<div dir="ltr"><div><span><p>And some of those Libertarian micro-nation discussions happened on this list! Lol<br></p><p>"Hongoltz-Hetling is an accomplished journalist based in Vermont, a Pulitzer nominee and George Polk Award winner. <em><a href="https://bookshop.org/a/1620/9781541788510" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town (and Some Bears)</a></em>
sees him traversing rural New England as he reconstructs a remarkable,
and remarkably strange, episode in recent history. This is the so-called
Free Town Project, a venture wherein a group of libertarian activists
attempted to take over a tiny New Hampshire town, Grafton, and transform
it into a haven for libertarian ideals—part social experiment, part
beacon to the faithful, Galt’s Gulch meets the New Jerusalem. These
people had found one another largely over the internet, posting
manifestos and engaging in utopian daydreaming on online message boards.
While their various platforms and bugbears were inevitably
idiosyncratic, certain beliefs united them: that the radical freedom of
markets and the marketplace of ideas was an unalloyed good; that
“statism” in the form of government interference (above all, taxes) was
irredeemably bad. Left alone, they believed, free individuals would
thrive and self-regulate, thanks to the sheer force of “logic,”
“reason,” and efficiency. For inspirations, they drew upon precedents
from fiction (Ayn Rand loomed large) as well as from real life, most
notably a series of micro-nation projects ventured in the Pacific and
Caribbean during the 1970s and 1980s. </p></span><span><p>None of those
micro-nations, it should be observed, panned out, and things in New
Hampshire don’t bode well either—especially when the humans collide with
a newly brazen population of bears, themselves just “working to create
their own utopia,” property lines and market logic be damned. The
resulting narrative is simultaneously hilarious, poignant, and deeply
unsettling. Sigmund Freud once described the value of civilization, with
all its “discontents,” as a compromise product, the best that can be
expected from mitigating human vulnerability to “indifferent nature” on
one hand and our vulnerability to one another on the other.
Hongoltz-Hetling presents, in microcosm, a case study in how a politics
that fetishizes the pursuit of “freedom,” both individual and economic,
is in fact a recipe for impoverishment and supercharged vulnerability on
both fronts at once. In a United States wracked by virus, mounting
climate change, and ruthless corporate pillaging and governmental
deregulation, the lessons from one tiny New Hampshire town are stark
indeed."</p></span>
</div><div><a href="https://newrepublic.com/article/159662/libertarian-walks-into-bear-book-review-free-town-project">https://newrepublic.com/article/159662/libertarian-walks-into-bear-book-review-free-town-project</a></div></div>