Here's your latest episode from the The Advocates for Self Government CiVL News Roundup produced by CiVL.com.
This episode explores a philosophical framework for peaceful coexistence, a historical case study of a principality that eliminated income tax through casino revenue, and new survey data on immigration policy.
• Christopher Cook presents the Common Respect Protocol, a voluntary framework for polycentric jurisdictional ecosystems.
• The CRP is based on individual consent, justified force only in response to violations, and the fallacy of requiring one system for coexistence.
• Cook's framework allows individuals to establish polities, affiliate with existing structures, exit unwanted governance, or remain ungoverned.
• Cláudia Ah-sen-sao Nunes details how 19th-century Monaco avoided bankruptcy by establishing a luxury casino.
• Monaco's casino revenues funded infrastructure and allowed Prince Charles III to abolish all direct taxes by 1869.
• Nunes references John Stuart Mill's "On Liberty" to discuss state intervention in activities like gambling.
• The Advocates for Self Government conducted a 10-question poll (Jan 14 - Mar 8, 2026) with 1,233 respondents on political philosophy.
• The survey offered conservative, progressive, and libertarian answers, scoring respondents on a Nolan-style chart.
• Results showed 55.2% conservative, 19.2% progressive, 17.8% libertarian, and 7.8% moderate.
• A key finding was the divergence between self-identification (26% libertarian, 25% conservative) and policy answers (55% conservative).
• Conservative answers consistently supported strong federal enforcement on immigration, treating the border as a security issue.
• The survey designers argue that standard two-option polls fail to capture the nuances of public opinion on immigration.
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