't be changed. Exactly when are you expecting this great miracle return to freedom minded conservatism? Reagan was a great president and yet the march toward socialism continued during his presidency. Bush has been a very good president and yet the march toward socialism continues. FDR got the American people addicted to nanny government services and I don't see them giving up their addiction any time soon. Every year, it's more, more, more.

If we take back more of the media and the country still disolves into corruption and socialism, I don't see any way out. Then what? An island? Israel? Texas? Maybe the liberals would happily jettison Texas. There've been more amazing things in the history of the earth.

181 posted on 10/24/2002 6:41:32 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: Roscoe; takenoprisoner; freeeee
Your suggestion that Libertarians were seeking the imposition of Levitical law in Somalia is as absurd as the the first time you tried to sneak it by. In their own words, Libertarians have defined what they mean by Kritarchy: Self-appointed judges unbound by written law who discover and invent the law as they go along.

Your suggestion that Libertarian Michiel van Notten was seeking to establish "Self-appointed judges unbound by written law" is as absurd as the first time you tried to sneak it by.

Michael van Notten sought to help in the establishment of a free and self-sufficient Somalia predicated on the Codification of the Xeer, i.e., upon the Written Code of Somali Natural Law:

Relates Van Notten:

Here's more on the nature of justice in the almost "ideal anarchy" of Somalia: Some regions have established local courts that depend on the predominant local clan and associated factions for their authority. The judiciary in most regions relies on some combination of traditional and customary law, Shari'a law, the Penal Code of the pre-1991 Siad Barre Government, or some combination of the three. For example, in Bosasso and Afmadow, criminals are turned over to the families of their victims, which then exact blood compensation in keeping with local tradition. Under the system of customary justice, clans often hold entire opposing clans or sub-clans responsible for alleged violations by individuals. http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/world/somalia.htm

Well, isn;t that interesting. Given the current "failure" of Libertarian Michael van Notten to assist the Somalis in developing a Libertarian Kritarchy predicated upon the Written Code of the Somali "Xeer" Common Law (in which Religion and Law are kept separate), many Somalis are instead adopting the totalitarian Islamic Shari'ah Tyranny in its place.

Guess you're pleased as punch about that, Roscoe -- after all, it is YOU who have celebrated the "failure" of the Somalis to establish Natural Law systems of governance, and instead called the adoption of Tyrannical Islamic Shari'ah Law "Something to be glad for." (134 posted on 10/24/02 12:08 AM Pacific by Roscoe) In your sociopathic hatred of Liberty and Natural Law, you actually call the establishment of Islamofascism in its place... "Something to be glad for."

You spit on the blood of thousands of your murdered countrymen with your sickening Aid and Comfort for Islamofascism.

Actually, the Bush administration has put the Somali Islamist movement al-Ittihad al-Islamiyya (“Islamic Unity”) on its list of terrorist organizations. How would you address that fact?

I would address it by saying that if the Somali Islamist movement has been identified as a Terrorist organization, then you must be real proud of your cheer-leading for the establishment of a Tyrannical Islamofascist State in Somaliland, aren't you?? Your Islamofascist "buddies" in that part of the world are getting their names in the headlines -- you must be so happy.

After all, your abhorrence for Liberty and Americanism is well-evidenced by the Pro-Islamofascist statements you have made on this thread:



Fifth Columnist Disruptors like "Roscoe" who openly celebrate the establishment of a Repressive Islamic Shari'ah Tyranny in Somaliland are a treasonous poison to Free Republic.


182 posted on 10/24/2002 7:20:38 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: #3Fan
They don't stay in their homes. 176 posted on 10/24/02 1:29 PM Pacific by #3Fan

As with alcoholics, depends on the Junkie, and the Junk in question (Opium fiends are not famous for wanting to go on road trips... or engage in physical movement, for that matter). And, as with Alcoholics, that's what we have Drunk Driving and Public Intoxication laws for (and you can raise the Legal Penalties on those laws as high as you want, I am not likely to oject very much).

For me, as I said before, it comes down to this: What can I morally justify as a Jesus-like form of behavior?

I just can't see home-invasion to, for example, prevent the private usage of Opium... as a Jesus-like Moral Action.

It's a Private Property thing. I've little or no objection to regulations on the Public Commons (I'm a Taxpayer, a part owner), but...

...Is just a Prayer I can not see, as being something I could morally Pray to God.
And if I can't morally Pray for it, I can't morally Vote for it.

As always, JMHO. Best, OP

183 posted on 10/24/2002 7:26:04 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
As with alcoholics, depends on the Junkie, and the Junk in question (Opium fiends are not famous for wanting to go on road trips... or engage in physical movement, for that matter). And, as with Alcoholics, that's what we have Drunk Driving and Public Intoxication laws for (and you can raise the Legal Penalties on those laws as high as you want, I am not likely to oject very much).

Alcohol isn't as addictive as hard drugs.

For me, as I said before, it comes down to this: What can I morally justify as a Jesus-like form of behavior? I just can't see home-invasion to, for example, prevent the private usage of Opium... as a Jesus-like Moral Action. It's a Private Property thing. I've little or no objection to regulations on the Public Commons (I'm a Taxpayer, a part owner), but... "Please Lord Jesus, bless and sanctify my breaking into this guy's home and putting a gun to his head so he won't smoke opium"... ...Is just a Prayer I can not see, as being something I could morally Pray to God. And if I can't morally Pray for it, I can't morally Vote for it. As always, JMHO. Best, OP

In Jesus' first advent he didn't come to be a drug agent, he came to be sacrificed as the lamb. You're going to see some law being enforced at the second advent.

184 posted on 10/24/2002 7:36:27 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: #3Fan
Alcohol isn't as addictive as hard drugs.

And cigarettes are as addictive.

But in many, many, many cases... alcohol is much more destructive than either. Many alcohol-users drink and drive all the time, causing significant death and destruction.

But we do not penalize Alcohol users who stay at home, for the actions of those who drink and drive. We don't invade people's homes and smash bottles of Vodka; we punish those who actually drive while drunk.

In Jesus' first advent he didn't come to be a drug agent, he came to be sacrificed as the lamb. You're going to see some law being enforced at the second advent.

Sure... but unless you think that it is your responsibility to slay the wicked for their Moral Vices, it is the first advent which is our Life-example as Christians.

185 posted on 10/24/2002 7:43:20 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
And cigarettes are as addictive.

But cigarettes don't cause people to kill people. People can smoke all they want, I don't care.

But in many, many, many cases... alcohol is much more destructive than either. Many alcohol-users drink and drive all the time, causing significant death and destruction.

But the rate of addiction is much higher for hard drugs. All my friends drink, none have killed anyone or been killed. A few of my friends have done drugs, most lost their jobs, one was killed by a dealer. A million people have similar stories as mine. I vote what I know and that's what I know.

But we do not penalize Alcohol users who stay at home, for the actions of those who drink and drive. We don't invade people's homes and smash bottles of Vodka; we punish those who actually drive while drunk.

Yep, because society has decided that alcohol isn't as dangerous as hard drugs.

Sure... but unless you think that it is your responsibility to slay the wicked for their Moral Vices, it is the first advent which is our Life-example as Christians.

No, not totally. In the first advent He was an example to teachers. Turn the other cheek only applies when ministering and you offend someone. We are not to let people treat us as He was treated. He was meant to be sacrificed, we aren't. We're allowed to stand up for ourselves.

You don't believe in breaking in someone's home to enforce the law. What if you lived in the middle of a city and a neighbor was keeping a hydrogen bomb in his garage and said he was going to set it off. Should the police be allowed to break in this person's home and get the bomb? A bomb holder's problem's wouldn't be confined to his home and I feel that too many drug user's problems spill out into the street. I vote accordingly. You feel drug users do a good job of keeping their problems to themselves and you can vote accordingly. We agree to disagree, don't we. I went through this exact same stuff in 1200 posts in two days a month ago and don't feel like going through it again. If you want to see everything I wrote, I'll direct you to those threads if I can find them. Only 1% of the population want to legalize hard drugs and so this argument isn't worth a lot of my time. You're not going to get your way anytime soon. And it's things like this that make me never want to be part of the Libertarian party nor want to be around them if they were to run their own state or nation. Sorry.

186 posted on 10/24/2002 8:01:52 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: #3Fan
But the rate of addiction is much higher for hard drugs. All my friends drink, none have killed anyone or been killed. A few of my friends have done drugs, most lost their jobs, one was killed by a dealer. A million people have similar stories as mine. I vote what I know and that's what I know.

Your friend who was killed by a dealer... he wasn't gunned down in one of those notorious street battles between employees of Rite-Aid and Wal-Mart Pharmacy fighting over Viagra turf, was he? Didn't think so.

Not to be flippant with the memories of the dead, but realize this: Opium was legal (a dutied import, on the regular customs schedule) in the US until 1905 (shortly after Governments began pushing heroin as a "cure" for morphine addiction... oh, great). But legal Pharmacists are not widely known for shooting eachother, or customers, over "turf".

You know it. So... "vote what you know"?

You don't believe in breaking in someone's home to enforce the law. What if you lived in the middle of a city and a neighbor was keeping a hydrogen bomb in his garage and said he was going to set it off. Should the police be allowed to break in this person's home and get the bomb?

What if your neighbor owned a gun?

If he said he was going to shoot you, then the Cops should take an interest.
If he didn't, the cops shouldn't.

Now, of course, as concerns nuclear weapons... I believe that a man should have a sufficient "fence" around his property to contain negative externalities... which renders the "private possession of nuclear weapons" unjustifiable for anyone with less than, say, ten thousand square miles of barren desert at a minimum.

However, the Government doesn't necessarily see it that way. Libertarians have demonstrated this... at least one libertarian has previously declared his intent to build a neutron bomb in downtown New York City (just to see what the Government would do).

Guess what... The Government sent them instructions -- and tried to subsidize them.

A bomb holder's problem's wouldn't be confined to his home and I feel that too many drug user's problems spill out into the street. I vote accordingly. You feel drug users do a good job of keeping their problems to themselves and you can vote accordingly. We agree to disagree, don't we. I went through this exact same stuff in 1200 posts in two days a month ago and don't feel like going through it again. If you want to see everything I wrote, I'll direct you to those threads if I can find them. Only 1% of the population want to legalize hard drugs and so this argument isn't worth a lot of my time. You're not going to get your way anytime soon. And it's things like this that make me never want to be part of the Libertarian party nor want to be around them if they were to run their own state or nation. Sorry.

Majority Vote does not define Truth.

Try as I might, I can't make myself see...

...as being something I could morally Pray to God.

And if I as a Christian can't morally Pray for it...
...Then I as a Christian I can't morally Vote for it.

As always, JMHO. Best, OP

187 posted on 10/24/2002 8:38:26 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
Your friend who was killed by a dealer... he wasn't gunned down in one of those notorious street battles between employees of Rite-Aid and Wal-Mart Pharmacy fighting over Viagra turf, was he? Didn't think so.

She was killed. There was no reason to do it, she was 24 years old. He was simply wigged out on meth.

Not to be flippant with the memories of the dead, but realize this: Opium was legal (a dutied import, on the regular customs schedule) in the US until 1905 (shortly after Governments began pushing heroin as a "cure" for morphine addiction... oh, great). But legal Pharmacists are not widely known for shooting eachother, or customers, over "turf".

They weren't fighting over turf. He was simply wigged out on drugs. His drug using dad had killed a young girl a few years before and I guess he wanted to know what it felt like and being high on meth reduces one's inhibitions.

You know it. So... "vote what you know"?

I will and I know that hard drugs are too addictive to too many people to be legal.

What if your neighbor owned a gun?

If my neighbor threatened to shoot me with his gun for no reason then he should be arrested for that.

If he said he was going to shoot you, then the Cops should take an interest. If he didn't, the cops shouldn't.

My neighbors have guns, that's fine with me. Guns don't make one crazy like hard drugs do.

Now, of course, as concerns nuclear weapons... I believe that a man should have a sufficient "fence" around his property to contain negative externalities... which renders the "private possession of nuclear weapons" unjustifiable for anyone with less than, say, ten thousand square miles of barren desert at a minimum.

I feel the same about drugs. Since that's not possible then keep them illegal.

However, the Government doesn't necessarily see it that way. Libertarians have demonstrated this... at least one libertarian has previously declared his intent to build a neutron bomb in downtown New York City (just to see what the Government would do).

Figures.

Guess what... The Government sent them instructions -- and tried to subsidize them.

They saw him as a joke.

Majority Vote does not define Truth.

But it's the law.

188 posted on 10/24/2002 9:33:42 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: #3Fan
They weren't fighting over turf. He was simply wigged out on drugs. His drug using dad had killed a young girl a few years before and I guess he wanted to know what it felt like and being high on meth reduces one's inhibitions.

Oh, crystal meth. My pardon. I agree that crystal meth, "redneck cocaine", is a genuinely evil drug.

It's manufacture is also a direct consequence of Drug Prohibition.

Commercially, Crystal Methamphetamine is an economically non-viable drug, were it not for the economics of Prohibition. Like "white lightning" bathtub gin, Crystal Meth will not survive decriminalization in any significant quantity.

Frankly, the economics just aren't there for it without the artificial profit margin.

Guess what... The Government sent them instructions -- and tried to subsidize them. ~~ They saw him as a joke.

It was a Joke.... until the Government itself started shipping Top-Secret DOD specifications to him. (Which is precisely why he burned the specs... unlike his Government, he possessed Common Sense).

Majority Vote does not define Truth. ~~ But it's the law.

It is the Law, sure... but the current state of Law is not the Ethical Question that a Christian considers when he is asked to make Law (as I am, indirectly, at every Election).

If I am asked to vote for or against a given Policy, the only Moral standard I can think of is, "What is a Jesus-Like moral action?"

Try as I might, I can't make myself see...

...as being something I could morally Pray to God.

And if I as a Christian can't morally Pray for it...
...Then I as a Christian I can't morally Vote for it.

As always, JMHO. Best, OP

189 posted on 10/24/2002 9:59:06 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: #3Fan
Commercially, Crystal Methamphetamine is an economically non-viable drug, were it not for the economics of Prohibition. Like "white lightning" bathtub gin, Crystal Meth will not survive decriminalization in any significant quantity. Frankly, the economics just aren't there for it without the artificial profit margin.

By way of example, Cocaine is an economically viable drug, regardless of Prohibition. Cocaine was profitable in modest doses ("Coca-cola") long before Prohibition, and it is an insanely profitable drug now (although, just as we saw with "white lightning" under Alcohol Prohibition, producers have an economic incentive to package and market the drug in extremely high concentrations in order to facilitate Ease of Smuggling).

But I don't immediately recall "Metha-Cola" being a profitable Tonic Drink prior to prohibition economics.

Although even if it were profitable -- which is dubious -- the lower dosages encouraged by Non-Prohibition would probably be much less dangerous than the extremely high concentrations which are economically encouraged by Prohibition Economics.

190 posted on 10/24/2002 10:09:49 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: #3Fan
I will and I know that hard drugs are too addictive to too many people to be legal.

Illegality creates "hard-ness".

Prohibition is the difference between 19th century "Coca Cola", and 20th century "crack cocaine". It creates an economic incentive to package and market the drug in extremely high concentrations to facilitate ease of smuggling.

191 posted on 10/24/2002 10:20:20 PM PDT by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
Oh, crystal meth. My pardon. I agree that crystal meth, "redneck cocaine", is a genuinely evil drug. It's manufacture is also a direct consequence of Drug Prohibition.

No, they manufacture because they know how. If everything was legal except meth, they would still manufacture it because they like it.

Commercially, Crystal Methamphetamine is an economically non-viable drug, were it not for the economics of Prohibition. Like "white lightning" bathtub gin, Crystal Meth will not survive decriminalization in any significant quantity.

Yes it would.

Frankly, the economics just aren't there for it without the artificial profit margin.

Then they would make it themselves.

It was a Joke.... until the Government itself started shipping Top-Secret DOD specifications to him. (Which is precisely why he burned the specs... unlike his Government, he possessed Common Sense).

Uh-huh.

It is the Law, sure... but the current state of Law is not the Ethical Question that a Christian considers when he is asked to make Law (as I am, indirectly, at every Election).

As sure as it should be illegal for someone to have a hydrogen bomb in their garage in a city, hard drugs should stay illegal. You never did answer my question: Should the police be allowed to go into someone's house to remove a hydrogen bomb in a city?

For the sake of those murdered by people on hard drugs, you should pray for it if that's the kind of stuff you pray for.

192 posted on 10/24/2002 10:56:31 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
By way of example, Cocaine is an economically viable drug, regardless of Prohibition. Cocaine was profitable in modest doses ("Coca-cola") long before Prohibition, and it is an insanely profitable drug now (although, just as we saw with "white lightning" under Alcohol Prohibition, producers have an economic incentive to package and market the drug in extremely high concentrations in order to facilitate Ease of Smuggling). But I don't immediately recall "Metha-Cola" being a profitable Tonic Drink prior to prohibition economics. Although even if it were profitable -- which is dubious -- the lower dosages encouraged by Non-Prohibition would probably be much less dangerous than the extremely high concentrations which are economically encouraged by Prohibition Economics.

And then people would want the good stuff. That's why they choose crack over coke. There's a demand for potent drugs, the more potent, the more some want it.

193 posted on 10/24/2002 10:59:03 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
Illegality creates "hard-ness".

Demand creates hardness.

Prohibition is the difference between 19th century "Coca Cola", and 20th century "crack cocaine". It creates an economic incentive to package and market the drug in extremely high concentrations to facilitate ease of smuggling.

Plus people liked the extra-potency.

194 posted on 10/24/2002 11:00:31 PM PDT by #3Fan
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
Michiel Van Notten was a Libertarian idealist. His positions on Xeer are interesting but not essential to the success of his business project. The economic problem he was adressing was that because Eritrea had separated itself from Ethiopia, the Ethiopians had become totally landlocked and dependent on a single trade route to Djibouti. This was a bad situation because Djibouti did not have adequate shipping capacity and was charging exhorbitant prices. In order to compete with this, Van Notten wanted to build a toll road linking Ethiopia to Awdal which is a region of Somaliland adjacent to Djibouti in the extreme northwest of the country. In Awdal he wanted to build a container cargo port. The fishing thing was just a preliminary step to get the port established. The development of the port and road would benefit the people of that primitive region because they would then be on a trade route.

A pure libertarian country with no government other than tribal judges is not required for this project to be feasible. Nor is separation of church and state. What is required is political stability, enforcability of contracts, the rule of law, and security of private property. Also helpful are a liberal trade policy, a low tax burden, and a stable currency. The constitution of Somaliland seems favorable to the at least some of these things.

Link to Awdal project

195 posted on 10/24/2002 11:39:59 PM PDT by ganesha
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
Your suggestion that Libertarian Michiel van Notten was seeking to establish "Self-appointed judges unbound by written law" is as absurd as the first time you tried to sneak it by.

False.

196 posted on 10/25/2002 1:20:35 AM PDT by Roscoe
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To: ganesha
A pure libertarian country with no government other than tribal judges is not required for this project to be feasible. Nor is separation of church and state. What is required is political stability, enforcability of contracts, the rule of law, and security of private property.

All of the things that libertarianism is destructive of.

197 posted on 10/25/2002 1:23:23 AM PDT by Roscoe
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
I would address it by saying that if the Somali Islamist movement has been identified as a Terrorist organization, then you must be real proud of your cheer-leading for the establishment of a Tyrannical Islamofascist State in Somaliland, aren't you??

The identified terrorist activities are in Somali, which you assert Somaliland should be part if.

198 posted on 10/25/2002 1:27:33 AM PDT by Roscoe
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To: #3Fan
"Majority Vote does not define Truth."

But it's the law.
188 - 3fan


'But it's the law', ONLY if it conforms to our constitutional principles.
Federal & state drug ~prohibition~ laws do not so comply on any number of grounds.
Reasonable law ~regulating~ the commercial sale & public use of mind altering substances on public health & safety grounds are perfectly constitutional, as you well know, as per alcohol.

Which leaves this question. -- Why do you support unconstitutional prohibitionary type laws, -- laws which in their enforcement are destroying the very principles our free republic is built upon?

199 posted on 10/25/2002 6:08:25 AM PDT by tpaine
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To: tpaine
'But it's the law', ONLY if it conforms to our constitutional principles.

As interpreted by our court judges.

Federal & state drug ~prohibition~ laws do not so comply on any number of grounds.

Then do drugs and see if the courts will save you from going to jail.

Reasonable law ~regulating~ the commercial sale & public use of mind altering substances on public health & safety grounds are perfectly constitutional, as you well know, as per alcohol.

Test it in the courts. I'll stand back and watch.

Which leaves this question. -- Why do you support unconstitutional prohibitionary type laws, -- laws which in their enforcement are destroying the very principles our free republic is built upon?

Our republic wasn't built on drug freedoms any more than it was built on the right of people to have sex in public.

You're the one that believes that states don't have the right to outlaw drug use, aren't you. So much for the myth of "state's rights Libertarians". LOL

200 posted on 10/25/2002 6:16:26 AM PDT by #3Fan
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