I live in my own "country" - my own body, wherever am I.
The Convention on the Rights and Duties of States is an international treaty signed in Montevideo, Uruguay, on December 26, 1933. The convention establishes the definition of the State, its rights and obligations.
In Article 1 it establishes four characteristic criteria of a State that have become part of customary international law.
They have been recognized as confirmation in International Law, establishing that a State as a person of International Law must meet the following requirements:
ARTICLE 1
The State as a subject of International Law must meet the following requirements:
Permanent population - me in my own body
Determined territory - my own physical body, very well determined boundaries, not imaginary like countries borders
Government - I am my own government and rule as I want for myself
Ability to enter into relations with other States - very happy to do that with anybody
Under these guidelines, any entity that meets these criteria can be considered a sovereign state under international law, whether or not it has been recognized by other states.
ARTICLE 3
The political existence of the state is independent of its recognition by other states.
Even before being recognized, the State has the right to defend its integrity and independence.
ARTICLE 7
The recognition of the State may be express or tacit. The latter results from any act that implies the intention to recognize the new State.
In other words: my body of a living man can be a State, wherever am I, with the "territory" inside my body. If I travel around, I am just a simple ambassador of my own state in that visited state.
Have you traveled to any other "normal" country other than wherever you are at the moment?
It would be interesting to see what kind of visa you can have.
Have you had any conversation about this with potential countries that you want to visit?, "normal" countries have a lot of relationships with other countries and they establish who can visit their countries and who doesn't.
Curious to see if you have had anything like this.
ask yourself what is a "visa" ?
When you use a pass-port is a license to travel in a commercial interest.
Under any commercial travel you have to respect the contract terms you are presented (air-port, trans-port, visa) are all contractual terms.
People are just consenting without knowing what they are consenting.
Yep, totally agree, and after 2020 it became abundantly clear that getting second or third citizenships can easily have no value at all if the planned shit hits the ventilator device!
What is the inflation of real freedom when you even need a large, private jet to travel through any global lockdown? Yeah, they implemented that rule in 2021 or so...
The only way forward for most people is to actively disregard any notion of legality of all this, then do what has to be done at each fork in the road!
I haven't done detailed comparisons between the different Caribbean islands, but I'd either choose the US Virgin Islands or whichever island nation is better.
How is Japan when it comes to freedom? From what I understand, the Japanese (and by extension the Japanese government) doesnβt have the sense that the people have a revolutionary right to overthrow a government they dislike, so the people are denied the means (i.e. firearms) to exercise this right.
Honestly - one of these countries, my fiance is latina, and I want a place that has a low cost of living, is healthy and has the potential to transition to Bitcoin. I like countries that have low crime, warm weather and open-minded people. I don't get too much of that here in the U.S. (small doses at bitcoin meetups).
Norway and its renowned for its high living standards, with a robust economy, low unemployment, and a high GDP per capital. It has also been recognized and honored as the happiest country in the world on multiple occasions.
In a tropical country with 25 CΒ° all year round!
I hate to do the season change of clothes.. π Like Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Martin, etc.ππ
I live in my own "country" - my own body, wherever am I.
The Convention on the Rights and Duties of States is an international treaty signed in Montevideo, Uruguay, on December 26, 1933. The convention establishes the definition of the State, its rights and obligations.
In Article 1 it establishes four characteristic criteria of a State that have become part of customary international law.
They have been recognized as confirmation in International Law, establishing that a State as a person of International Law must meet the following requirements:
ARTICLE 1 The State as a subject of International Law must meet the following requirements:
Under these guidelines, any entity that meets these criteria can be considered a sovereign state under international law, whether or not it has been recognized by other states.
ARTICLE 3 The political existence of the state is independent of its recognition by other states. Even before being recognized, the State has the right to defend its integrity and independence.
ARTICLE 7 The recognition of the State may be express or tacit. The latter results from any act that implies the intention to recognize the new State. In other words: my body of a living man can be a State, wherever am I, with the "territory" inside my body. If I travel around, I am just a simple ambassador of my own state in that visited state.
Have you traveled to any other "normal" country other than wherever you are at the moment?
It would be interesting to see what kind of visa you can have.
Have you had any conversation about this with potential countries that you want to visit?, "normal" countries have a lot of relationships with other countries and they establish who can visit their countries and who doesn't.
Curious to see if you have had anything like this.
ask yourself what is a "visa" ? When you use a pass-port is a license to travel in a commercial interest. Under any commercial travel you have to respect the contract terms you are presented (air-port, trans-port, visa) are all contractual terms.
People are just consenting without knowing what they are consenting.
Think about this.
Yep, totally agree, and after 2020 it became abundantly clear that getting second or third citizenships can easily have no value at all if the planned shit hits the ventilator device!
What is the inflation of real freedom when you even need a large, private jet to travel through any global lockdown? Yeah, they implemented that rule in 2021 or so...
The only way forward for most people is to actively disregard any notion of legality of all this, then do what has to be done at each fork in the road!
Lol this is Darth being Darth.
https://darth-coin.github.io/general/natural-law-bitcoin-en.html
This is essentially what most call stateless. But a state at the same time.
https://postimg.cc/F1ZfpLz3
Damn, that's a good gif. https://m.stacker.news/36843
What you get away with is always a win!
My own private Island!!!My own private Island!!!
https://m.stacker.news/36808
Scotia?
One that I could buy?
https://m.stacker.news/36862
Also Switzerland
Cryptoland means shitcoin land ?
More like Scamcoin land.
I haven't done detailed comparisons between the different Caribbean islands, but I'd either choose the US Virgin Islands or whichever island nation is better.
I have lived in Venezuela, USA, Spain and Australia.
There is not a perfect place, there is not the perfect weather, there is not the perfect house.
It's hard to choose, but Spain has been a good place to live.
Japan
I wrote about 10 things I learnt from living in Japan for two years on my blog.
How is Japan when it comes to freedom? From what I understand, the Japanese (and by extension the Japanese government) doesnβt have the sense that the people have a revolutionary right to overthrow a government they dislike, so the people are denied the means (i.e. firearms) to exercise this right.
Taiwan or Vietnam would be good.
None. I have yet to see any government which did not go bad.
A personal island near mars somewhere on a type 6 civilisation
I would live next to @Darthcoin's
Honestly - one of these countries, my fiance is latina, and I want a place that has a low cost of living, is healthy and has the potential to transition to Bitcoin. I like countries that have low crime, warm weather and open-minded people. I don't get too much of that here in the U.S. (small doses at bitcoin meetups).
Switzerland.
Norway and its renowned for its high living standards, with a robust economy, low unemployment, and a high GDP per capital. It has also been recognized and honored as the happiest country in the world on multiple occasions.
I am where my feet are and I am content with that until I am not.
I chose country with fertile soil
Right where I am, I wouldn't ask for more
Two or three would be ideal.
One in the Southern hemisphere and one in the Northern hemisphere to have a nice summery year.
And a third one to try something new each year.
I am unable to choose one. I would rather spend one year in a country. Once the year passed , I will move to the next.
Get a decent sailboat, or even RV, I lived that way on & off for decades, always had that option to spend the night somewhere spontaneous :-)
Iceland? An island that is quite isolated so you dont have to deal with other peoples shit.
yeah you deal with your own shit... volcanoes ππππ
yeah endless thermal energy.
In a tropical country with 25 CΒ° all year round! I hate to do the season change of clothes.. π Like Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Martin, etc.ππ
El Salvador
Elon probably says MARS