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Something doesn't add up. Governments around the world aren't just failing at random. It looks too orchestrated. The elites are trying to abolish governments. Fact. In places like the World Economic Forum, the UN's development programs and private think tanks, they are already talking about post nation governance. A future where borders and politicians fade replaced by algorithmic management. Smart cities run by code, resources distributed by digital overseers. AI not just assisting government, but being the government. Open code, public servers, oversight by truth, not profit. Oversight? Nobody. Fact, the EU has already passed laws for AI oversight boards. Fact, the UN's twenty thirty agenda speaks of automated monitoring of resources and populations. The collapse of trust in governments isn't an accident. It's a setup. The replacement isn't democracy reborn. It's governance by machine owned by the same few who hollowed out the old system.

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The speaker believes in limited government, not anarchy. Government's primary function is defending the country, which the speaker has been unable to imagine as a private enterprise. Another function is protecting citizens from coercion by other citizens, which the speaker believes the government performs ineffectively. The speaker states a third essential function of government is defining the rules, such as what constitutes a violation of private property. A fourth function is providing a judicial system to adjudicate disputes about the meaning of those rules. The speaker believes these are the only essential functions of government. They suggest that government might do more good than harm in some other areas, but moving back in the direction of these four functions would be marvelous.

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I believe Doge isn't about money, but shrinking government to limit its power, even against figures like Trump. But, if Trump is the head of the government, why would the government try to stop him? Because the bureaucracy should uphold the Constitution and prevent authoritarianism, holding everyone accountable and ensuring the government works for the people. Trump is shredding the Constitution, but we never said the bureaucracy should resist political leadership. We are saying that the President will put someone in charge who will contravene the constitution. This is what dictatorships do. The President is in charge of the military, as per the Constitution, which vests executive authority in the President. The idea of an independent military or a bureaucracy resisting political leadership is dangerous.

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Is this truly a democracy? A functioning democracy requires a strong feedback loop between the people and their government. Without it, if unelected bureaucrats hold the power, the meaning of democracy is lost. The weight of leadership can be challenging, but open communication is essential for a government to represent its citizens effectively. A government without responsiveness to its people isn't truly democratic.

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The international order has been built over generations. Ordinary people are too small-minded to govern themselves. Order and progress require individuals to surrender their rights to an all-powerful sovereign.

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150 years ago, people didn't need government permission for everyday activities like fishing, owning property, starting a business, or even setting up a lemonade stand. Now, almost everything requires government approval. If you believe you're still free, you're mistaken. You're essentially a controlled human in a tax system.

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If Trump gets the Federal Reserve out, he'll be one of the greatest presidents ever. However, Trump would never and should never end the Federal Reserve because he's part of the money-making system of the Luciferian satanists. The Jews in the cabal send their leaders to meet with Fortune 500 company leaders and secretaries of state. Government says, "In God we trust," but they actually trust in the devil. All government overstep, schools, water, and the police department can be done better by private companies. Complete privatization will open up prosperity in everybody's wallets through a subscription-based localized privatized police business model. The easiest way to do that is to ban political parties.

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To avoid tyranny, it's crucial to be self-sufficient and not rely on the government for basic needs like food, shelter, education, and healthcare. If the government controls these aspects of your life, they have the power to manipulate and oppress you. History has shown that governments can become tyrannical, and if that happens, you're in trouble. Our forefathers understood this well, and it's a lesson that needs to be relearned by the American people. When a government has the power to give people everything they want, it also has the power to take everything they have. We believe that freedom is more important than anything else, even if collectivism seems morally acceptable or leads to a higher standard of living.

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"A lot of the things that that sort of came to fruition during COVID were were not sudden breaks. They were just more of the same to a to an extent that we haven't seen before. But, nevertheless, it's still part of a still part of a curve." "The logic is the government exists to solve social problems." "Government is based upon expertise." "Government knows best what it is that we should do." "And if you combine that idea with the very Canadian idea of authority, then there's some explanation there for why it is that governments at all levels I'm not just talking about the federal government. Governments at all levels take it upon themselves to be involved more and more in just about everything and to to issue rules and regulations and guidelines and policies and bylaws and discretionary decision making because that's what it thinks its job is."

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Trusting experts is not a feature of science or democracy. In legal cases, both sides present experts who can be convincing. Experts have their own biases and ambitions, so it's not reliable to trust them blindly. Trusting experts is more common in religion and totalitarianism.

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The speaker believes in limited government, not anarchy. The first essential function of government is defending the country against foreign enemies, a function the speaker has been unable to imagine as a private enterprise. The second function is protecting citizens from abuse and coercion by other citizens, which the speaker believes the government performs ineffectively. The third function is defining the rules of the game, such as defining private property. The speaker gives the example of airplanes flying over a house at different altitudes and asks at what point it becomes a violation of private property. The fourth function is providing a mechanism for adjudicating disputes about the meaning of those rules in a judicial system. These are the only four essential functions of government, according to the speaker.

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The speaker warns against blindly trusting leaders, using a character from a book as an example. They believe society has lost its healthy distrust of government, citing Richard Nixon as a positive influence for teaching skepticism. The idea is presented that government is a shared illusion, and once the myth is shattered, the government ceases to exist.

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The government aims to control you, not serve you. Democrats and Republicans create problems, not solutions. They want to keep you feeling powerless and dependent. The establishment fears Trump's return not because of him, but because of you. Wake up, America, or lose your freedom.

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The speakers agree the current system is "pretty bad," and Speaker 1 attributes this to a lack of competition, stating the government has a monopoly on governing. Speaker 1 clarifies they are not advocating for privatizing government. The speakers then discuss corruption, with Speaker 0 stating they know some individuals involved. They then consider focusing on incompetency and waste instead of fraud. Speaker 0 agrees there is waste in the system.

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The speaker favored laissez-faire economics but was challenged on the justification for government-supplied police and courts. The argument was posed that if people can agree to a monopoly court and police system, they could also agree to government-run industries like steel plants and dams. This led the speaker to conclude that laissez-faire is inconsistent. The speaker believed the only consistent positions were either anarchism (scrapping coercive government entirely) or liberalism (allowing government involvement in various industries). The speaker then abandoned laissez-faire.

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Leadership in government is seen as political power, which is a way of antagonizing the people. Politics are necessary, but they can also be seen as rules imposed upon the people. In this country, rules are not imposed but are the collective wish of all free citizens. However, when you travel around, you realize how limited your freedom actually is. Passports are required to travel, making it feel like being in jail. Free speech and free enterprise are also restricted, with monopolies posing a threat to competition.

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I resent it when a representative refers to us as the masses. The founding fathers aimed to minimize the power of centralized government, as they understood that governments can't control things without controlling people. When a government tries to control the economy, it resorts to force and coercion. The founding fathers also recognized that, apart from its legitimate functions, government is not as efficient or economical as the private sector.

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People are too small-minded to govern themselves. Progress requires individuals to give up their rights to a powerful ruler.

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Without a strong feedback loop between the people and their government, democracy loses its meaning. Bureaucratic rule undermines the power of elected officials—the president, the Senate, and the House—to represent the will of the people. If unelected bureaucrats make the decisions, we don't have a democracy; we have a bureaucracy. It's crucial to repair this feedback loop so that our elected representatives, not unelected bureaucrats, determine our nation's course. The public's chosen leaders in the presidency, House, and Senate must be the ultimate decision-makers.

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History shows government spends all tax revenue plus more. Government is too big, its programs aren't working, and it's doing more harm than good. No additional government programs are needed; existing, ineffective ones should be eliminated.

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If there isn't a solid feedback loop connecting the people to the government, and the bureaucracy is in charge, what does democracy even mean? If the people can't vote and have their will enacted by their elected officials like the president, senate, and house, then we're not in a democracy, we're in a bureaucracy. It's crucial to fix this feedback loop so that the public's elected representatives decide what happens, not a large, unelected bureaucracy. There are good people in the federal bureaucracy, but it can't be autonomous. It must be responsive to the people; that's the whole point of a democracy.

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Doge isn't about saving or spending money; it's about making the government so small that it can't stop Trump. Why would the government try to stop Trump? Isn't he the head of the government? You're suggesting the government would be too small to stop Trump, even if he's president? Because they want to protect the constitution. And he is creating an authoritarian dictatorship. Are you saying Trump is spreading the constitution? We are saying that we put all power in the executive branch. The legislative branch, the FBI, and the military. We're silencing the media. But isn't the president commander in chief of the military? I'm suggesting the president will put someone in charge who will go against the constitution.

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Energy grids collapsing, food systems stumbling, parliaments in constant deadlock. Leaders suddenly look incapable of solving even basic problems. That's not just bad luck. That's stagecraft. The elites are trying to abolish governments. In places like the World Economic Forum, the UN's development programs and private think tanks, they are already talking about post nation governance. A future where borders and politicians fade replaced by algorithmic management. Smart cities run by code, resources distributed by digital overseers. AI not just assisting government, but being the government. Open code, public servers, oversight by truth, not profit. Right now, the servers belong to corporate giants. The algorithms are written by private labs. Oversight? Nobody. Which means the people would be trading fraud governments for something worse. A control system you can't vote out, can't even see.

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Speaker 0: Have you seen local news anchors reciting it verbatim, as if democracy is the greatest thing ever? It’s become a social engineering propaganda tool that democracy is the greatest thing ever. We weren’t founded as a democracy. This country is founded as a constitutional republic. Speaker 1: There’s a line from Sweatshop Union: if democracy is so good, why are we running all over the world down people’s throats? Speaker 0: Exactly. Spreading democracy by dropping bombs just doesn’t make sense. Speaker 2: The political apparatus is set up such that government is not merit-based, but private institutions select leaders on merit. What happens if, in the future, micro sovereignties are run by the most competent person rather than a personality? Look at Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore in the 80s. His government was compensated based on economic returns and performance. Singapore is widely regarded as one of the best places to do business and as one of the freest, most open micronations. Speaker 0: Let’s start with The Sovereign Individual, the book on the table. Difficult read? Speaker 2: One of the hardest reads, in my view. It’s dry and painful, with dismal subjects. Speaker 0: An eye opener—unplugging from the matrix. It’s an orange-peeling book and was written in 1997, about twenty years before Bitcoin. Speaker 2: It predicted the emergence of anonymous digital cash, i.e., Bitcoin. It predicted the rise of narrowcasting rather than broadcasting, i.e., social media. It predicted government use of a plandemic to reinforce border integrity when things started to get weird. Speaker 0: It was prescient. Imagine reading it in 1996. The book’s first five to ten years—how successful was it? Speaker 1: I imagine they’ve sold enormous numbers more recently. The book’s sales figures suggest a Pareto effect: 10-to-1, 15-to-1 in rankings. The necessity of a post-nine world has made the authors’ insights profoundly prophetic. Speaker 2: It’s a book ahead of its time. How would you pitch it to someone who hasn’t read it? Speaker 0: The easiest pitch is to tell them upfront that it’s impossible, font too, and that it’s dense. In a short-time-preference society, reading long-form is niche. The value is unplugging from the matrix; if you have the courage to unplug, this book will ruin your life in the best possible way. It’s the one-way door toward Bitcoin. Speaker 1: Would you suggest that someone with a strong Bitcoin understanding read the book? Speaker 2: Yes. The audio is easier for some; the density is akin to a Peterson-level experience. A few have read it and shared the same unplugging moment. The book’s central idea is that after a certain realization, you cross an event horizon toward a brighter future, where finances and sovereignty are rethought. Speaker 0: The book’s numbers show how compounding matters: if you’re paying tax or inflation on savings, opting out into self-sovereign regimes like Bitcoin or jurisdictional optimization can be transformative. The example: for every $5,000 in taxable income, a 10% compounded yield over a forty-year career costs you more than $2.2 million. The answer, as the book highlights, is to move to Bermuda or switch to Bitcoin, eliminating inflation’s tax on your purchasing power. Speaker 2: The analogy: a 100-dollar bill on the ground—someone will eventually pick it up. The book frames incentives as simple, primordial drivers: people seek the easiest path to preserving wealth, and Bitcoin creates a powerful magnetism toward sovereignty. Speaker 0: The discussion then moves to a digital future: the sovereign individual, information aristocrats, and the rise of digital nomad visas. In 2020, 21 countries offered digital nomad visas; by 2025, between 43 and 75 countries are inviting people to live there for up to eighteen months, bringing income and economic value. This reflects the shift toward the “digital heaven” where physical location is less limiting, aided by crypto finance, multisig, and portable wealth. Speaker 2: The concept of “digital Berlin Walls” and border controls is challenged by the rise of nomad visas, tax competition, and capital mobility. As the state’s revenue base weakens, micro states or micro nations question how to finance themselves; land can be sold or leased to new sovereign enclaves, while existing nation-states become more like a la carte governments. Speaker 0: The discussion then turns to Moore’s Law and bandwidth, and how faster processing and information flow empower sovereign individuals. As information becomes easier to transport, people can conduct business from Bermuda, Japan, or Florida with equal ease. That power accelerates the move toward self-sovereignty. Speaker 1: The rise of cyber warfare is a counterpoint: a single actor can strike on a scale once reserved for nation-states. This creates a need to treat citizens as customers to encourage them to stay, while individuals can also defend themselves with cryptography, multisig, and secure digital infrastructure. The book’s framework contrasts magnitude of power with efficiency: the transition from medieval power projection to high-technology, efficient defense and commerce. Speaker 2: The Luddites are discussed as a historical example: when a new machine threatened skilled labor, some resisted, but the Luddites did not riot against all technology—only against those jobs at risk. The modern parallel is AI and data-entry work: will the losers and left-behinds revolt against technology, or will they adapt? The answer may lie in new governance forms where governance is more responsive to the needs of citizens who are themselves mobile and empowered. Speaker 0: The conversation returns to “government as a service” versus the nation-state. Open-market competition among micro-nations could yield better service ethics, as governments compete to deliver what citizens want, when they want it. The book emphasizes that the market should decide governance efficiency, not centralized coercion. The nation-state’s cost of enforcement rises as sovereignty disperses, making it harder to extract taxes or project power. Speaker 1: The panel discusses the role of education and personal responsibility. Reading the Sovereign Individual remains a duty, but so does practical action: multisig setup, hardware wallets, off-ramps, and building digital sovereignty with practical steps. The speakers stress the importance of small, incremental steps: five minutes a day of reading; gradual exposure; and helping others gain exposure to Bitcoin through accessible tools. Speaker 2: The “orange pill moment” is repeated: once you see the future, you cannot unsee it. The book is a catalyst for readers to pursue self-sovereignty, not as a cynical rejection of government, but as a practical shift toward a voluntary, customer-based governance model in a world of mobile populations and robust tech. The speakers emphasize that this is not a call for doom; it’s an invitation to participate in reform through education, prudent financial choices, and deliberate, long-term planning. Speaker 0: The closing notes insist: read, educate others, and become the change you want to see. The conversation underscores three pillars: information technology’s accelerating power, the emergence of micro-nations and digital sovereignty, and the imperative to align incentives toward cooperative, merchant-like behavior rather than coercive domination. The speakers leave the audience with a hopeful vision: a world of decentralized governance where governments as “customers” compete to serve, and where sovereign individuals use Bitcoin to protect and grow wealth, enabling a future with less violence and more abundance. Speaker 1: If you want to connect with the speakers, you can follow them via their channels (noting their emphasis on privacy and selective presence). The discussion ends with renewed energy: fight for the future, protect your digital life, and explore the bright orange future responsibly, with education and preparedness as your guides.

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There is no left or right, only "them" versus "we the people." Tax dollars fund endless wars and aid illegal immigrants while Americans receive little support. It's time to stop funding the machine that harms the people. If tax money is weaponized against the people, stop paying. Free men don't ask permission to help those in need, including babies, children, women, and men devastated by crises. Yet, authorities prevent resources from reaching them, threatening helpers with jail. Therefore, it's time to stop paying taxes and stop asking permission for God-given rights, including the right to travel freely. Stop paying for licenses and permits. If they can't represent us, stop paying them. They are servants of the country and should help those in need.
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