Replying to Avatar Corbin

Dissolving the Federal Leviathan: A Call For State Sovereignty

The principles of non-interventionism abroad—rooted in the non-aggression principle, individual liberty, and the futility of central planning—apply with equal force at home.

Just as Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, Frédéric Bastiat, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, and Ron Paul have demonstrated that foreign intervention manufactures enemies, perpetuates war for elite profit, and violates sovereignty under the guise of humanitarianism or security, so too does the U.S. federal government impose domestic imperialism on the states.

The federal apparatus is not a guardian of freedom; it is a coercive monopoly that thrives on division, incentivizes corruption, erodes accountability, and prevents genuine self-determination.

The solution is radical but logically inescapable: dissolve the federal government and restore full sovereignty to the states.

This is not anarchy or chaos. It is the extension of classical liberal ideals to their consistent conclusion: voluntary association, free exit, and competition among jurisdictions.

As Murray Rothbard argued, secession is the ultimate check on power; Lysander Spooner dismissed the Constitution as a “parchment barrier” that failed to bind government. The federal government sold its soul at the founding, and it is time to reclaim liberty.

The Founding Betrayal: From Compromise to Corruption

At the Constitutional Convention, productive states like Virginia were coerced into assuming the war debts of less responsible ones, such as Massachusetts.

Alexander Hamilton’s national debt scheme sounded like unity: pool the burdens, issue bonds, create a central credit. But it was the original sin—a transfer of wealth from the frugal to the profligate, justified as “keeping the union together".

This opened the floodgates to endless federal extraction: subsidies, pork, bailouts, and wars funded by taxing the productive to enrich the connected.

As Mises observed in his analysis of incentives, centralized power inevitably breeds corruption.

When one entity controls the purse for fifty diverse peoples, it rewards waste, division, and unethical action. Politicians pit states against each other—red vs. blue, urban vs. rural—to justify more control.

The federal government does not unite; it divides to conquer, manufacturing crises (wars abroad, culture wars at home) to expand its reach. Fear is its currency: without a common enemy or moral panic, why tolerate the theft?

Domestic Imperialism: The Federal Parallel to Foreign Intervention

The arguments against intervening in Venezuela, Cuba, or Yemen apply verbatim to Washington intervening in Texas, Utah, or California.

Sanctions on a rogue regime harm civilians while entrenching the dictator; federal mandates harm states while entrenching bureaucrats.

Just as “humanitarian” bombs create power vacuums and blowback abroad, federal decrees create resentment and dependency at home.

Hoppe’s non-aggression principle forbids initiation of force. Yet the federal government initiates it daily: forcing Utah to fund New York’s policies, California to comply with Texas’s preferences via Supreme Court fiat, or any state to subsidize another’s folly.

This is collectivist logic—punishing millions for the “sins” of a few elites—identical to sanctioning an entire nation for its leader’s crimes.

Hayek’s “fatal conceit” warns that central planners cannot orchestrate outcomes without distorting knowledge and incentives.

Washington assumes it can mandate abortion policy, drug laws, or education nationwide, but reality defies such control. The result? A self-fulfilling prophecy of division, where pressure strengthens polarization rather than unity.

Bastiat’s seen vs. unseen: we see the “national standard” or “civil rights enforcement”; we miss the unseen erosion of consent, the black markets of resistance, the exodus of talent. Ron Paul extends this: true compassion—and true rights—come from voluntary cooperation, not coercion.

Citizens demanding federal imposition of their ethics on dissenting states (“Utah must allow abortions!” or “California must ban them!”) are domestic imperialists.

Under the guise of righteousness, they wage war on sovereignty, mirroring the “greater good” pretext for foreign bombs. As in interventionism abroad, good intent masks power grabs; the road to serfdom is paved domestically too.

Superior Accountability and the Power of Exit

Without the federal shield, accountability explodes. Local politicians live among their constituents—no distant lobbyist moat, no “national security” excuse.

A mayor wasting funds faces recall tomorrow; a governor flees to the grocery store knowing voters remember.

Most powerfully: exit becomes real. Vote with your feet, not futile ballots. Productive citizens flee high-tax, regulated states for freer ones, starving bad governments of revenue.

As in markets, competition drives excellence: low taxes in Texas attract businesses; innovative education in Florida draws families. Bad policies? Exodus. Good ones? Influx.

This is Tiebout’s hypothesis in action—jurisdictional competition—but amplified without federal overrides.

States become laboratories of democracy, as Justice Brandeis envisioned, free from Washington’s fatal conceit. People can really vote with their feet.

Addressing Objections: Defense, Trade, Crime, Scarcity, and More

Disaster relief first.

Look at Katrina: billions funneled through Washington, and New Orleans still waits.

Why? Because money in D.C. isn’t money on your roof. It sits in FEMA warehouses, gets eaten by contractors, or buys senators a reelection ad.

Local crews show up day one—with chainsaws, water, hands. They know the streets. They know the people.

No forms in triplicate. Same with California fires.

Federal aid’s “help”? It’s a press conference and zero accountability.

The real saviors? Neighbors. Trucks from Oregon. As always, immediate help and real donations come straight from people, no middleman.

All budgets are easier to account for, people are actionably able to hold politicians accountable.

The TV makes grandiose statements of massive government assistance but ask people in North Carolina, during or after Katrina, after tornados or after any disaster.

And when states like Texas send aid—not because FEMA says so, but because they choose to—it’s fast, it’s accountable.

When Texas or Florida chooses to help Mississippi, it’s genuine—it’s voluntary, transparent, direct accountability.

No distant politician or outside influence, nobody’s career or pork budget decides if or when the help is allowed.

No IRS withholding, no lobbyist kickback, no “support this other thing, vote for my bill, vote for my re-election or we pull the funds".

When FEMA does it, it’s always conditional: “Now you’ve got to sign this grant form, let us audit your books first or you can just hire our approved contractors while we wave some flags for the cameras and we give a speech about how tragic it is and how we are trying extra hard to help.”

Power and corruption disguised as generosity.

State-to-state? Pure neighbor stuff, no strings between the efforts or beyond the cleanup.

Bottom line:

Central aid is charity with claws.

Local help is hands, no strings.

One survives and is accountable.

One survives on paperwork and no accountability, just propaganda.

Critics invoke fear: without the federal government, chaos—war among states, invasion, economic collapse, moral decay.

National Defense and War: States can form voluntary alliances for mutual defense, as Switzerland’s cantons do. No automatic wars; each state votes its own funds and troops.

Endless foreign entanglements die—no military-industrial complex profiting from printed money. Real threats? States cooperate swiftly, as free people did in 1776.

The federal monopoly incentivizes offensive wars for profit; decentralization starves aggression.

Trade and Economy: Interstate commerce thrives without barriers—voluntary agreements replace tariffs. Roads? Private firms or state tolls build them efficiently, competing for users.

No redundancy waste; profits reinvest. Scarcity? Markets allocate better than bureaucrats—prices signal needs, innovation surges.

Take West Virginia or Mississippi, how much has the federal government improved their quality of life?

If they’ve got nothing to sell, they’ll build something.

They’ve got resources, minerals or ports. Wood. Land. Sun. If they can’t turn that into a life, no one can.

Federal ‘aid’ keeps them hooked on transfers, killing incentive—remove the drip, watch innovation surge.

Cheap labor plus zero federal red tape equals profit.

Mississippi could become the new Singapore: low taxes, private ports, no OSHA audits every Tuesday.

These places stay in perpetual poverty and addicted to drugs with terrible healthcare and awful food access, completely walled off markets while our federal government has massive budgets.

The ports are not safe, drugs come in, legally and illegally always have. No accountability, corporations have more federal influence than the local government.

People don’t want handouts.

They want fair shots.

Crime and Justice: Local sheriffs and courts handle it, tailored to communities.

No federal overreach turning minor offenses into SWAT raids. Cartels crossing borders? Border states defend vigorously, without dragging Vermont into the fight.

Imposing Ethics (“Civil Rights” or “Women’s Rights”): This is the domestic equivalent of humanitarian intervention—force your morality on others. Classical liberals reject it: rights are negative (non-aggression), not positive entitlements imposed by majority fiat.

If a state violates natural rights, citizens exit or revolt internally. No “saving” them with federal guns—that’s just new oppression. If someone is stuck in a place with laws they disagree with, there is no better option than being able to move where laws fit better.

Relying on the federal government isn't just the majority potentially swaying the laws to and fro, it's leaving the laws to disconnected, corrupt politicians, not even from your area.

Federal government, thus your local representatives completely unaccountable, fenced off from any consequence and disconnected from you.

Unity and Coordination: Voluntary cooperation suffices for shared needs (e.g., disaster response).

History’s “unified” empires crumbled under central weight; decentralized systems (Holy Roman Empire’s cities, Hanseatic League) innovated and prospered.

#Bitcoin accelerates this: sound money ends federal printing, starving wasteful spending and endless wars. States on Bitcoin compete honestly—no inflation tax subsidizing corruption.

The Path to Liberty: Dissolution as Correction

Non-intervention abroad refuses the false choice of “invade or do nothing”—it chooses freedom.

Domestically, dissolving the federal government refuses “centralize or anarchy”—it chooses sovereign states in voluntary federation.

When people rise against overreach, that’s not chaos. That’s correction.

We don’t need a distant leviathan dropping mandates from the sky.

We need to get out of each other’s way.

Let states trade, migrate, and rebuild without external coercion manufacturing misery.

Peace through freedom is not just the ethical choice—it is the only choice compatible with liberty, reason, and reality.

The federal government has outlived its betrayal. Dissolve it. Restore sovereignty.

Let a thousand freedoms bloom.

Let each person live the life they choose.

nostr:nevent1qqsddvzvddjr37gd4rgzs3qdnxdyaq8y9xvzdlpdfdnuft7ed5sn62cpz3mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfdu9vsn35

How Sound Money Ends War and Empire

The most common objection to dissolving the federal government is fear: without Washington holding it all together, chaos erupts.

States fracture into warring blocs. Blue states band together, ally with Canada or the European Union, and forcibly reconquer the red holdouts.

Civil war ensues—blood, division, the end of America as we know it.

This nightmare assumes one thing: power still flows from printers, not people. It doesn’t.

Sound money—Bitcoin—has already changed the game and won the war.

Any attempt at domestic conquest collapses before the first tank rolls, not because of superior arms, but because the aggressors run out of real value first.

Scenario 1: The Printing Bloc Declares War

Suppose a coalition of high-tax, regulation-heavy states forms a new or stays in the current “union".

They print fiat to fund armies, subsidies, and alliances.

They demand compliance from freer states: pay up or face blockade.

They’ll even rally the world—embargoes, sanctions, cut off oil. But incentives don’t die for ideology.

They can wait forever—oil doesn’t rot.

Free states have Texas (biggest oil producer in the continental U.S.), North Dakota, Oklahoma—plus shale tech to ramp in weeks.

Blue bloc cuts off imports? We just double-down domestic.

And Russia, Saudi, Venezuela—they’re already selling oil in yuan, rubles, or barrels-for-Bitcoin. They want buyers, not ideology.

Power vacuums fill fast. First tanker that shows up gets triple the cash.

They can’t all side with blue. China needs lithium from Nevada. India needs wheat from Kansas. Europe needs data centers in Utah.

Sanctions only work if everyone obeys. They won’t.

Half the planet’s already rerouting trade off-dollar rails.

Even if every ally obeys—and they won’t—the embargo wounds the bloc, not the free states.

Oil? Texas, North Dakota, Oklahoma—domestic production ramps in weeks.

Food? Midwest farms feed themselves and export.

Tech? Arizona fabs spin up; Nevada silicon is local.

Minerals? Utah copper, Wyoming lithium, North Dakota rare earths—already mining.

China dominates refining, but raw ore comes from free states' soil. They need our feed more than we need their factories.

The blue bloc relies on foreign imports. Cut them off? Their shelves empty first.

Short squeeze? They feel it in days.

Free states unplug and thrive. The siege becomes self-suffocation—for the printers.

We’re already printing more than the Pentagon costs; add war and the deficit triples overnight. Annual interest on debt exceeds the annual DOJ budget.

Within two to four weeks, prices double every day.

Baker won’t take cash—wheelbarrows full or empty—because tomorrow it buys nothing. Everyone scrambles for real stuff: bread, gas, gold.

The kicker: every person who ditches fiat for Bitcoin leaves less demand for dollars.

Independent states exiting cuts some burden—but the remaining bloc still owes the same bills: debts, soldiers, subsidies. In fiat, they print more.

Supply of money up. Demand down. Goods accepting it? Down.

Prices explode—scarcity increases as fewer and fewer bakers take paper.

It’s not “more dollars” in a vacuum. It’s more dollars chasing less goods and fewer buyers and sellers.

The note doesn’t inflate gently. It explodes.

Ninety days later, their currency is worthless.

Hyperinflation guts paychecks. Soldiers don’t fight for notes that buy half a sandwich.

Supply lines break—fuel, food, parts priced in dying dollars become unaffordable. Contractors vanish. Cities ration.

The sound-money states? They wait. Bitcoin holds value. Trade continues. Citizens thrive on stable savings, not promises.

No battle needed. The printers starve themselves.

History repeats: Weimar, Zimbabwe, Venezuela. Fiat wars end when the money dies. The aggressors don’t conquer—they collapse.

Scenario 2: Alliances with Foreign Powers

The bloc seeks help: Canada, the EU, even Russia or China. “Peacekeepers” arrive. Foreign bases. Joint operations.

All fiat partners. The same suicide accelerates.

Every ally prints to fund the effort. Inflation compounds globally. Euros, loonies, yuan—all debase together.

Foreign troops don’t march for worthless scrip. Logistics fail faster with longer supply chains. Home populations revolt against the cost.

Sound-money states remain solvent. They trade with whoever offers value—no ideology required.

Allies fracture over the bill: who pays for the next round of missiles?

External empires don’t save dying currencies. They accelerate the grave.

Scenario 3: The Bloc Adopts Sound Money

Desperate, they switch to Bitcoin or gold.

Now war becomes impossible.

Real money imposes discipline. No printing endless wars. Every bullet, every base, every bribe costs actual value—voted on, paid upfront, felt immediately.

States won’t fund conquest when citizens see the sats leave their wallets. Alliances dissolve: why bleed for neighbors who won’t pay?

Sound money creates natural checks and balances. Offensive war turns unfeasible, impractical, short-lived if attempted.

The conflict ends not in victory, but irrelevance.

The Inevitable Outcome

This mirrors non-intervention abroad: coercion manufactures its own defeat. Domestic imperialists, like foreign ones, rely on the printer’s illusion. Remove it, and aggression starves.

#Bitcoin already exists. Nodes run worldwide. Wallets hold unbreakable value.

The war was never red vs. blue.

It was printer vs. people.

And the printer always loses—especially when the alternative is already running, quiet and unstoppable.

Dissolution isn’t the path to war.

It’s the end of it.

Sound money doesn’t fight.

It just wins.

Let a thousand freedoms bloom.

Let each person live the life they choose.

nostr:nevent1qqsrluejpllw9htz7fcmynq6t59x6yyk3759d483r0l70ru2a043jaspr9mhxue69uhk2umsv4kxsmewva5hy6twduhx7un89uz7fyts

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

No replies yet.