-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.aci.net/kalliste/
<A HREF="http://www.aci.net/kalliste/">The Home Page of J. Orlin Grabbe</A>
-----
That Mysterious Laissez Faire City

"America, I'm Outa Here!"

by Claire Wolfe

It was supposed to be another meeting of Hardyville's Official
Unofficial Y2K Committee, but it didn't start out as planned.
The rest of us were milling around waiting for Carty, the ex-military
logistics whiz who's our unofficial official. Carty's normally a
smack-on-time kinda guy. But this night he thundered in late, flung some
books and papers down on the table and roared, "I'm outa here!"

"No you're not," Janelle-the-waitress observed from behind her tray.
"You just got here."

"I mean I'm outa here," Carty boomed with a sweep of one big hand. The
rest of us -- even those not in the path of the hand -- reared back a
little. "I'm out of America!"

Now, understand: Carty is huge, shaves his head, and considerably
resembles Jesse "The Governor" Ventura. So we were all a bit loath to
ask, "Whuh?" But Carty also breathes red, white and blue and we could
not believe what we were hearing. So somebody eventually ventured the
question:

"You mean, like, leaving the country?"

"Damn right. Leaving. I got outa the service because I couldn't hack
having that ... person as Commander in Heat. And now that those
spineless, crooked, limp-di ... oh hell, those senators said he could do
anything he damn well pleases. I just am not living in a country where
that SOB's been turned loose to be dictator of the whole shebang. I'm
tired of putting up with it. I'm outa here."

While some of the others were still hmming and errring in shock, I
leaned over and looked at the pile of stuff Carty had thrown down on the
table.

"Hey, I know who this guy is," I said, picking up a book called Escape
from America by Roger Gallo. "He has Escape Artist, a giant Web site for
people who want to live in other countries. The book is about how to do
it."

"Is the book any good?"

"Dunno, I haven't read it yet," I answered, starting to page through.
"But he knows what he's talking about on that Web site."

A few others gathered and started pawing through the papers and
pamphlets.

"Sovereign Society?" Bob-the-nerd queried, picking up a fat envelope
with a British postmark. "Is this about gold-fringed flags and not
having a drivers license?"

"No," Carty said, a little calmer. "It's about offshore investing,
second passports and like that. You've got to pay $195 a year to join,
but looks like they've got real solid information. And you get either a
Swiss or an Austrian bank account with your membership."

"Oh hoity toity, Swiss bank account!" someone scoffed. "What have you
got to put in a Swiss bank account, Carty? Those bankers don't even want
to talk to people like us."

"I've got about as much as you got, beer gut. But look, you can get
things started in the account with as little as $5,000."

Readings. Hms. Nods.

"I know about those guys, too," I said into the silence. "They're on the
up and up -- unlike some offshore investment hypers and hucksters. The
Sovereign Society is people like James Dale Davidson and Lord Rees-Mogg,
who wrote The Sovereign Individual, investment guys like John Pugsley
and Doug Casey, and Vince Miller of the International Society for
Individual Liberty."

"Hey, Claire, if you know so much about all this offshore stuff, how
come you're still here in Hardyville?"

"Well, you can ask my banker and my Significant Sweetie about that.
Believe me, I'd be on an island somewhere if my checkbook and my honey
would go along with the plan."

"Well, Carty here ain't rich. So, Carty, how you gonna do it?"

"You don't have to be rich anymore," Carty said. "Only smart."

"Well, that lets you out, then."

"No, seriously," I interrupted. "What these writers and groups are all
saying is that the Internet, free trade and other things are enabling
independent people to slip out of control of bad governments. You can
set up a corporation in, say, Costa Rica, Nevis or Anguilla, open a
business on the Internet -- and you could be here or there or anywhere.
You can live in one country, bank in another, operate your business in
another. ... It helps to be richer than I am, and it's probably smart to
have good legal advice. But I know perfectly ordinary people who've done
it for only a few thousand dollars."

"Makes it hard for gubmint grabbers to know where your money is," Carty
nodded. "And just think of all those other countries that don't have
Mafia Bill for president."

"Yeah, but they do have, you know, Generalissimo Whosis, El Supremo
Dictatoro of the People-o. Stuff like that."

"Well, that's why you research 'em all in advance and listen to people
who've done it," Carty shrugged, waving at his paperwork.

"And maybe," I added, when countries see that all their bright, young,
affluent brain-workers and entrepreneurs are heading elsewhere, they'll
eventually wise up. Then we might actually have countries competing for
who can offer the most freedom. How about that?"

"Never work." Nat Lyons shook his head. "No such thing as a government
getting better instead of worse over time."

"Only because people put up with it," Carty insisted. "Now it's a lot
easier to vote with your feet."

"Weren't there some people trying to start their own countries?"
Dora-the-Yalie asked me.

"Oh, yeah. All the time. People want to build artificial islands. Or
they want to negotiate some sovereign territory inside another country.

"The most interesting one I know is Laissez Faire City. Some heavy
hitters behind that one, too. They're working on a cyber community --
with its own banking system and everything -- while hoping long term to
build a physical community, probably in Central America. Whether they'll
pull it off, who knows? Their operation always seems to be under
construction, and never quite constructed. But even with their
struggles, they seem better funded and better planned than some other
projects."

Hey, I know. Let's build Hardyville South," Nat cracked, sweeping off
his cowboy hat and offering it around, brim up. "I'm takin' donations
for it. Swiss bank money accepted."

"Me," Bob-the-nerd sighed, "I'm holding out for the ultimate escape --
outer space."

"I really think you guys oughta come back to earth for a while," Janelle
bossed, entering with coffeepot. "And Carty, you can take care of Mr.
Clinton later. Right now, I think you oughta get back to saving
Hardyville from that Y2K thing."

We all milled to our places. Carty pulled out his notes and began saying
something about availability of natural gas supplies. But I found myself
sitting in the back of the room with Escape from America on the table in
front of me, reading and pondering.

Could there really be places on earth where ordinary people don't have
to slave half our lives just to pay protection money? Where bankers
don't report every innocent move to some snoop agency? Where cops don't
stop us on the streets and steal the money from our pockets? Where we
can live the way we want on our own land? I think I'm gonna find this
Gallo guy and see if he'll answer a few questions. I'll let the
Hardyvillians know what I find out.

WorldNetDaily, Feb. 18, 1999


You're On Candid Camera

Big Brother Fears Over Store "Anti-fraud" ID Scheme

The DMV may sell your picture

SEVERAL American states are accusing the federal government of duping
them into allowing pictures of millions of citizens to be gathered in a
new computer database which they fear could be used to track people
moving around the country.
A system set up to help shopkeepers prevent fraudsters using stolen
cheques and credit cards is being touted as a weapon against terrorism
and illegal immigration. Some fear "the feds" could use it to keep an
electronic eye on people with political opinions, for example, which
security services deem extreme or dangerous.

The state governments involved sold driving licence photographs to Image
Data, a New Hampshire company marketing computers to be kept next to
shop tills, like credit card authorisation machines. The correct,
tamper-proof photograph of the owner of the cheque book or credit card
appears on screen, helping shopkeepers to catch criminals.

However, Congress put $1.5 million (£938,000) into the project and the
Secret Service contributed technical support, raising suspicions that
Washington wants to use the system to keep tabs on citizens for reasons
other than retail fraud. A privacy debate has erupted. Governor Jeb Bush
of Florida cancelled the sale of 14 million photographs to Image Data,
Colorado scrapped the sale of another five million and South Carolina is
suing for the return of 3.5 million.

Tom Feeney, a Republican in the Florida state legislature, told the
Washington Post: "The arguments against this programme become much more
credible if the federal government and others ultimately intend to use
the technology and data on Americans for purposes broader than fighting
crime."

The Secret Service - which guards against serious financial crime as
well as protecting the President - denies any Big Brother motive, saying
it simply wanted to make sure the system worked, so that Congress's
money would not be wasted.

Image Data says its information would not be supplied over the Internet
but via a secure system.

The London Telegraph, Feb. 19, 1999


Soon to be an MGM movie

Even More Trouble for Credit Lyonnais

California Insurance Commissioner Files Big Suit


California's insurance commissioner yesterday filed a multi-billion
dollar lawsuit against Credit Lyonnais, the French banking group, and
others, alleging fraud in connection with their roles in reorganising an
insolvent life insurance company.
The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, charges that
the defendants skirted California insurance regulations by failing to
disclose their association with a company allegedly controlled by Credit
Lyonnais.
Credit Lyonnais could not be reached for comment late yesterday.
The allegations stem from a 1991 effort by the then California Insurance
Commissioner to rehabilitate Executive Life Insurance, a company that
had sold annuity insurance policies in California throughout the 1980s.
The lawsuit states that Executive Life invested heavily in junk bonds
and failed when the value of these bonds plummeted in the late 1980s.
The insurance group was seized by the state, which then sought bids for
the rehabilitation of the business, including the assumption of its life
insurance policies and annuities.


The winning bid, according to the state insurance commissioner, came
from a consortium comprising Altus Finance and a number of other French
investors, who purchased Executive Life's junk bonds and set up an
insurance company to take over Executive Life's policies.
According to the lawsuit, Altus secretly entered into agreements with
some of the French investors to transfer control and management of the
newly formed insurance company to Altus. The defendants are alleged to
have made misleading statements to hide the insurance company's true
ownership. of the insurance company.
The state is seeking to recover profits that Altus, which currently
operates under the name CDR Enterprises, made on the junk bond
portfolio. The lawsuit also seeks compensatory and punitive damages.


Named as defendants in the suit were French state-owned bank Credit
Lyonnais and Swiss finance company Omnium Geneve. Other named defendants
included Altus Finance, a division of Credit Lyonnais, CDR Enterprises
and French mutual insurance companies Mutuelle Assurance Artisanale de
France and Mutuelle Assurance Artisanale de France Vie.

The Financial Times, Feb. 19, 1999
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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