Life Within The Leviathan : 3 Reasons I'm Not Fleeing The Empire (Sorry, Berwick)

in politics •  8 years ago  (edited)

One of the hot topics of the liberty community is EXPATRIATION.

"GTFO before SHTF!"

"I want more freedom, so I'm moving to Mexico."

"The Empire is gonna collapse, I want out! Everyone get out now!"

"Martial law is gonna be declared any day, I'm getting out now."

"OMG FEMA CAMPS!!!"

See also, "the dollar is about to collapse" and/or "The next president is Hitler, I'm leaving".

Thing is, I TOTALLY GET IT.


Do What What You Feel Is Right

I'm not saying I do not FULLY understand where my friends and fellow freedom lovers are coming from here, or that I don't think there are plenty of valid reasons to 'get the fuck out', as it were.

HOWEVER, I have several very well-considered reasons for not choosing to leave, and for having no future intention to.

A whole lot of that hinges on what my own personal goals and preferences are, which are different than many of my friends.

However, some of the reasoning behind the motivations of many expatriating/expatriate-hopeful friends,
I tend to disagree with. You can figure out on what points, by reading below.

~[To my friend Jeff Berwick, @thedollarvigilante who founded Anarchapulco: that conference is the best Anarchist gathering I've experienced, I am honored to be a speaker there, and I loved Acapulco!]~

So without further ado--and for your personal consideration--here are the 3 major reasons this anarchist woman is not bailing out of The Imperial City.


#1

I actually "LOVE MY COUNTRY" {yes, I'll explain what that means}

_

A lot of people shout "I love my country!" without ever bothering to consider what a "country" is, or what they even mean when they say that. They identify with places they've never been, seen, or experienced, and millions who live on the same patch of dirt they do, without ever knowing more than a fraction of a percent of those people or the hundreds of micro-cultures within the arbitrary boundary lines of fascist Murica.

While I used to think in foggy terms and mushy concepts that don't exist, I now understand that a country is not a singular thinking or conscious entity unto itself,

AND

whether a person is referring to the physical patch of earth within certain human-conjured lines OR the individuals that live within those invisible lines, it's extremely vital to define what you mean by the word country.

It was also very important that I finally realized just HOW SMALL A PERCENTAGE of earth, or any so-called country, I have actually experienced.

So when I say I love "my country", I don't mean:

  • That it is physically 'mine' in any way. That is, I don't own anything other than what is on my immediate private property, and the region around my house, whether it is 'my town', or 'my state', is not actually owned by me.
    I certainly can't claim ownership of the arbitrarily outlined 3.8+ million square miles known as MURICA.

  • That I personally love every individual in it. I have not even met 1% of the individuals living within the drawn lines of the U.S, people of extremely different backgrounds and upbringings of immense variety. It would be dishonest to say I love 350+ million people I know precisely nothing about. I do not hate them, but then I do not hate or love anyone I do not really know.

  • That I love those who wear any government uniform or badge and claim to represent me while violating the freedom of others.

  • That I know all about the geography, that I have seen all the land and culture, or that I have enough information to actually be able to say "I love all the geography, people, and cultures of this region". No, I am not saying that either.

What I DO Mean:

  • I love that there exists within this land region a verifiable history of individuals who value the principles of real freedom, and are still verbally or otherwise advocating for liberty/challenging authoritarians.

  • I love that people are still talking about and believing in the notions of freedom in many cities/towns/subcultures, because even if individuals in the boundaries of The Empire are not very free, they are taught that it is valuable and many of them are starting to figure out just how much they are less free than they assumed.

  • I love the insane levels of geographic beauty here. I have a real sense of the size of the landscape, from road trips and on-foot travel/hiking, and I am in love with the absolutely immense beauty and extreme geographic diversity available all within the government-drawn boundary lines. I am in love with places here I have yet to see, only because I am aware of how much there is here yet to be explored and experienced. I see the experiences of others out in the wildernesses of this "country" in documentary, tales from friends and acquaintances, catalogues, photography, video, etc. I understand that millions travel from around the globe to see places here that look nothing like other places and offer things other places do not.

Somewhere else is not at all better or more beautiful JUST because it is somewhere else.

  • I love just how fucking armed millions of Americans still are. Yes, we have got a massive gun culture here, and people are not as stupid as many anarchists depressively would like to believe. The evidence is in the data. Ammunition and firearms sales tend to skyrocket the minute the Lamestream Media breathes a whiff of new restrictive legislation.

People are waking up, and there's data to prove it if you pay close attention.

The Big Sandy Machine Gun Shoot in Arizona-Teleg



#2

They're The Ones Who Suck

_

I know that a lot of my friends and others who value freedom--and see how fascist this government has become--want to get out and protect their families.

Thing is, I'm just not afraid of what the government here can or might do. I used to be, but not anymore.

I decided the best defense is a good offense, really. And I intend to hack at the root--the belief in government/authority--right here in the heart of The World's Most Imperialist Empire.

As I've said before, this dragon believes that ideas are all that change the world

Ideas form beliefs, outlooks, world-views; they are what people act on. In a land where people already value freedom, and have a history of valuing it, all I need to do is help them discover their own chains, and The Empire dissolves with very little sound. If you listen closely, and keep your finger out there in the world wide web where the pulse of freedom already is, you can already hear the leak. It deflates as we speak.

I refuse to run off the playground because there's a bully on it. I'd rather defend myself against the bully, and have everyone else on the playground stand up to him so that he is rendered powerless and irrelevant.

When a bunch of aggressors try to use force to take over a region and people, it does nothing to help take back stolen land or free others if everyone who believes in freedom just runs away from the aggressor and leaves them with their mentally/physically enslaved victims.

I'm staying here and fighting back with the one thing they can't stop with deadly force:

THE IDEA WHOSE TIME HAS COME.

The revolutionary concept that there is no such thing as a legitimate group of bullies.

#3

If It Doesn't Happen Here, There Will Be Nowhere To Run

_

If freedom can wake up here, it can wake up anywhere.

Arguably, from some perspectives, this is the hardest "nut to crack" for freedom lovers.
But it is also the biggest threat if it is not cracked.

Americans are some of the most heavily-schooled and indoctrinated among the first world countries, put through 12,000 hours of spirit-breaking, critical-thought-crushing, government-funded prison. Yet, we're told from birth we're living "free", so many Americans essentially think black is white and up is down, slavery is freedom.

Yet, it also makes sense to say:

If it CANNOT happen here, it will not happen anywhere else.

Arguably, Europe and much of China (the cultures and beliefs of a lot of the individuals there) have a far deeper and more embedded, entrenched, ancient history of militarism and submission to authority. They are extremely steeped in statist collectivism and individual freedom isn't even heavily discussed and valued the way it is in the cultures of modern day America.

In addition, wherever there have been places where freedom might have been, or perhaps was uprising,

the growth of Imperialist America is quickly getting the boots of global domination on the ground in those places and upending/subverting/bombing innocents who were minding their own business, all in the name of "freedom".

Wherever you're running to,
If the government of the United States only continues to get larger, and more powerful, and expands its reach,

You will not be free long, and even if you are right now, your children and/or grandchildren certainly won't be.


I don't mean to beat a dead horse... JUSTKIDDINGYESIDO.

The dissemination of the ideas of real liberty: Voluntarism, Anarchism -- the idea that all human interactions should be based on consent, and no one has the right through election or title to violate the free will of another by force,

is all that is going to save the world, protect you, and free the world.


Practically Speaking

If you want practical freedom just while you are alive, I understand that. Lots of places in the U.S.S.A are stifling of actual freedom.

Yet, lots of places here are still not LESS free than many places in Mexico, or Canada or elsewhere.

Lots of places here are, in a practical sense if not on paper, still more free than many other places on the globe one might run to.

I have noticed how much many individuals in the liberty community seem extremely ignorant to just how much of the region called the United States is untouched, unexplored, full of armed and freedom-minding individuals,
and how much of it is rather practically free--where you can live un-assailed by government powers for the most part, and where regulation is not stifling or is nonexistent.

Do your research, inform yourself.

Be wary of sensationalist, fear-mongering hype, that generates deep emotions in you.
News that makes you feel fear, makes you want to run, makes you feel you cannot be happy if you don't get thousands of miles away from where you are.

Fear manipulates, and authoritarians who want to rule the world want you to give in to it.

THAT WAY THEY CAN PREDICT YOU.


In The End, These Pros Outweigh The Cons

I live among the beautiful, biologically diverse and rich landscapes of Arizona, which is largely unsettled and unexplored, I could spend a lifetime seeing all it has to offer.

Surrounding my home is the biologically diverse and rich lands that are within the boundaries of the so-called America, and I want to explore those lands still. I do not take the unique beauty here for granted.

I live among a culture of individuals who are extremely heavily armed here in Arizona, and who value private property; many of whom are armed with major weaponry and are prepared to use it against the federal government.

Fun Fact: Arizona is home to The Big Sandy Shoot, an event that happens every year and is coming up in October. Hey @thedollarvigilante, you should seriously consider flying in there to do an Anarchast episode live from that event, more people need to know about that gem!

I am one individual among millions who were brought up taught to value freedom, and are figuring out just how much freedom they've lost.

And there are already many thousands here in this region of the planet who are fighting to get it back through decentralization, the internet, and withdrawing their money and consent from government and authoritarian rulers.

--

{Disclaimer:
For my friends who loved Mexico and wanted to go there, I get it, and that's your choice. It is not objectively better than mine though, because I have a different focus on things and I love the beauty and freedom I already have here.
I did not see more beauty in Mexico than beauty I have witnessed here, and I actually did not witness more freedom there than lots of places I have experienced here (though Acapulco is freer in places than the major cities of the U.S.) Do what you must, my friends, but think carefully about why and above all: Do it for the right reasons, not out of fear.}

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Yes! That first part, exactly! I was born here, I've lived here my whole life. There are places in the world that I might like to visit, sure, but there are places here where I want to live. And sure, I might want to live in different places within this country, but I like speaking english and driving on the right side of the road.

Maybe, in the fullness of time, I might decide one day that I would like to live somewhere else, but that is not a decision that I want to be informed by a terror of a giant bureaucratic organization that might kill or imprison me.

Plus, I really really suck at learning new languages. I've tried, and I'm sure I could learn them, but I can't find any kind of lessons or method of learning that doesn't bore the crap out of me way before I get out of the beginning stages. Maybe if I hired a tutor, but damn, I aint rich.

In all things, be informed, and do it for the right reasons! :)

I am not prey, so I don't just RUN. I CHOOSE.

I stand beside you. This very accurately describes my own feelings as well. Sure there are differences, but more or less you not only hit the nail on the head, you almost sent it flying out the other side of the board.

I do think the fight needs to be here. The entire world seems to be having problems. At one point a decade ago I considered moving to Canada. Now I don't really see living there as being different from here. As to Mexico it has it's problems too and whatever happens in this country are very likely to spill over into that country.

If they could push the North American Union that many have Theorized is an agenda that'd likely be the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.

I do love my country. I despise my government. I view most of the people not with hate, but as victims.

That makes me want to fight more, I just choose my battle as one I can hopefully actually survive and make a difference.

*throws confetti and blows kazoo

I'm not alone!!! Thank you!

This was REALLY great, Amanda!

I am one of those "If you want practical freedom just while you are alive" folk...but I venture a guess that's largely b/c I am an urban girl who's DONE. One-eightying on ALL THE THINGS will do that.

But you're right.

I really DO love this country too! For ALL the reasons you described. And, thankfully, in the past few years I've been able experience some of the more "free" parts of our beautiful land and how great those who live there are, which DOES make me feel slightly less "stuck."

BUT

Like you, I have a son...and I want him to have options IF SHTF. He has family in Switzerland and Australia, but those are first-world. I aim to carve the path for a second-or-third-world option.

Ideally, we can have "feet" in as many places as possible, still feeling free and safe wherever we hang our hats. I would like that...'cause I really like it here, too.

P.S.~
Your formatting skills herein are KILLER. You really figured out how to use it to effectively put YOUR voice to text. Well done!

Thanks, I think formatting took 2/3rds of the effort LOL, but considering the whole thing took about 3 hours total to flesh out and format, that's not too bad.

I really appreciate your perspective here so that others can see and think of everything.

I like to think of this as "home base" but it's really -- like my husband Tom says -- a launch pad. I want to travel and see the world and maybe even spend months in other places some day in the future when my son is older.

I love the whole earth for what immense beauty I know it has to offer, and I have no assumption that somewhere else is necessarily better than right where I am. :)

Great article! Whether the pros outweigh the cons is a matter of personal opinion. It depends on your priorities - what you want to be able to do with your life in the short term and how much the U.S. gets in the way of that.

I love the natural beauty of this continent too. You have a point with the argument that "if it can't happen here, it's not going to happen anywhere else." I am really intrigued by your location in Arizona!

Thanks, Amanda. I like your analogy of the bully and the schoolyard. Why should I leave? I've heard "Get out of Dodge," too. Not me. This blue marble floating around in space is my home, ALL of it. The bullies and fearmongers can rant and rave all they want and they'll never scare me. I recognize no authorities. No one tells me what to do. The imaginary lines drawn as borders do not exist to me. Besides, government is inept and inefficient, and we "citizens" overwhelmingly outnumber the bullies. There's a great book by Harry Browne: "How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World." I recommend it highly.

Lastly, and YES...we live in a beautiful world. I work to capture that beauty everyday in my art. Arizona is one of my favorite places!

Ding, ding, ding, we have a winner. Young lady you have just described what I think is a larger portion of the people's beliefs than some realize. I may be just a simple redneck but this ole boy, ain't going nowhere.

:) This made me smile. Thank you.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Great points, Amanda. Thanks for the thoughts. As I was reading I was nodding my head, because I too, love America's geographic beauty and culture of anti-authoritarianism.
But nowadays, with the ability to run our own lives around the edges of the rulers' restrictions, it really doesn't matter where we live as much. Freedom is an internal affair.
I probably live in what some may consider a less free place, South Korea, and have lived here ​most of the time since 1995. For Koreans, it can be a conformist nightmare, but my life is my own in so many ways and my family enjoys life here too. I travel to the USA to see family and friends once or twice a year, but my work, family and life are all based in Korea, which I enjoy the heck out of. One advantage of being an expat is in the fact that you don't have to live by anyone else's rules.
I agree with you on the right to defend yourself using firearms in principle, but have to admit that I am much, much safer from gun violence here than almost anywhere in the USA.

So much love for this post. This is my fucking home and I'm not going anywhere.

*throws hearts at you

Also to note, basically going somewhere outside of the mpire is practically a guarantee move into a war zone!.

I love it here! Let the statists leave and the state disintegrate; they do not get to steal it for themselves.

I love YOU, hubby. :) Thanks for the love. <3

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

There's a lot of valid reasons for people leaving certain countries, but it's hard to imagine any country being very safe in the coming years. I don't live in the USA or North Korea though :P, so I guess it's not the worst situation for me.

yup on #3

I probably wouldn't leave Arizona, either.
However, living on the plains is a totally different experience in the winter.
Mexico was a wonderful escape for me, I can't wait to get back.
You can live in Acapulco for less than $300 a month.
That is rent and two meals a day at a restaurant.
If you get out of the tourist areas and don't engage in drugs you should have little problem in mexico.
I agree that jumping ship doesn't make sense in all areas and situations.
Being an outsider when the balloon goes up is not the best situation to be in.

I deeply dislike and distrust my government. I know that men with guns may come for me in the middle of the night to take me away to a happy camp. I took an oath to defend this country although I see the inherant problems in it's constitution or rather the abuses of it. I was not relieved of this oath. I love a good fight. I will help and defend others in time of need. I also think America has stunningly beautiful places. I live in one of those. I bow to no king and run from no bully or beaurocrat. I consider myself to be just one of the III% that will die on my feet so that my children may not kneel to a master. I used to pledge allegiance to a flag, but it is not the flag I would die for but the god given rights of the individual that lives under it. I will not run because like you said this is the bastion of freedom and if it loses here, the whole world is doomed to follow.

Interesting post. I liked it (upvoted, and followed)

I lived in different countries (Balkans, France and the USA), and spend months in South Africa (JoBurg). Since a year, I immigrated to the USA (green card - 10 years).

Is grass always greener on the other side (of the border ?)

If I would compare to the places I lived in before: France (Occidental Democracy) or to the Balkans (Less occidental, almost as democratic), I can say that the US are a quite a fantastic place to live.

I will not elaborate on the items which I think the USA are ahead of these 2 other countries, but here's a short list of my personal thoughts:

  • health system (even if f%king expensive, it's quality stuff. Dentists especially)
  • employment/economy (try to find a job in Serbia 5 years ago...)
  • promotion of people: can do attitude, rewarding mindset.
  • taxes (F. YES, compared to France... USA is almost taxless on the income and on the sales taxes)
  • overall mindset: way more positive than on other countries in Europe.
  • Freedom of Speech: YES. In France, some of the things I read here would send people to jail. Seriously. France is a country of censorship...
  • Security: Paris Islamic attacks, Nightlife in Pristina Kosovo, Alexandra Township in South Africa... compare what you want... even the Bronx is safer sometimes.
  • Diversity of people: the Melting-pot is a real thing (here in Norcal at least), and the LGBT community is respected. (Note: South Africa obviously still has efforts to make, but BEE should help)

Of course, your TV is pure SH1T, your food is a shame, your credit scoring is a scam/lie, your education system runs on debt, and your administrative bureaucracy is as bad as the French one... but overall, the USA are a great place to live.

Choose your country, choose your poison.

My 2cents. Happy to discuss (this is where the magic happens)

Inspiring! I have similar thoughts about my home and native land, Canada.

Also, it's practical in an important sense. From the purely cynical blood-and-guts perspective: when an Empire is growing, the best citizenship to have is the Empire's. I know the foregoing sounds amoral, but we sometimes have to consider the practical side. Consider the advantages a Briton enjoyed in the 19th century, or the advantage enjoyed by St. Paul because he was a Roman citizen.

And you are right in that Americans are most familiar with the idea of Liberty. That definitely counts. Why count on (say) Mexicans or mainland Chinese to discover the ideal of Liberty when so many Americans already know it?

In my case, I'm sticking with my home and native land for a more quotidian reason: I know how the system works in Canada. That's good enough reason for this Canuck to stay put :)

I am really starting to think I need to put articles like this in a "SHTF-Brian has been Kidnapped and Killed by the "Authorities"" dropbox and if something ever happens to me, the posts go viral all over social media.

Sort of one of those, if I am reported to have committed suicide, "Know I would Never" type situations.

Amanda you are spot on! I'm an old voluntaryist and my libertarianism goes way back. I have always been skeptical when Doug Casey kept telling people to leave the USA. The Harry Browne influence in me has found freedom in an unfree world. And that influence also told me at the beginning you do not have to cross into other government jurisdictions necessarily to have more freedom. He suggested to live free anyway. Here's a Thomas Jefferson quote: "If a law is unjust, a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so." There are so many of us libertarians and voluntaryists who should understand what he means. If you do not follow an unjust law, you will not necessarily get caught. I see people breaking laws everyday and they do not get caught. And some poor bloke thinks he has to move to Hong Kong because he does not want to disobey an unjust law? That's screwy. America has the heritage of freedom. Even first and second generation Americans know this and I see some of them do things that their parents would not dare try in the old country. I'm staying!

I chose to boycott the state at 12 (1954).
I only reason I didn't leave in the late sixties/early seventies was because I couldn't afford the one freer place I found, Switzerland. So I opened a Swiss bank account instead, to keep some money safe. I had read Casey's "International Man" and thought of myself as "a man without a country".
Now, I am glad I didn't leave. At 74 I have had a good life here, and am a life member of Libertopia. If I get caught in the authoritarian machinery, I can say "too late" thugs! I already lived most of my life free in this unfree country. So every additional day free is a victory they can't take away. Life outside the "matrix" is possible, if challenging, but I have taken "the road less traveled" and that made all the difference. I am living proof: RESISTANCE IS NOT FUTILE!

We're neighbors. I'm in eastern AZ.
I agree that there's a lot to love about the country (place and people). Of course, the state is a rabid monster, and has become one of the more draconian regimes.
Twenty years ago I wanted to stay and be part of the change. Today, I just want out. The increase in decadence on multiple levels has been discouraging. But I'm really mostly concerned with becoming jailbait for overzealous alphabet soup government thug units. It used to be that you had to at least do something wrong to get your door broken down, possessions seized and family traumatized. Now all they need is a warrant, which can be gotten whether there's just cause or not.
Not even getting into the welfare trap...
Yep, ready to go. Can't be soon enough.

I love it!

I tell you what, After reading your post, i like living in the USA once again. And to think i was going to move to mexico, cray cray...

Thanks @dragonanarchist for once again edging a clear facet on the gem of truth . I've committed to focusing on the positive aspects of our existence, even while acknowledging the invasions of regulation and government. I can resonate with this.

Thanks, Chuck. I love that I can help people clear any mental or emotional fog and make better decisions for themselves, for the right reasons. I have been helped to do so many times by my fellow humans mentoring me, so I want to pass it along. :)

Great article. The Big Sandy Shoot sound like a very interesting event.

i agree. i love this place. a few of the people actively suck. where else can i go that the fiery whirling maelstrom won't follow me? i don't speak any other living language anyway. unless i can find some very hardcore catholics. i think i'll hang out here even if the end comes.

Well written, dragonanarchist! I often debate the question of fight or flight in my own head. Although, due to shared parenting, I'm spiritually confined to a jurisdiction close to my daughter, but even if, I would really have to question moving for the abovementioned points you have made. Look forward to similar content in the future !