Utopia interrupted

By August 10, 2022Society, Technology

By Harry Blutstein

The Network State, a new book by Balaji Srinivasan presents a new model of digital statehood run and managed in the cloud1. It’s all so simple. A group of people get together on the internet and decide that they’re going to start a country. They use a social network to connect them and create an identity, a leader to unite them, and a cryptocurrency to protect their assets. They even create their own laws, in which the newly-minted nationals agree to abide by. It’s all so simple.

This is not the first time that libertarians have dreams of cutting lose from the established order or national sovereignty. Now it is the internet that will liberate the citizens of the digital-nation, although the problem remains that they have to physically have to live somewhere, and be subject to its laws. So, not so simple. 

An earlier idea that overcame this problem was to create a floating colony, either using ships or artificial islands, located in international waters. Residents of these communities would be out of reach of sovereign countries, so they would not be bound by government rules and best of all, they would pay no taxes. It is called seasteading, which is being promoted by the Seasteading Institute2.

You have to go back to the 1970s for the first serious attempt at seasteading, which was based on the idea that unclaimed island in the Pacific Ocean could be colonized by libertarians.

A Nevada-based real estate developer and coin dealer, Michael Oliver, had a dream. A libertarian, he wanted to escape the overbearing clutches of governments. The only way to do so, he decided, was to create his own country, where there would be few or no rules. In 1968, he published A New Constitution for a New Country, a practical guide on how to construct a new nation in which “people will be free to do as they damn well please. Nothing will be illegal so long it does not infringe on the rights of others. If a citizen wishes to open a tavern, set up gambling or make pornographic films, the government will not interfere”3. Income would be generated from fees from grateful banks wishing to establish offshore services—no questions asked—and offer transnational corporations a place to establish their headquarters without bothersome rules or taxation.

Pulling together around 2,000 investors, Oliver established the Ocean Life Research Foundation. With funds raised, Oliver’s first idea was to find a country that would be willing to sell his foundation one of its islands, over which the Foundation would declare sovereignty. When he couldn’t find any takers, Oliver looked around for an unclaimed island that could become his libertarian paradise.

The best Oliver could do was Minerva Reef, in the middle of the Pacific, 500 km southeast of Tonga. It had never been claimed, despite being discovered as far back as 1854. There were, however, serious problems establishing a settlement on the reef, not the least being that the reef lies some three feet above water at low tide and about four feet under water at high tide.

Undaunted, in January 1971, Oliver and a small party went to Fiji, where they chartered a 54-foot motor sailer and purchased the materials to create artificial islands on the reef. On their arrival at Minerva, the party unloaded large hunks of coral wrapped in chicken wire, concrete blocks, sand and other rubble, which allowed them to build two micro-islands on the reef. On one of these islands, they built a small stone tower and hoisted its flag: a yellow torch of freedom on a solid blue background. The founding fathers of Minerva hoped to expand the reclaimed land until it would eventually support a city of 30,000 citizens. They even minted their own coins.

From: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_of_Minerva

In February 1972, Oliver appointed Bud Davis the Provisional President of Minerva. A former project engineer with North American Rockwell, he ran the new republic from the living room of his one-story house in Gustine, California. From there, he mailed out a Declaration of Sovereignty to around one hundred nations, requesting recognition for the world’s newest principality. The only head of state willing to strike up diplomatic relations was the Sultan of Occussi-Ambeno. This coup lost its sheen when it was discovered that the Sultanate was a figment of the fertile imagination of Bruce Grenville, a New Zealand anarchist.

While the founding fathers of Minerva were romantics, they were pleased to find that they had counterparts in the business community who were thinking along similar lines. For example, Carl Gerstacker, the chairman of Dow Chemical Company, startled his audience in 1972 when he mused:

“I have long dreamed of buying an island owned by no nation and of establishing the World Headquarters of the Dow Company on the truly neutral ground of such an island, beholden to no nation or society. If we were located on such truly neutral ground we could then really operate in the United States as US citizens, in Japan as Japanese citizens and in Brazil as Brazilians rather than being governed in prime by the laws of the United States … We could even pay any natives handsomely to move elsewhere.”

Dow later brushed this quote off as a joke, but when questioned at the time, Gerstacker said he was “deadly serious.”

After reading a report about this speech, Oliver approached Dow to ask whether it would like to establish its world headquarters on Minerva. Gerstacker did not respond, and the principality remained no more than a flag fluttering in the wind over a few square yards of debris that threatened to wash away in the next storm.

Unfortunately for Oliver, Australia did not take kindly to a privately owned principality being created in its neighbourhood and pressured Tonga, being the closest country to Minerva, to act.

On June 21, 1972, King Tupou IV led an expeditionary force to invade the Principality of Minerva. Without an army or navy to call on, the king recruited a five-man convict work detail to undertake the invasion and, to add gravitas to the expedition; a four-piece brass band played the Tongan national anthem from on-board the royal yacht Olovaba. The king then personally led his force ashore once the tide was out. After tearing down the Minervan flag, he read aloud a proclamation of sovereignty. The reef now belonged to the Kingdom of Tonga.

When the king was back on board the royal yacht, his work detail was left to dismantle the stone tower, which had been erected by Oliver. What up until now had been a bloodless war turned nasty, as a fight broke out between two of the convicts, and one was killed. So, while the Principality of Minerva never had a live population, it was left with a single gravesite, which was all that remained of the shortest and smallest war in the history of the world, and even that grave soon disappeared, as did the Principality of Minerva when successive storms washed away its artificial islands.

Sources

  1. https://thenetworkstate.com/
  2. https://www.seasteading.org/
  3. https://reason.com/1975/12/01/a-new-constitution-for-a-new-c/

9 Comments

  • Noel says:

    Thanks for this.

  • Jon says:

    Pity more Neo-Libertarians (David Leyonhjelm, Paul Rand etc) don’t cast their gaze beyond the Karman Line for their future abodes. I – and I’m sure millions of others – would contribute generously to their one-way tickets.

  • Laurie says:

    I recently heard (read?) someone describe Libertarians as like house cats: fiercely independent while being completely dependent on others. A pack of loons.

    I first heard about the Tonga thing in a book called Hot Money and the Politics of Debt by a Canadian academic named RT Naylor. I picked it up in a second hand book store, read few pages and and promptly forked over the $6 or so they wanted for it. Highly recommended as a primer on the history of corruption, money laundering and international politics as well as being laugh out loud funny. Its a bit old now but you still hear names he mentions in the news today.

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