 Professor Tom W. Bell is a legal expert on special jurisdictions and decentralized communities. He earned his JD from the University of Chicago, practiced law in Silicon Valley and Washington DC, and served as a policy director at the Cato Institute before joining the faculty of Chapman University, Fowler School of Law. His many publications discuss copyright, Internet Law, Prediction Markets and the Third Amendment and include the book Your Next Government from the Nation-State to Stateless Nations. Bell's clients have included the Prospera Zeti and the Free Society Project. Tom, you're not gonna be able to see us, but we will have time for questions after you speak and feel free to share your screen if you would like to and you can also see a countdown timer of roughly how much time you have left. Take it away, Tom. Thank you. Thank you, Carl. Glad to join you all, wish I could be there in person. I was last with the MTA in 2016, spoke then about theology. It's great fun. I'm expecting the birth of my next son imminently so I couldn't travel, but let's talk. I want to tell you about some of my work in the field, which is basically practicing decentralized law. I'm going to tell you about three projects on which I've worked, Prospera, the Zetae in Honduras, the Kataba Indian Nations Green Earth Zone and Free Society Project. And the theme that ties these all together is the use of ULEX, the open source legal system. So let's jump in. I'm gonna share my screen now and make sure that we can all see the same things. I'm looking for what I want now. I probably should have closed out a lot of these browser windows. I'm still looking for the one I want. Sorry, friends. I want to show you first this one. There we go. So if you are, I hope that's sharing, I don't see it on my own screen. But I hope you're seeing the webpage for my book, Your Next Governments, so you'll know where to find it. And I will post in the chat when I can, links to all of the, oh good, you see it, all of the pages I'm sharing today. In fact, there they are in the chat now. And by the way, if you're curious what I spoke about in 2016, I'm just gonna show you this. You can look up re-create.org. Basically, the premise of re-creational theology, which I spoke about in 2016, is all presented here. But we're not gonna talk about that today. We're gonna talk about bringing peace among people. That's the goal here, bringing peace among people. So in this book, Your Next Government, I discuss some of my work in the field for clients and I've updated it since then with the audio book version. There's an updated audio book version, which is free, as far as I can tell. I see $0.00, so check it out to get even more up-to-date news about my work in the field and today you're gonna get even more up-to-date news. Let's start talking about Prospera. This is Google Maps, I'm going to zoom in here so you can see where it is. Now notice, we're gonna be going into Honduras here in the middle of the screen. We're gonna zoom in and notice we're in the same time zone as Chicago and that's terribly handy when you're engaged in all kinds of virtual transactions. We're zooming in on the island of Rotan off the coast of Honduras and we get in close enough, you'll see there is Prospera. Now it's mostly undeveloped. The architects at Hadid Architects are developing some wonderful buildings there and what do I wanna say about Prospera? I'll say it's the most advanced special economic zone in the world today. Essentially, the ZA there that is from the Spanish acronym for Zones Employo y Deseroyo Ekinomica, Special Employment and Economic Development Regents. The ZA there is one of three that has launched and like the other ZAs, it is accorded under Honduran law including their constitution, a great deal of latitude to basically self-legislate. They can pass indeed half to pass legislation for everything in that private zone except criminal law. Now they get to enforce their own criminal law which is essential in Honduras but they can't have their own criminal rules unless they're approved by the National Assembly. And it turns out the Honduran criminal code on paper isn't that bad. It's not scary at all, no worse than any other countries at least. It's the administration of the Honduran criminal justice system that can give you pause but you don't need to worry about that in Prospera. More importantly for present purposes is that it is independent economically for the most part from Honduras. They do have to levy some rather small income taxes. They do have to pay minimum wage that's in the Honduran constitution. There's other limits. It's not go do your own thing. You don't get to fly your own flag. You don't get to have your own diplomatic relations. It's not a sovereign nation but it has a great deal of leeway and especially in those areas that foreign investors and people who want to bring economic development to Honduras, all those areas they care about. I was very pleased to work on this. I've been working in Honduran projects since 2011 and this was the third of the three projects I worked on the one that finally got some traction and launched and in it is the Roatan common law code. The Roatan common law code. I'm gonna come back so I can look at you. And the Roatan common law code uses Ulex the open source legal operating system. It uses the substantive rules from Ulex. And to get those substantive rules I went like someone going shopping with a basket to the library and I pulled off the shelf all of the world's best most uniform recognized rule sets for things like contract law for things like secured transactions for tort. I use sources such as those from the American law institute, uniform commercial code. They're all flag free sources. It's very important. You heard Curtis Lockhart from CCI speak earlier about Romer's approach to charter cities. And I think Romer misunderstood something brilliant man did not understand how patriotic people can be even in places like Honduras where they definitely have problems with their government but nonetheless, these people have felt the sharp end of colonialism. There is no way as a prize where we miss this no way they're gonna let a Canadian flag over their soil and let the Canadians even Canadians bless their hearts they seem pretty peaceful compared to Americans. Even Canadians are not gonna be allowed to parade around on Honduran soil waving their flags saying oh look, we know how to govern better than you. That's an insult. So what we did with Prospera was we used flag free sources. Now they mostly come from American sources not entirely, some of them international but this is important for diplomatic political reasons. I also happen to think they're better rules due respect to the Canadians. I think that using flag free sources gets you away from all kinds of public choice lobbying problems that poison the legal systems of nation states. Let me go back to screen sharing though I got more to tell you about this one I'm very excited about. This is the Kataba Green Earth zone and this just launched. Now here's a website for Prospera, check it out. Oh, I gotta say one more thing about Prospera. They have announced the issuance of a cryptocurrency backed by the real estate in their zone. I think they're the only place on earth doing that. It is a cryptocurrency backed with not just a hard asset but the most permanent assets, real estate, absolutely wonderful. But let's talk about the Kataba. The Kataba are a relatively small Native American tribe in a trust relationship with the US federal government based in South Carolina. And here you can see where they are in South Carolina. Here we are. And they recently announced the launch of their Green Earth zone. And here is the press release. Again, you'll find the link in the chat and in the Green Earth zone, they basically have attempted and I think succeeded in creating a set of rules which are optimized for digital assets, cryptocurrencies, NFTs and other forms of digital development. They are bringing this to their reservation on what they call server pods. These are containers full of server racks. The whole zone is going to take up less than two acres, 1.89 acres. They're gonna hook it up to power. It's going to be a virtual special economic zone. The first special economic zone in the United States, I would argue, and I had studied about this. You can read about it in my book. Very excited about the Green Earth zone. Interestingly for the present audience, I want to observe the Kataba are almost two A1 members of the Church of Latter-day Saints. Most interesting, apparently sometime back in the 1800s, someone did some stall missionary work among the Kataba, persuaded them and now you have friends running the GEZ. I'm very excited about the connections that they can make between those of you in Utah and Mormons all over the world and their zone. Very excited about it. I hope some of you will follow up and find a fellowship with the Kataba on that front and others and surprise, surprise. It won't be a surprise. The Kataba are basically running Ulex as part of like the Prosper Zedian Roatan. They're running that as part of their legal system. I was privileged to work on that legal system. They just launched it. They're going to be accepting. Really what you want to do is enter into a treaty with host nation under which two things happen. They secede or basically it's called cessation. They back away from their claims of sovereignty on not much land. We're not asking for much. It's a little piece of territory. We basically want to create a private Monaco. Monaco is very small, bigger than the Kataba zone, which is 1.8 acres, but still very small. So we have a treaty of cessation and mutual recognition. So the host country will say, we're backing off of this zone, this area, this delimited geographic area. You're welcome to go in there and we will recognize you. We're going to have a treaty of mutual recognition. It'll be the first of what we hope will be many recognitions by sovereign countries. You need to be recognized by sovereign so that you can do things like sail your vessels into the ports and fly your planes to their airports. That's going to take a long time, but we're going to start out with friendly relations with our host, kind of our parent country really. We're going to be their own little private Monaco. And it turns out there's lots of countries in the world that would love to have a little Monaco. Right, she can jowl with them, bringing in foreign investment, perhaps showing them how to govern better, you know, maybe just being a tourist attraction. It certainly works well for the south of France and northern Italy. They're close to Monaco. Lichtenstein's neighbors are very happy with it. We hope to do the same for other countries that have been kind of left out of this new developing area. So what else can I tell you about a free society project? I'll scroll down a little bit here and there's not much to show. Really, we're kind of there as a team and you might recognize some of you who do crypto stuff. You might recognize these two gentlemen. They're big in crypto. And this zone, like the Kataba greeners zone is going to be optimized for crypto. And I saw that because I'm one of the people that's working on the coding for that. And of course it uses Ulex. And let's take a look at Ulex while we're here. This is the GitHub page. You coders will recognize what's going on here. It's basically open source code, but it's legal code. Legal code. I'm up to version 1.2 now. This is a public source image of a plant called Ulex. And that's kind of our mascot is the plant Ulex. It's beautiful and thorny. And here are the rules. If you want to see the rules of Ulex, there they are. So the thing about Prosper that's interesting, sorry, not Prosper, Free Society Project that's interesting is we're going to be using the procedural rules as well as the substantive rules. So here's the substantive rules. And those are used in Prosper and the green earth zone. And so again, you'll see here, oh, you want some tort law. Here's some great tort law by the American Law Institute. This is the gold standard for tort law. Great, but those two jurisdictions have their own procedural rules. The idea with Free Society Project is to have a completely decentralized sovereign decentralized as we can make it. And so you'll notice if you spend some time with these rules, look how the judges are formed here. There is no standing court. There's no marble-pullered hall. There are no employees of the government deciding claims against the government, which by the way is I think a salient injustice of most current legal systems. We have employees of the people we're suing deciding the cases against their employee, their employer when we sue the government, outrageous. That won't happen in Free Society. Shouldn't happen anywhere. And I even have here a pretty carefully articulated appellate system, which is can be open sourced. My long-term goal is to upload Ulex and make a platform where people all over the world in all kinds of communities can bring their disputes, find judges, have neutral resolution of their claims against each other. I want to bring peace online. I want to bring the rule of law online. Without the rule of law, there can be no prosperity. In fact, the World Bank says the rule of law is the single largest source of wealth in the world today and they are correct. And we don't have that online. I want to help make that happen. I'll say one more thing and take questions. I want to flag for your attention a slightly different topic. So I've gotten interested in what I call protocol communities, things like Bitcoin, Tezos, Aragon. And you can see here, here's all the communities I look at in this paper. And this paper basically studies the governance of these, you could call them crypto communities basically decentralized communities, assesses them on a number of criteria. For example, are they susceptible to a 51% attack? Do they invite open proposals? Do they put people in privity? So these are things I think we should care about. And if you want to find out more about it, that you can read this paper, that this is about totally online communities. I mostly wanted today to focus on real world communities that are starting to run Ulex. And basically I want to bring Ulex to these communities as well, but that's a longer term project. Okay, I think I'm still under 20 minutes. So I'm gonna stop here and see if you have questions. I noticed I have trouble hearing people on the mic. So if you ask me a question, please get up tight with the mic so I can hear you, okay? Hi, can you hear me? I can, thank you. Okay, so I have been exposed to a lot of new information and I'm trying to digest it. So if I'm not understanding you, just please forgive me. When you were talking about Prospera, I thought I heard you say something about enforcement would be by the society, but determining policy would not be. So as a libertarian candidate for governor in Arizona, please help me understand who determines what constitutes a crime and who will determine that. Great, I have another paper on this. Look for common law. It's the Illustrated Guide to Common Law Zones in the Journal of Special Jurisdictions. And it talks in great detail about the Prospera legal system. It compares it to the legal systems of other common law special economic zones like they do by International Financial Center. The short of it with Prospera is they do not get to write their own criminal laws. The Honduran National Assembly has defined murder, for example, Prospera cannot change that on their own. What Prospera can do, in fact, what it has to do is enforce that law on its own. So there will be Prospera security guards who catch murders and Prospera courts that try murders and Prospera prisons that imprison guilty murderers. The Honduran government itself will not be administering their criminal code, but they have written the criminal rules that will apply in Prospera. So I'll stop there. Does that answer that part of your question? It does. And for me personally, it's safe to say that most people would define murder the same. However, I guess one of my concerns is because as a libertarian, I'm interacting with Cato Institute on more than one subject. Recently, someone in Cato was vehemently defending mandated vaccines, for example. And so, you know, we have body sovereignty. At least I think libertarians would agree on that. So again, I'm concerned about that definition or other definitions such as that, but that's the end of my question. Thank you. You can look up the Honduran criminal code as I have. I didn't see anything that was glaringly outrageous. So, but I suggest you do your shopping if you want to move to Prospera. I'm thinking of moving there. Well, in lieu of moving to Prospera, what efforts or would you say trains of thought are you aware of that are going to take what we, the lessons learned from Prospera, from Catawba, to say, hey, you know, here's the digest. Here's what we, here's what happened. And I know it's an ongoing effort. Because this seems very directly applicable to me, even in Utah where we have, we want to have a trustable voting system, right? And it'd be really cool if we could take essentially the model of Prospera or whatever else and create a repeatable Ulex style thing for our precincts and have them federate to create this conglomeration of zones, right? So that's why I'm very interested in what you're doing and the lessons learned because how do you get one legal system operating inside of another? That seems a way to fix our voting system. Well, I'm glad to hear you're thinking about that. I agree. It's very interesting. Right now I can say is, you know, you might want to check out my book. I have some resources here. And I would say connect with the people at CCI. I'm really impressed with their work. I really love their podcasts. And we'll CCI, will you bring out some new podcasts? I'd love to hear some more. There's some other people I could hook you up with, but I think that's a good start. Check out my book CCI and, you know, good luck friend. I think we're all heading in the same direction and nobody really knows how to get there, but we're going to explore lots of paths. I think we'll get somewhere good. Cool. Well, you're doing great work. Good luck. Thank you, sir. Hey, Tom, it's Curtis Lockhart from CCI. Thanks for the plug. Appreciate it. Sure. But I got to say your comments about Canada. You know, I've kept those in the back of my mind, too. On the Prospera theme, I guess, the other two questions have been about it as well. And I was wondering, you know, you being intimately involved in Prospera with the recent presidential elections last year and the, you know, I guess, socialist candidate, winning how have you guys sort of reacted or adjusted if you have to that reality? It looks like we may have lost him for a bit. I'm not sure if he heard that. Did you hear that, Tom? Oh, I'm sure he would have had a profound answer. So sorry. Oh, well. Oh, there you are. Tom. I'm back. Did you hear? Did you hear that? I got it. I got it. Okay. I'll give you really quick. I see I'm over. I'm not happy. I think Castro is going to be fine for Prospera Y because Prospera is already set. I don't think Castro realized how hard it is to get rid of the Zed A's once they're up and running. She can change the composition of camp, the sort of board of trustees that oversees the Zed A's. But that means there won't be any approval of new Zed A's under Castro's watch. Prospera's already been approved and we set it up. And by the way, I'm no longer active in managing Prospera. I'm just, I have a small equity stake and I want to see it Prospera. But anyhow, they are already in the door. Camp cannot stop them. And last thing, outside property owners can put their property into Prospera by mutual agreement of Prospera and those outside property owners. So basically what Castro is going to do is cut off all future competition to Prospera and it will be able to expand by bringing in new real property. And I don't think she's going to be able to get rid of it. She can slow down the processing by camp. But Prospera's already approved. So she just did a big favor to Prospera. It's not so great for the Zed A system generally, but for Prospera, I think it's actually could work to their benefit. Let's have another round of applause for Tom. Thank you so much, Tom, signing off now.