Ross will be attending PorcFest!!! 🙂 Grab your tickets today!
Just got back from a lunch with Ross, his wife, Caroline, and of course, Lyn Ulbricht, the bestest mom in the world. They will all be at PorcFest is a few short weeks.
Ross will be attending PorcFest!!! 🙂 Grab your tickets today!
🚨 HUGE ANNOUNCEMENT 🚨
— The Free State Project (@FreeStateNH) May 29, 2025
After over a decade behind bars…
After years of tireless advocacy…
After never giving up hope…
Ross Ulbricht is coming to PorcFest 2025.
This will be a celebration of freedom, resilience, and community.
Join us in welcoming Ross to the Free State!… pic.twitter.com/WeDDvOzovs
Just got back from a lunch with Ross, his wife, Caroline, and of course, Lyn Ulbricht, the bestest mom in the world. They will all be at PorcFest is a few short weeks.
Who said "baloney"? pic.twitter.com/3iKPAHWTz4
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) May 29, 2025
I joined Ross Connolly 10:30-11am on Vermont Viewpoint: “Carla Gericke, President Emeritus of the Free State Project and former citizen of South Africa, informs listeners about the political instability in South Africa and the controversy between the Trump Administration and the South African leadership.” Listen now… it’s the last 25 minutes of the show.
Today, I am breaking my silence about South Africa. I'm finally ready (kinda-sorta?!?) to start unpacking my own complex relationship with the country I left in 1996. Join me now for Day 133 of My Living Xperiment. https://t.co/QHWNPOhU5d
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) May 13, 2025
Let’s be clear: Gen X wasn’t supposed to save the world. We were raised feral, fed cynicism and TV dinners, and told to amuse ourselves under fluorescent lights while both our parents worked and worked (and drank and drank). But guess what? Against all odds—and mostly because we never fully bought into any of it—we’re going to save the damn place anyway.
We’re the last analog generation, the bridge between The Digital Before and After. We remember busy signals and dirty ashtrays. Polaroids and slide shows against the living room wall. We played in the street, unsupervised, until the streetlights flicked on. We learned conflict resolution the old-fashioned way: dodgeballs to the face and detention slips. We didn’t grow up safe, exactly–at 10pm TV ads needed to remind parents they HAD children–we grew up resilient. We didn’t get participation trophies. We got sarcasm, Reaganomics, and MTV back when it was good.
We didn’t ask for a cause, but now we’re the last generation with the muscle memory of true freedom before it got digitized and deep-faked out of existence.
We remember a pre-Nineteen-Eighty-Four world. And now we know: knowing shit now matters.
We remember when technology felt like liberation: the Sony Walkmans, the an-ti-ci-pation of dial-ups, the first oh-so-heavy laptops. We were early internet cowboys, digital pirates before everything got Googled and gated and gamified. We’re the OG hackers, the ones who understood the web as synapses firing, a network, connected yet decentralized, not this emerging panopticon, permanently observed.
While the Boomers debate which gated community to die in and the Millennials debate whether they’ll ever own property, we’ve slipped into middle age quietly, warily. As Jon Stewart said walking out on stage at a show in Boston a few years ago: “Yeah, you got old too.”
Now, with our earned crows’ feet and graying temples, we’ve realized the world needs saving. But here’s the rub, we also believe: No One is Coming to Save You. Huh?
Hold up: You need to adjust your mindset. Gen X still remembers how to say “no.” No to authority, no to manipulation, no to the subtle gaslighting of a world that says freedom is selfish and submission is virtue. We see the con. We smell the bullshit. We survived the Satanic Panic and D.A.R.E. without becoming devils or addicts. We’ve learned suffering is real and bureaucrats can’t save you. In the past five years, we’ve learned bureaucrats lie and people die.
And you need to know it too.
We were raised by television and nihilism, and yet, miraculously, we still care. Not in the earnest, overcommitted way of the Millennials. Not in the detached, absurdist memes of Gen Z. We care strategically. We care because we know what’s at stake if no one does. And because we’ve seen what happens when you let Boomers run things too long. (Hint: it ends in debt, war, and a sad cruise.)
We’re the dark horses. The “middle children.” The “whatever” generation that never really got a defining moment—so we’ll make one. Quietly, competently, stubbornly, while everyone else argues on the internet.
Here in the Free State of New Hampshire, we’re building parallel systems. Homesteads. Homeschools. A homeland. We’re working on encrypted channels and local barter/crypto networks. We’re expanding nuclear power, creating a Bitcoin Reserve, and we’ve even legalized flying cars. We’re walking away from broken institutions and planting trees we know we might not sit under, because that’s what grownups do. Real grownups man up, and after Covidmania, the world needs us.
We don’t need your hashtags. We have real memories.
We remember childhoods before screens. We remember liberty before lockdowns. We remember speech before censorship. We remember when saying racist shit was frowned upon and applied equally to all. We remember when you could disagree with someone without trying to destroy them. And we remember fun—before every joy came with a PSA.
Yes, we watched The Breakfast Club. We absorbed its lessons: that people aren’t their labels, that authority can be wrong, that honest vulnerability fosters connection. Rebellion isn’t rage, it’s truth-telling. It’s authenticity. The system can’t contain us because we never bought into it to begin with.
We’re Gen X, and we stand outside looking in. We want you to look at the world like we do. Like you are free.
We’re Gen X, and we have the mixed tapes, wild dreams, and scars to prove it. We’re the last generation to know things independent of the internet, and you better start listening. We’re Gen X, and we’re here to save the world. You’re welcome. 🙂
Day One Hundred and Twenty Five of My Living Xperiment: What's coming up this week in the @FreeStateNH?
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) May 5, 2025
Follow me for daily insights about life in the Free State! https://t.co/g18J9rEQUj
Day 107 of My Living Xperiment: @FreeStateNH Monthly Volunteer Party! https://t.co/HfShi2MKQb
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) April 17, 2025
This week on Manch Talk, your host Carla Gericke is joined by the Free State Project’s Executive Director, Eric Brakey. This former three-term Maine Senator recently moved to New Hampshire, and he updates us on the upcoming Liberty Forum taking place at the end of the month.
Get your tickets today: NHLibertyForum.com
Day 97 of My Living Xperiment: What's coming up this week inthr Freest of Free States? Why doesn't "freest" have three Eees? https://t.co/id3h59i3hR
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) April 7, 2025
The third Thursday of every month is FSP Volunteer Party Time! Good company and dinner provided!
Day 79 of My Living Xperiment: FSP Volunteer party at the Q. Come hang out! https://t.co/GuMaAgIiV0
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) March 20, 2025
Thanks to all who answered the call! We stuffed those bags lickety-split!
Day 78 of My Living Xperiment: Sunshine Week and random office tour https://t.co/aAktdnyJMl
— Carla Gericke, Live Free And Thrive! (@CarlaGericke) March 19, 2025