If you must pay the state to stay on your own land, you don’t own it — you rent it.
That simple truth is finally breaking through the noise.
Across the country, a new courage is rising from governors’ mansions, statehouses, and kitchen tables.
Florida is about to end the property-tax trap. Texas is moving more slowly toward zero. Ohio’s citizens are organizing for abolition, which could come as early as November. Indiana is rethinking the lien that never dies.
This feels less like a policy tweak and more like a restoration, a finishing of the American Revolution at the local level: no income tax, no property tax — fund what government must do with transparent sales taxes, trade duties, and tariffs.
I don’t speak here in theories.
Nine states already live without an income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming, and New Hampshire.
Look where the economic gravity sits — Texas, Florida, Washington — among the largest, most dynamic state economies in America. No wonder seven more states are actively considering joining them.
People vote with their feet, their families, and their capital, and they consistently choose places that respect their liberties. The lesson is not complicated: Prosperity follows liberty, and liberty begins with the state taking its hand out of your pocket before you get home from work.
The next step is to take its hand off your deed.
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