This is what I believe in terms of sociopolitical and economic policy:
1. Suppression of all "public services"
2. Suppression of all taxes, levys, fees
3. Illegalization of "public debt"
4. Levy, rental, concession fee or however you want to call it, on all unimproved non-renewable, non-human made, natural resources, first and foremost land. An open, free market is the only valid and fair mechanism to determine the rental value of the good in question
5. Equal distribution among each individual pertaining to a specific natural resource. E.g., someone living 50 km away from my town has no moral right to get a piece of the revenue our land generates. Conversely, all inhabitants along the course of a river have equal rights to the value derived from using that water, regardless of "national borders" or other fictitious administrative schemes. All citizens of Earth have an equal right to value derived from using the atmosphere, the oceans, and other globally distributed commons, notwithstanding local concentrations of value/negative externalities that should be paid locally, e.g., fine particle pollution, which has a local effect, not a global one like CO2 emissions
If you are versed on libertarian thought, you will easily recognize all these as a modernized version of Henry George's ideas, commonly known as "land value tax" (although it was never a tax), which became extremely popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries in the English-speaking world. As a matter of fact George lost the race for mayor of NYC to Roosevelt only through election fraud, and still Central Park exists as a testimony of his proposals. Churchill was a georgist too -- until the British landed aristocracy presented him with the receipts for his political career. Local georgist experiments took place in many US cities with definite and visible results, generally suffering the same fate: squandering by the corrupt politicians and population who followed the initial implementation, enabled by the lack of a general legal framework that made the reversal impossible. Outside of the US, New Zealand implemented georgist policies, and most famously Singapore and Hong Kong did too and are still implementing georgist land policies, to some degree and very much success.