@Indigo As much as I would love secession, I fear that these secessionist states might be controlled opposition. A lot of these states openly talk about Agenda 21/30 sustainable development goals and shit like that. State governments are puppets just like federal governments.
@Indigo
>and I've heard of the Seasteading movement, I think it's pretty based, but still needs time to be proven in practice
A couple lived on a floating home back for four months back in 2019 but the Thai navy intervened despite them being away from their legal territory.
https://odysee.com/@Seasteading:8/the-first-seasteaders-1-facing-the-storm:8
@Indigo Ocean Builders is currently located in Panama who is more open to the idea. There are other projects (mostly located in the US) but Ocean Builders seems to be making the most progress.
Officially, any nation partnered with the UN can't claim territory >12km past their shores. I expect nation states and international organizations will use environmentalism as an excuse to crackdown on seasteading even though seasteads can be Eco-restorative because sea-life clings to and reproduces on floating objects. They will probably have other excuses like being tax-havens for the rich or hide-outs for terrorist organizations. The latter was probably the excuse used by the Thai navy.
But on the other hand, I believe that going after these independent floating nations or autonomous zones through force would cause a lot of backlash from land residing citizens unless the state can cover it up.
I am a regular donor to the seasteading institute. It's actually my only contribution to the libertarian cause right now, but I really see a lot of potential in this.