The Free State 🦔
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The Free State Project

Join thousands of libertarian and liberty-minded individuals who are making New Hampshire their home to preserve liberty in one state.

@FreeStateNH
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PorcFest: The Next Generation with Carla Gericke
March 21, 2026 at 02:00PM

Carla Gericke lays out a new vision for PorcFest, describing it as the next evolution of the Free State Project and a chance to show just how much the liberty community in New Hampshire has grown. This year’s PorcFest will spread across the state through a decentralized network of events, venues, and community spaces that reflect the real-world ecosystem Free Staters have built together. It's more than just a festival shift — it’s a way for newcomers to experience liberty in action, meet the people building it, and see where they might fit within the Free State Movement. With a passport-style challenge, major cash prizes, and a big shared gathering at Rogers Campground, the plan keeps the spirit of PorcFest alive while opening the door to something much bigger. Carla’s message is ultimately a rallying cry: this is a chance not just to celebrate the movement, but to expand it and invite the next wave of pioneers in.Get your tickets to the new PorcFest at: porcfest.com

đź”—Source: FreeStateProjectNH

🦔 @FreeStateNH
March 21, 2026 at 02:00PM

PorcFest: The Next Generation with Carla GerickeCarla Gericke (@CarlaGericke) lays out a new vision for PorcFest, describing it as the next evolution of the Free State Project and a chance to show just how much the liberty community in New Hampshire has grown. This year’s https://t.co/puckdsyFUe

🔗Source: 𝕏 @FreeStateNH

🦔 @FreeStateNH
State of the Free State with Hon. Eric Brakey
March 22, 2026 at 02:00PM

Eric Brakey’s annual “State of the Free State” talk looks at how the Free State Project has grown from a bold long-shot idea into a movement that has helped shape New Hampshire’s political and cultural landscape. He frames it as a story about bringing liberty-minded people together in one place, where individual efforts in activism, community building, technology, business, and public office can add up to something much bigger. The speech highlights how Free Staters have gone from being dismissed as a fringe group to becoming a real force in the state, while also arguing that New Hampshire has become a national model for freedom-focused policy and grassroots action. At the same time, Brakey warns against ideological infighting and makes the case that the movement’s future depends on practical achievement, collaboration, and building real institutions rather than chasing purity tests. Overall, it’s a wide-angle look at where the movement came from, what it believes it has accomplished, and why its supporters think the most important work is still ahead.

đź”—Source: FreeStateProjectNH

🦔 @FreeStateNH
March 22, 2026 at 02:00PM

State of the Free State with Hon. Eric BrakeyEric Brakey’s annual “State of the Free State” talk looks at how the Free State Project has grown from a bold long-shot idea into a movement that has helped shape New Hampshire’s political and cultural landscape. He frames it as a https://t.co/bMXcGZrjhw

🔗Source: 𝕏 @FreeStateNH

🦔 @FreeStateNH
Keynote: The Dozen Strategies That Don't Work — and the One that Does with Tom Woods
March 23, 2026 at 02:00PM

Tom Woods mixes humor, personal stories, and sharp political critique in this talk, using his own journey to ask a bigger question: what is to be done for people who care about liberty in a world that often seems determined to reject it? He argues that education still matters, but says it is not enough on its own, especially after the Covid era convinced him that practical action, strong communities, and real-world independence matter even more. He points to the Free State Project as a rare answer to that problem: a place where like-minded people can actually build freer lives together through mutual support, entrepreneurship, local action, and shared values. He also makes the case for a balanced approach to politics, not as the whole strategy, but as one tool among many for defending freedom at the state and local level. He closes on a personal note, reflecting on growing up in New England and explaining that his planned move to New Hampshire feels less like starting over and more like returning to something he has been missing for years.

đź”—Source: FreeStateProjectNH

🦔 @FreeStateNH