I have been thinking about Agenda 2030 and the 17 "Sustainable Development Goals" that despite their well meaning and well sounding proposals always somehow end up being used to justify centralised, bureaucratic and socialist solutions. Somehow the conclusion is always more taxation, more regulation and more centralised control... in short they are globalist propaganda.

But what would be their opposite? What would be an agenda for freedom that actually promotes their stated goals of poverty reduction in a real and measurable way? A list of principles that actually defends people's rights and freedoms instead of pushing for their serfdom? Principles for a decentralised, p2p world with no masters...

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These "sustainable development goals" have been fairly characterised by the slogan:

"You will own nothing and you will be happy"

AKA

"You will Eat the bugs,

You will live in the pod,

You will own nothing."

It's not an unfair summary given their socialist push to control food production, housing and redistribute property. The propaganda war on meat, private property and families as well as their push for social credit scores, CO2 rationing and other central planning dystopic regimes has made their ideology obvious.

It's only natural and fair to resist and push back against these ideas... but we should go beyond that and make positive, constructive proposals for a better world. It's not enough to slow down their agenda, we must have our own. We need to have clear goals to strive for.

So here is my modest proposal for an agenda of freedom, decentralisation and individual sovereignty.

1. FREE SPEECH: You will say what you like. You will educate your children how you see fit. You will publish what you choose. You will control your thoughts. Any tyrant that wants to tell you what to think or say should be exposed for what they are and pay a price.

2. PRIVATE PROPERTY: You will own property. You will decide how to enjoy, modify or dispose of your property with no restrictions but the rights and property of others.

3. PRIVACY: Your data belongs to you. No authority can make you reveal your secrets, or even any trivial facts without your consent. No regulation can force you to divulge personal information. Any tyrant attempting to spy on you should be treated as an enemy of the people. Any entity tracking the data of millions should be made to pay compensation to its victims, apologise and be abolished. Its leaders should be subjected to ostracism and seen as the sick voyeurs that they are.

4. SELF DEFENSE: You have the right to defend against any aggression on your life, your property, your privacy and all of your rights with force. No permission should ever be required to defend your legitimate rights. Anybody attempting to disarm you, as long as you have not initiated aggression, is your enemy. The only reason they would have to disarm innocents is in preparation to cause them harm once they are unable to defend themselves.

5. INDEPENDENCE: You have the right to decide for yourself. you should be free to join or not join any collective endeavour. Your voluntary consent is required before enrolling your time, energy, property, name or any other thing that belongs to you in any scheme, organisation or institution. Force is not a legitimate way to have people participate in any kind of business, community or governmental activity or institution. There is always a choice and you have the right to exercise it.

6. P2P: You have the right to interact with your peers without intermediaries. Cartels and monopolies enforced by law are illegitimate. If you can sell to your neighbour, you should not be forced to accept a middleman. If you can trade P2P, you should not be forced to accept a centralised trusted third party.

7. FOSS: You have the right to decide what protocols you participate in and the right to know what those protocols mean. Only Free Open Source Software can guarantee transparency and choice. Closed source is dangerous ton your property and privacy. A closed source contract is a tool for enslavement. A closed source monopoly is serfdom. We should recognise those that push them as exploiters or at best potential exploiters.

8. DECENTRALISATION: Local solutions are best. Multiple solutions in competition favour the user and lead to progress. Monopolies and centralised impositions destroy choice, violate your rights and lead to worse outcomes as they are ideal tools for exploitation. Restrictions on competition, barriers to entry and top-down regulations that put smaller providers at an artificial disadvantage should be denounced and abolished.

9. CHOICE: Your voluntary decision is a requirement for legitimate participation. It is the expression of your independence. It is the expression of your consent and your free will. Any regulation that does not allow for choice is illegitimate. An opt-out clause should be required in any regulation.

10. RULE OF LAW: Laws must be simple, clear and easy to understand for all people that they apply to. Laws must apply to all people, guaranteeing equal rights before the law. Laws must be approved and consented to by the people. Laws cannot change frequently or be subject to changing interpretation. Laws cannot be enforced arbitraliry or selectively. If a law cannot be universally enforced it should not exist. Laws must be few: no citizen should have to professionally study law to understand their obligations and rights. Hyperlegislation destroys respect for the law and its effectiveness. The number of laws should be strictly limited.

I've asked ChatGTP to prepare a manifest called "Agenda for Freedom 2030" for us:

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🌍 Agenda for Freedom 2030

A Decentralized Roadmap for Prosperity, Autonomy, and Human Flourishing

Preamble

The Agenda for Freedom 2030 is a commitment to creating a world where human beings are free to pursue prosperity, cooperation, and dignity without coercion. This agenda recognizes individual liberty, local solutions, and voluntary action as the true engines of sustainable development. It rejects top-down, bureaucratic control in favor of peer-to-peer, decentralized, and community-led innovation.

🔓 The 17 Liberty Development Goals (LDGs)

1. End Poverty through Free Markets and Entrepreneurship

Replace dependency-based aid systems with access to open markets, micro-entrepreneurship, decentralized finance (DeFi), and peer-to-peer trade.

2. Voluntary Food Sovereignty

Empower local farming, permaculture, and open food networks instead of subsidized monocultures and global agribusiness cartels.

3. Health Freedom and Medical Innovation

Support medical choice, open research, decentralized biotech, and portable health records using blockchain—freedom from centralized medical mandates.

4. Free and Open Education for All

Promote homeschooling, unschooling, online academies, and decentralized knowledge networks—education without state indoctrination.

5. Voluntary Equality and Individual Sovereignty

Support equality before the law and personal freedom of association. No group privileges—only individual rights and responsibilities.

6. Decentralized Access to Clean Water

Protect natural water rights. Enable community-driven clean water tech, rainwater harvesting, and local resource management without state monopolies.

7. Energy Abundance through Open Innovation

Remove barriers to decentralized energy: solar, wind, hydrogen, thorium, and open-source energy grids. End state control of energy policy.

8. Liberty-Driven Economic Growth

Promote entrepreneurship zones, crypto economies, and parallel institutions—economic prosperity through deregulation and sound money.

9. Open Infrastructure, Built by the People

Encourage public-private partnerships, crowdfunded roads, mesh networks, and infrastructure cooperatives—without coercive taxation.

10. End Forced Redistribution, Promote Voluntary Giving

Charity is virtuous when voluntary. Replace forced redistribution with cultural, religious, and social frameworks of mutual aid and generosity.

11. Free Cities and Voluntary Communities

Allow for opt-in local governance: charter cities, seasteads, intentional communities—laboratories of liberty, not centrally planned urban sprawl.

12. Responsible Use through Property Rights

Sustainability through responsibility. Property ownership creates stewards of the land. Replace "collective responsibility" with individual accountability.

13. Resilience over Climate Centralization

Promote decentralized climate adaptation: off-grid living, permaculture, disaster self-reliance—not carbon credits and global bureaucracy.

14. Protect Oceans through Market Signals

Empower coastal communities and responsible fishing via tradable quotas and local stewardship, not UN ocean governance.

15. Nature Conservation via Private Incentives

Wildlife thrives when local people have a stake. Use property rights, tourism income, and land trusts to incentivize biodiversity.

16. Peace through Non-Aggression and Parallel Justice

Replace monopoly policing with community defense, restorative justice, and voluntary arbitration. End the war state.

17. Peer-to-Peer Collaboration, Not Global Technocracy

Replace top-down treaties and organizations with free trade, open protocols, voluntary standards, and crypto-based DAOs.

🔑 Guiding Principles of the Agenda for Freedom 2030

Sovereignty of the Individual: No one may be ruled without consent.

Decentralization by Default: Solutions should be local, voluntary, and scalable.

Open Access over Gatekeeping: Knowledge, markets, and tools should be open-source and censorship-resistant.

Opt-in Governance: Communities should govern themselves voluntarily, not be dictated to.

Self-ownership and Non-aggression: The foundation of a just and peaceful society.

🚀 A Future Without Masters

Let this be a peer-to-peer revolution where the human spirit flourishes not under the watchful eye of technocrats, but in the wild energy of creativity, cooperation, and liberty.

No taxes. No mandates. No central planners.

Just people. Creating. Trading. Living.

Simpler answer to almost all the points:

1. Own bitcoin,

2. Post notes,

3. Zap sats,

4. Print guns,

5. Eat meat,

6. Lift weights,

7. Read books,

8. Grow food,

9. Build homes,

10. Raise kids,

11. Make Peace,

12. Be free.