Contract for liberty

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The Contract for Liberty is a voluntary social contract designed as the basis of a free and voluntary society. By signing it, sovereign signatories, individuals, agree to the contract protection and enforcement.

What it does

The contract creates a judicial system of an impromptu court of peers consisting only of other signatories. Any time the personal liberty of a given individual is violated by another, this impromptu court is meant to resolve those conflicts, decide if one party was wronged, and decide upon a punishment.

Why

In the quasi-anarchist society that this contract creates, the only "governmental" or ultimately authoritative body is the court of peers. The integrity of that court is maintained by the fact that the signatories have a vested interest in the continued fairness of the court should they ever harm anyone. Since the governing body only convenes when a dispute needs a resolution and otherwise does not exist, it is a model for an anarchist society in which the participants are guaranteed a form of justice and protection of athority all without the coercion of taxes or police.

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