> I see the "wisdom of those who came before" embodied, not in governments, but in social structures and organizations that people create and join voluntarily
I see it in both. Though I would be willing to entertain the idea that people, at the age of majority or at certain milestone ages throughout their life, sign a 'declaration of civil life' or some such that basically says "Yes, I am aware of the laws and mores that cover my area and I agree to be a good citizen and, in return, I expect to have a voice in that governance."
Those that don't sign can move to a zone with laws they do agree with or a Christiania type 'freezone' where people can live free of social agreements that they would have otherwise inherited by accident of birth.
I support this because there has not really been a government free zone in any stable sense since before the written word. I'd be curious how it actually plays out.
I see it in both. Though I would be willing to entertain the idea that people, at the age of majority or at certain milestone ages throughout their life, sign a 'declaration of civil life' or some such that basically says "Yes, I am aware of the laws and mores that cover my area and I agree to be a good citizen and, in return, I expect to have a voice in that governance."
Those that don't sign can move to a zone with laws they do agree with or a Christiania type 'freezone' where people can live free of social agreements that they would have otherwise inherited by accident of birth.
I support this because there has not really been a government free zone in any stable sense since before the written word. I'd be curious how it actually plays out.