Difference between revisions of "User:DanB/BaseStead Strategy"

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Here are my thoughts regarding incremental strategies.
 
  
I have been thinking about Seasteading <b>strategies</b>. A strategy is a plan of action that will achieve a goal. The Seasteading community has a well defined goal: construct autonomous floating societies.
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I have been thinking about Seasteading <b>strategies</b>. A strategy is a plan of action that will achieve a goal. The Seasteading community has a well defined goal: construct autonomous floating societies. This is an enormously ambitious goal. It involves at least the following steps:
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<ul>
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<li>Design and construction of large scale floating structures.
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<li>Development of a legal framework guiding the relationship of Seasteaders with one another, and with the outside world.
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<li>Convincing large numbers of people to uproot their lives, careers, and families and risk everything to move to a far off place with a bunch of strangers, some of whom have expressed a (shall we say) certain moral laxness.
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<li>Development of an economic structure that allows the Seasteaders to support themselves.
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</ul>
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Currently the main focus of TSI appears to be publicity/marketing/outreach and design. The underlying strategic assumption seems to be: <i>if</i> we design a good enough Seastead, and <i>if</i> we tell enough people about it, the rest of the above process will happen naturally. Significant expenditures of effort and time have gone into thinking up and testing new designs.

Revision as of 03:03, 20 March 2009


I have been thinking about Seasteading strategies. A strategy is a plan of action that will achieve a goal. The Seasteading community has a well defined goal: construct autonomous floating societies. This is an enormously ambitious goal. It involves at least the following steps:

  • Design and construction of large scale floating structures.
  • Development of a legal framework guiding the relationship of Seasteaders with one another, and with the outside world.
  • Convincing large numbers of people to uproot their lives, careers, and families and risk everything to move to a far off place with a bunch of strangers, some of whom have expressed a (shall we say) certain moral laxness.
  • Development of an economic structure that allows the Seasteaders to support themselves.

Currently the main focus of TSI appears to be publicity/marketing/outreach and design. The underlying strategic assumption seems to be: if we design a good enough Seastead, and if we tell enough people about it, the rest of the above process will happen naturally. Significant expenditures of effort and time have gone into thinking up and testing new designs.