Eric catches up with Carla Gericke—President Emeritus and current Board Chair of the Free State Project—to talk about the movement’s growth and direction. They dive into why Free Staters are increasingly recognized as the best neighbors in New Hampshire, despite critics’ attempts to paint them otherwise. Carla shares insights on building local resilience, expanding liberty culture, and strengthening community networks across the state. They also discuss upcoming events, new initiatives, and the importance of mobilizing independent-minded Granite Staters. If you’re curious about life in the Free State or how liberty is being built on the ground, this is an episode you won’t want to miss.
In the Media
“Portsmouth, NH
If a historic New England holiday is your style, then the seaside town of Portsmouth, NH, will light you up!
Highlights of its Vintage Christmas celebration include an annual Candlelight Stroll at Strawberry Banke Museum where you can explore 350-plus years of seasonal and holiday traditions surrounded by costumed role-players and hundreds of lanterns illuminating the historic Puddle Dock neighborhood. Tours of decorated furnished homes from 1795 to the 1950s are also available. And that’s just the start of the celebratory activities in the area.
“Portsmouth at Christmastime? Literally irresistible. If you want to feel like you’ve stepped straight into a Christmas rom-com, this is your set piece,” says Carla Gericke, a New Hampshire agent with Porcupine Real Estate.
‘The cobblestone streets, the golden glow of lights strung overhead, the giant Christmas trees in Market Square, the artisanal shops dressed to the nines, the restaurants humming with live jazz and fresh oysters—it all conspires to charm you.'”
Read more at Realtor.com…
Sometimes, I am looking for a quick solution to a problem–like someone asked for a head shot, and I think, Oh, I’ll just pull that from online, and then I Google myself, and then I’m like, Huh, WTF is dat!?! Here are a few of those…
Granite Grok Micro-Interview:
From a few years ago, but I give a shout out to Porcupine Real Estate, Ian Underwood and Bare , Granite Grok, and the Free State Project in THIS VIDEO.
The Leader of Sons of Liberty During the Second American Civil War?!?



The Fire Rises Wiki is a collaborative wiki with the goal of informing and documenting the Hearts of Iron 4 mod The Fire Rises and its submods.
International article from Switzerland: The American Libertarian movement aligns nudists, gun lovers, vaccine skeptics, and enemies of the state…
In 2023, NZZ came to PorcFest: American libertarians want to establish their own state in New Hampshire. Every year, thousands of supporters meet at the Porcupine Freedom Festival to discuss progress. But are their ideas of freedom just another form of authoritarianism?
“The ecstatic pessimist Carla Gericke
The same goes for Carla Gericke. The 52-year-old is a lawyer, real estate dealer, author of «The Ecstatic Pessimist» and former president of the Free State Project. She moved from New York’s Chinatown to New Hampshire in 2008. She likes the fact that one doesn’t have to pay income or wealth taxes here and that the state has only 1.3 million inhabitants. For her,libertarian philosophy can be summed up with the words: «Do not hurt anyone, do not take anything away from anyone.»
Gericke grew up in South Africa. «I’ve always been a rebel,» she says. «When you grow up in a repressive apartheid state and you are a bit awake, you inevitably begin to question what is given.» This skeptical attitude remains, even if one is somewhere else, she says. Out of outrage at injustice, she became a lawyer, and in 1996 she won a green card in the lottery and came to the United States.
Asked about the many gunmen at Porc Festival, Gericke, whose hobbies are yoga and shooting, says it’s worth remembering that there are many guns in New Hampshire, but the state ranks the lowest in gun-related deaths in America, only 0.9 per 100,000 people. California however, with the strictest gun laws in the United States, has an average of 6.1 gun-related deaths per 100,000 inhabitants.
In the end, isn’t libertarian aversion to taxes simply selfish and antisocial – the ideology of rich people who only look out for themselves? «It is more that the current system is unfair,» she says. «Only the wealthy can afford a good education and health care in the U.S., and the police are primarily targeting the poor. Is the current school curriculum up to date? In the age of the internet, should teachers be the gatekeepers of knowledge and continue to break the will of students and demand obedience?» She also doesn’t have an ideal solution, but feels that alternatives to the ruling institutions must be considered, more choices and a free market with incentives – that is, with diversity, breaking the monopoly of bureaucratic institutions.
In 2010, she faced a 7-year prison sentence for filming an officer who stopped her car for a police check. What is now commonplace thanks to smartphones was still a novelty at the time. After a long battle with the authorities, she was finally acquitted in a spectacular court case in 2014.
Dressed only with a weapon
Gericke generally advocates decentralization, which is why she is also working towards the secession of New Hampshire. «The U.S. will fall apart like the British Empire,» she says. Gericke, who hitchhiked through Africa and Asia for a long time, is a refreshingly creative, spontaneous, vibrant woman who simply wants to be free. Any dogma is alien to her and she sees the Free State Project as a playground, an experimental field.

Many others, however, alienate with their fanatical or freaky nature; they do a disservice to the advocacy of self-responsibility and anti-paternalism. This also includes people in the movement who talk in authoritarian terms, but claim to advocate freedom. For example, 38-year-old Jeremy Kauffman is a tech entrepreneur who launched the blockchain-based network LBRY to share documents and movies, making him one of the remarkably many libertarians in the internet and crypto scene. Last year, he ran unsuccessfully for a U.S. Senate seat. With his eloquent manner, he is ubiquitous at the lectures and panels at the Porc Festival. At first glance he seems likeable, open and intelligent; but for years he has been irritating others with statements that don’t fit the propagated love of freedom.
At first glance he seems likeable, open and intelligent; but for years he has been irritating others with statements that don’t fit the propagated love of freedom…” READ MORE…

NH Progressive Jon Hopwood inadvertently makes me sound like the coolest ancap alive in THIS HIT PIECE…
🎯 “Freedom is messy—but it’s worth it.” @BigJohn_SXM and @CarlaGericke unpack what it really means to live free in a world built on compliance. A timeless Big Questions conversation.
— Distant Warrior (@DistantWarrior) November 6, 2025
Watch the full episode — link is on the attached image & please follow @DistantWarrior ! pic.twitter.com/GvHGcenTVS
My Living Xperiment: Day 294
Beef tongue, bacon fat, and the skinny on NH real estate in today's #Freedomnomnom LIVE… Now going for 293 days straight! https://t.co/0t9WZ8h8ik
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) October 21, 2025
Beef tongue… YUM! The verdict is in: delicious. Amazing how one bite can time-travel you. Suddenly I’m in Pretoria, it’s a hot Christmas Day, and I’m mildly annoyed that I have to stop doing somersaults into the pool just to eat. Back then, lunch was cold cuts and mustard, Ma and Pa with their beers, the grownups laughing in the shade while the kids cannonballed and shrieked.

Beef tongue tastes like thick-cut roast beef — meaty, hearty, comforting — but not wild or gamey. If you’ve never had it, I suspect it’s not because it’s unworthy, but because smart chefs make sure they get it first.
Thanks to the incredible work at The Content Factory, I was included with real estate experts Jan Ryan, Broker Owner of RE/MAX Direct in San Diego County, CA, and Rebecca Hidalgo, CEO/Designated Broker at Integrity All Stars Realty in Chandler, AZ in The Spruce with this article, Real Estate Agents Agree: This One Home Feature Always Sells a Home Faster.
My quote:
Carla Gericke, Realtor at Porcupine Real Estate in New Hampshire, says natural light is of utmost importance to her clients, especially since winters in the area can feel long, dark, and dreary.
“When you walk into a sun-drenched kitchen or a living room with south-facing windows with a prospective buyer, you can practically watch their shoulders drop,” she says. “Light impacts mood, productivity, and even health, so homes that maximize daylight feel instantly more inviting and uplifting.”
Buyers are often looking for big windows, open layouts that don’t block the sun, and an orientation that captures morning and afternoon light.
So if you’ve been considering replacing your windows or removing that old, overgrown tree blocking the light from your home, now might be a good time to do it.
Fact-Check Carla Gericke’s Statements about New Hampshire from the Dr. Phil Show Transcript
The transcript appears to be from a discussion (likely featuring a guest from New Hampshire) speculating on what the state might look like as an independent country. I’ll break down the key factual claims one by one, verifying them against reliable data. Opinions (e.g., “prosperous” or “like a little Hong Kong”) are noted as such but not fact-checked, as they’re subjective. All data is current as of October 2025, drawing from U.S. Census estimates, World Population Review, and official state sources.
1. “New Hampshire… would be a prosperous Little Country geographically”
- Verdict: Subjective, but geographically accurate as a “little country.”
- New Hampshire is one of the smallest U.S. states by land area, ranking 46th out of 50 at approximately 8,953 square miles (23,187 km²) of land (total area including water: ~9,350 sq mi or 24,214 km²). This is comparable to small sovereign nations like Slovenia (~7,827 sq mi) or Kosovo (~4,203 sq mi), making it a “little country” in geographic terms.
- Prosperity is opinion-based but supported by NH’s high median household income (~$90,000 in 2023, 7th highest in the U.S.) and low poverty rate (~7%). As an independent nation, its economy (currently ~$86 billion GDP) could rank it among mid-tier small economies like Slovenia or Latvia.
2. “[We’d be] bigger than countries in Europe population wise”
- Verdict: True.
- New Hampshire’s population is estimated at ~1.41 million as of mid-2025.
- This exceeds the populations of at least 18 European countries, including:
- Iceland (~399,000)
- Luxembourg (~661,000)
- Malta (~535,000)
- Cyprus (~1.27 million)
- Latvia (~1.83 million, but close—NH edges it out in recent estimates)
- Smaller microstates like Liechtenstein (~39,000), San Marino (~34,000), Monaco (~39,000), Andorra (~80,000), and Vatican City (~800).
- For context, NH’s population is similar to that of Estonia (~1.37 million) or just below Lithuania (~2.86 million). It would rank around 150th globally by population, akin to small European nations.
3. “[We’d be] four times the size of Iceland”
- Verdict: Mostly true if referring to population; false if referring to land area.
- The phrasing is ambiguous (“size” after mentioning “population wise”), but context suggests population.
- Population: NH (~1.41 million) is about 3.5–3.6 times larger than Iceland’s (~399,000). Close enough to “four times” for casual speech.
- Land area: NH (~8,953 sq mi) is only ~23% the size of Iceland (~39,768 sq mi or 103,000 km²). Iceland is vastly larger geographically.
- Iceland is one of Europe’s sparsest countries (density: ~4 people/sq mi), so NH would indeed be “bigger” population-wise despite being much smaller in area.
4. “[We’d] be able to export energy [because] New Hampshire has a nuclear plant that no one talks about”
- Verdict: True on the nuclear plant; plausible (but hypothetical) on energy exports.
- New Hampshire has one operating nuclear power plant: Seabrook Station in Seabrook, NH (a 1,244-megawatt pressurized water reactor, operational since 1990). It generates ~55% of the state’s electricity and supplies carbon-free power across New England (e.g., to Massachusetts and Vermont utilities). It’s often under-discussed compared to larger plants, but it’s a key regional asset.
- As an independent country, NH could export energy via existing grid ties (e.g., to ISO New England). Currently, Seabrook saves New England consumers ~$500 million annually in emissions reductions and low-cost power. No other nuclear plants exist in NH, and it’s the state’s only major baseload power source beyond renewables/hydro.
5. “[We] have a deep sea port”
- Verdict: True.
- New Hampshire’s Port of Portsmouth (on the Piscataqua River) is the state’s only deep-water port, with a 45-foot (14-meter) channel depth suitable for large vessels (e.g., container ships up to 1,000+ feet). It handles ~4.8 million tons of cargo annually, including international freight, and supports the U.S. Navy’s Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.
- It’s strategically located ~40 miles north of Boston, serving as a gateway for northern New England trade. As a sovereign nation, it could function like a compact trade hub (e.g., similar to Estonia’s ports).
6. “[New Hampshire] could become like a little Hong Kong to the whole Eastern Seaboard where we’re more prosperous than we could be under [the U.S.]”
- Verdict: Speculative opinion, but plausible based on assets.
- This is hypothetical and not fact-checkable, but NH’s combo of a deep port, nuclear energy, educated workforce (highest high school graduation rate in the U.S.), and proximity to Boston/NYC (~1-hour drive) could position it as a trade/finance hub. Hong Kong (pop. ~7.5 million, area ~426 sq mi) thrives on its port and low taxes—NH already has no income/sales tax, which boosts prosperity. However, independence would introduce challenges like defense, currency, and trade barriers.
Overall Assessment
Most factual claims hold up well, with the Iceland “size” comparison being the only minor stretch (likely intentional hyperbole for population). The vision of NH as a prosperous mini-nation is optimistic but grounded in its real strengths: compact geography, energy independence potential, and trade access. If independent, it might resemble a scaled-down version of Singapore or Luxembourg—small, wealthy, and export-focused—rather than Hong Kong. For deeper dives, check U.S. Census data or NH state reports.
All recent media mentions occur in 2025, focusing on real estate trends, tax implications, and market insights where Carla Gericke, an agent at Porcupine Real Estate in New Hampshire, is quoted as an expert.
| Title | Source | Date | Link | Snippet |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| How Sentimental Sellers Can Help Buyers Win With Less | Realtor.com | July 30, 2025 | Link | “Storytelling is everything in real estate,” explains Carla Gericke, a real estate agent with Porcupine Real Estate in New Hampshire. “You’re not just …” |
| 90% of Gen Z Homeowners Admit To Underestimating the Cost of Homeownership | Realtor.com | July 1, 2025 | Link | For instance, Carla Gericke, a New Hampshire agent at Porcupine Real Estate, says that one of her Gen Z employees recently graduated from college and had to … |
| Americans Flock to These Small Locales To ‘Townsize’ This Summer | Realtor.com | July 19, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a popular New Hampshire agent at Porcupine Real Estate. “Bretton Woods is where liberty, luxury, and legacy meet. And that’s a rare find … |
| This “Golden Rule” of Touring Homes Is Disappearing | Apartment Therapy | June 23, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a New Hampshire agent at Porcupine Real Estate. “Some sellers worry about theft. Some want to sell it themselves, thinking they can help by … |
| How New York Homeowners Will Benefit From SALT Deduction Changes | Realtor.com | July 17, 2025 | Link | … real estate agent Carla Gericke. “For real estate investors, though? Not bad. If you’ve got property in those states, you’ll get to deduct more and keep … |
| How New Hampshire Homeowners Will Benefit From SALT Deduction Changes | Realtor.com | July 17, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a real estate agent at Porcupine Real Estate. Gericke sees this move as more of “windfall for high-net-worth buyers and well-connected … |
| Concord Makes List for Hottest Zip Codes in 2025 | Realtor.com | August 25, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a real estate agent at Porcupine Real Estate. “The kicker? Concord’s in the sweet spot: Just over an hour to Boston, the Seacoast, or the … |
| The Cities Young Families Are Flocking to in 2026, According to Experts | House Beautiful | July 31, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a New Hampshire agent at Porcupine Real Estate. “In other words: the window’s finally open,” she says. Local traditions like Pollyanna Glad … |
| How Massachusetts Homeowners Will Benefit From SALT Deduction Changes | Realtor.com | July 17, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a real estate agent at Porcupine Real Estate. “If you’ve got property in those states, you’ll get to deduct more and keep more after taxes … |
| How California Homeowners Will Benefit From SALT Deduction Changes | Realtor.com | July 17, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a real estate agent with Porcupine Real Estate. She adds, “If you’ve got property in those states, you’ll get to deduct more and keep more … |
| 32% of Homeowners in Austin, Texas Will Benefit From the New SALT Deduction Cap | LMT Online | July 20, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, a real estate agent at Porcupine Real Estate. Though Texas wasn’t the hardest hit under the original cap, the sheer number of households with … |
| Le 9 città americane dove trasferirsi nel 2026 | Elle Decor (Italy) | August 23, 2025 | Link | … Carla Gericke, agente immobiliare del New Hampshire presso Porcupine Real Estate. “In altre parole: finalmente si è aperta una finestra”, dice. Tradizioni … |
Prominent leader of the Free State Project, Carla Gericke gives a talk, “The Good Girl’s Guide to Self-Ownership,” delivered at PorcFest, where she explores the concept of self-ownership by likening each individual to an independent country (1:50). She emphasizes that true liberty begins within oneself, asserting that the dreams of building a libertarian homeland in New Hampshire stem from individual self-ownership (2:05).
Gericke breaks down self-ownership into three core components:
- Body as Infrastructure (6:06): Your body is your homeland. She encourages mindful attention to what is allowed in (food, love) and establishing boundaries. Your immune system is your primary defense (27:37), and managing inflammation is crucial for health. She also highlights the importance of emergency protocols for personal well-being (29:19).
- Mind as Government (29:51): The mind functions as the government of your personal country, with legislative, executive, and judicial branches. She stresses defining your value system (30:09), developing effective decision-making processes (31:12), and being aware of who controls your mind, especially in an age of constant propaganda (33:01). She candidly discusses her personal journey of quitting alcohol to achieve a clearer mind (35:03).
- Soul as Culture/Identity (37:19): This aspect focuses on developing your personal culture, constitution, and national identity. Gericke advocates for embracing the desire to be “good” and striving for wholeness. Key tools for accountability include journaling (39:09), setting goals with quarterly reviews (40:19), monitoring health through blood tests (40:27), and building a strong community network (40:47).
She connects individual self-ownership to broader movements like the Free State Project’s efforts to achieve independence for New Hampshire, highlighting the importance of freedom, decentralization, and unity as guiding principles (42:47). Gericke concludes by reiterating that fostering individual self-determination leads to a more voluntary world where communities can overcome challenges like resource scarcity and instability by banding together as self-owned humans (44:50).
