![]() While conditions on the 'stead have clearly become normalized for her, even she is shocked to discover that where the "laws" are basically that anything you can get away with is legal, people can and will get away with a lot.Īfter trying to find a bond worker who disappeared, Beck is recruited to help a producer who's arrived from Hollywood to run a reality show on the 'stead. ![]() But as we (and Beck) learn, "technically" has a lot of wiggle room. probably would get involved if their citizens were literally being enslaved. Technically, there is no "slavery" on the 'stead, only because countries like the U.S. People can "buy in" with a full stake on the stead and an apartment if they have enough money, but many people arrive as "bond workers" - basically, they sell themselves into indentured servitude, hoping to eventually earn their way to freedom and enough money to buy a stake of their own. Through her eyes, we learn how life in this libertarian utopia works. ![]() We never learn exactly what he does or where his money came from, but he's a Big Deal on the seastead, which means Beck has grown up living a fairly privileged life. Rebecca Garrison's father is a rich guy who brought her to the 'stead when she was four, after her mother died. or anyone else a reason to send in the Navy, they are mostly left alone. The United States and some other countries have "outreach offices" there, but since the seasteaders exist in international waters, as long as they don't give the U.S. The seastead is a collection of separatist anarcho-libertarian communes in the Pacific Ocean, made of floating platforms and spare ships all tied together and turned into a collection of micro-states, not really recognized as governments by the rest of the world, but allowed to exist more or less autonomously. The man has passionate fans and passionate haters, and after reading this book, I honestly don't know which one Naomi Kritzer is. Talking about Heinlein always invites the Great Heinlein Debate. I'm being a little cheeky, and a little unfair to the old man here. There was a lot of philosophizing, and there was always present the uber-competent Heinleinian Male, a stern, wise, yet loving patriarchal figure, and the equally uber-competent Heinleinian Female, as brilliant and capable as her man but always ready to do the dishes and then throw off her clothes for some proper servicing. Many of Heinlein's books depicted societies, on the moon or in near-future Earth enclaves, that run on anarcho-libertarian principles. Which is where Liberty's Daughter is clearly also a response to some of Heinlein's other books, especially The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. Beck Garrison is an independent gal just trying to earn some pocket money, like most teenagers, but her part-time job as "finder" of miscellenry leads her to the dark underside of the seastead home where she has spent her entire life. But Liberty's Daughter has the feel of a classic Heinlein juvenile - its protagonist is a smarty, spunky, capable girl whose father "runs" things in a vague, behind-the-scenes kind of way on their seastead home. I love Heinlein, skeevy spanking fetish and all. I haven't read anything by Naomi Kritzer before and don't know what her feelings about Heinlein are, but this book could not be more Heinleinesque if it added a few spankings and some Bugs. Heinlein, is patently obvious even if there are no overt call-outs or references. That this book was inspired by, and a reaction to, Robert A. And that some people will stop at nothing to keep her from talking about. When she tackles this investigation, she learns things about life on the other side of the waterline - not to mention about herself and her father - that she did not expect. To her surprise, she finds that she's the only detective that a debt slave can afford to hire to track down the woman's missing sister. She's grown up comfortable and sheltered, but starts doing odd jobs for pocket money. This makes it easy to flip a site to light theme super easy just Incase something doesn't look right.Beck Garrison lives on a seastead - an archipelago of constructed platforms and old cruise ships, assembled by libertarian separatists a generation ago. PRO TIP: open the extension menu, and click the link right below the button in the upper left corner and bind "toggle current site" to Alt+Shift+S. Darkreader converts ANY site into dark theme, it is free, open source, and is available for Firefox and Chrome.įrom my experience, it does its job really well. ![]() The solution is as simple as a browser extension.
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