The Universal Priciples of Liberty

Stephan Kinsella has long attempted to articulate universal principles of liberty that remain valid in every era. The Universal Principles of Liberty declaration1) 2) was finalized in its draft form on August 14, 2025. Alongside Kinsella, Freemax, Alessandro Fusillo, and David Dürr also participated in drafting this declaration, with Hans-Hermann Hoppe serving as its spiritual godfather. However, since the signatures of those who agree with this declaration are to be inscribed on Bitcoin, it seems unavoidable that this will be caught up in the controversy over spam.

⠀Regardless of the debate surrounding the method of inscription, placing this code above any law or regulation amounts to professing oneself a libertarian. For those seeking freedom, this declaration will serve as a voluntarily chosen constitution and a code of conduct. If more people come to regard these principles as their supreme rule, I believe the world can change more swiftly.

⠀I, Philemon Lysander hereby voluntarily and clearly adopt these principles as the supreme rule of my conduct.


About

In an age where even those who speak peacefully can be struck down, where rational debate is met not with dialogue but with deathly silence, the need for an unshakable moral compass has never been greater. The Universal Principles of Liberty were born from a shared conviction: that the essence of human freedom can, and must, be distilled into clear, timeless truths. Crafted through the collaboration of Stephan Kinsella, Freemax, Alessandro Fusillo, and David Dürr — and Hans-Hermann Hoppe as its godfather — this document expresses, in five simple principles, the foundational axioms of liberty. It is not a constitution, nor a manifesto of fleeting politics. It is a declaration — a recognition of the moral order that precedes and transcends states, parties, and rulers. By reading, endorsing, and adopting these principles, each signer performs more than a symbolic act. They affirm their commitment to a world free from systemic aggression. Taking inspiration from the phenomenon of Bitcoin — first embraced by individuals, then by millions, before entire nations could no longer ignore it and recognise it — this declaration is a strategy to make freedom real. Every signature is fuel. A proof-of-liberty. Bitcoin coded liberty for money; these principles code liberty for people. The more people who stand behind the principles of liberty, the greater the signal we send to the world: that liberty has unstoppable support. The mission is clear — to gather enough strength so that, for the first time in history, real-world territories can adopt true liberty and finally live in a genuine ethical order.


PREAMBLE

In recognition of the inherent dignity, liberty, and moral self-sovereignty of every Person, and affirming that peace, prosperity, and human flourishing arise where each respects the equal liberty of others — we declare these Universal Principles of Liberty (“Principles”).

⠀Their purpose is to foster conflict-free interaction. These maxims flow from reason, experience, and ethics; they are neither decreed by any state nor imposed by majority will. Adoption is voluntary, any person may adopt the Principles by any clear act of consent and enforcement rests on the free choice of individuals and communities to live by, and to arbitrate disputes under these Principles.

SCOPE AND HIERARCHY

Primacy

These Principles form the supreme meta-normative baseline for all Adopters.

Secondary Rules

Adopters may establish charters, covenants, by-laws, customs, private codes, or other private law systems based on these Principles (“Secondary Codes and Laws”). Such rules may elaborate procedures or address matters not covered here, but may not contravene, nullify, or abridge these Principles.

Conflicts

Where a secondary rule or practice conflicts with these Principles, these Principles prevail. Disputes over such incompatibilities shall be resolved by impartial arbitration.

Interpretation

If these Principles are silent or unclear, arbiters may consult:

ARTICLE I — TERMS AND DEFINITIONS

ARTICLE II — PRINCIPLES

  1. Non-Aggression Principle — Aggression against another Person’s Resource is unjust, irrespective of the actor’s status or scale. Aggression includes individual action as well as joint action, in which case participants in joint action may be liable for acts of the others, depending on the relationship between the actors and their causal connection to the Aggression.
  2. Self-Ownership — Every Person is the original and presumptive owner of their Body. Incapacity—temporary or permanent—does not nullify Self-Ownership. Self-Ownership may be forfeited, in whole or in part, as a consequence of committing Aggression, subject to principles of self-defense and proportionality.
  3. Original Appropriation (Homesteading) — Unowned External Resources become justly owned by the first Person (or association) who clearly demarcates, occupies, or productively transforms them, thereby establishing an objective, intersubjectively ascertainable link between the Person and the External Resource. Such ownership is retained until it is transferred by Contract, transferred for purposes of rectification, or abandoned. Abandonment may be determined by sufficient indications of intent such as long-standing inactivity, explicit communications, or failure to object to or prevent open and notorious adverse possession by another, which may mature into ownership absent timely challenge.
  4. Voluntary Exchange (Contractual Title Transfer) — A Person may acquire ownership of an External Resource by means of a Contractual title transfer from the previous owner. Such contractual title transfers may be partial or complete, conditional or unconditional, temporary or permanent, or immediate and contemporaneous or future-based, as the case may be and as specified by contractual terms of understanding between the relevant parties. Mere promises may give rise to moral obligations but do not result in legally binding obligations; contracts are consensual title transfers based on the owner’s property rights in owned External Resources, which remain with the owner until transferred by Contract, transferred for purposes of rectification, or abandoned.
  5. Rectification — A proven aggressor owes the victim compensation proportionate to the harm caused. This may include transferring title to Resources. In assessing compensation, consideration shall be given to the extent of the damage, including the victim’s subjective loss; the aggressor’s degree of intent and underlying motives; and, pursuant to §10, the type and degree of punishment the victim could, in principle, impose on the aggressor.

ARTICLE III — SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS

  1. Inalienability of the Person — Contracts purporting to alienate ultimate control over a Person’s own Body, such as voluntary slavery contracts, are unenforceable.
  2. Proportionality and Self-Defense — Defensive force in response to Aggression is justified, and is not itself Aggression, when reasonably necessary and proportionate to the threat, whether used immediately or after the fact. Where possible, self-help should be avoided pursuant to §11.
  3. Devices of Mass Destruction (DMD) — Possessing, developing, or deploying a DMD constitutes a presumptive standing threat when it foreseeably endangers innocent parties through indiscriminate or catastrophic effects. This presumption may be rebutted only by proving, to the satisfaction of all affected parties or a neutral arbiter, that robust safeguards eliminate substantial risk of wrongful harm. Where unrebutted, proportionate action—preceded, where practicable, by notice, dialogue, and arbitration—to neutralise the danger is justified; exigent circumstances may warrant immediate intervention.
  4. Presumptions of Title — The possessor of an External Resource is presumed to be the owner, which presumption may be overcome by evidence of superior title, including evidence of contractual transfer, rectification for Aggression, or abandonment. For property title disputes, the party proving the better claim to the External Resource prevails, taking any relevant presumptions and burdens and standards of proof into account.
  5. Evidentiary Standards and Procedures: Punishment. An Aggressor may, in principle, forfeit certain rights as a consequence of Aggression. The nature and extent of any remedy — whether compensatory, punitive, or protective — shall be determined according to community rules consistent with these Principles. Severe remedies require a heightened evidentiary standard, such as proof beyond a reasonable doubt, unanimous verdicts, double jeopardy protection, and jury authority over both law and fact. In cases of lethal Aggression, the right to forgive or settle rests with the victim’s closest relations or as decided by impartial arbitration; where multiple victims are involved, arbitration may govern the conditions for forgiveness. Repeated or grave Aggression may establish an Aggressor as a standing threat, justifying proportionate defensive measures.

ARTICLE IV — DECENTRALISED LEGAL ORDER

  1. Aspirational Goals; Conflict-Avoidance & Compromise — Adopters of these Principles pledge to negotiate in good-faith, compromise where possible, and, when feasible, submit disputes to neutral arbitration rather than resort to force, thereby advancing conflict-free interaction. Self-help is to be avoided where possible, as is vigilante justice, acting as a judge in one’s own case, or acting as an outlaw. All Persons adopting these Principles and seeking to benefit therefrom ought to aspire to comply with these Principles and to support the legal order of a free society attempting to implement and apply these Principles. The production of security may be entrusted to entrepreneurs or organized militias provided that such security contractors are bound by these Principles.
  2. Competitive Arbitration — No institution enjoys a coercive monopoly over law or enforcement. Individuals are free to select competing arbitral providers and protection agencies. Arbitration bodies and courts, with the consent of their clients, may agree on the establishment of courts of appeal and appellate courts to solve disputes between arbitral providers and protection agencies.
  3. Customary Evolution of Law — Communities may develop and promulgate Secondary Codes and Laws including registries, procedural norms, and evidentiary rules consistent with these Principles.

ARTICLE V — SELECT UNJUST LAWS

The laws listed below are examples of positive laws, past or present, that are incompatible with these Principles and therefore unjust. This list is illustrative, not exhaustive: any law contrary to these Principles is unjust, whether or not named here. Inclusion of certain laws does not imply that others, similarly incompatible, may be enforced.

CLOSING AFFIRMATION

The aspiration behind these Principles is a world free from systemic aggression, open to every Person. Let every free soul remember: we bow to no state, we kneel to no order but justice, we answer to no master but reason and ethics. Here, under these Principles, we choose life without coercion, without chains, and without tyrants. And no power on earth will stop us.

1) “The Universal Principles of Liberty”, https://theuniversalprinciplesofliberty.com/en/about.

2) 1. Stephan Kinsella, “Announcing The Universal Principles of Liberty,” StephanKinsella.com, August 18, 2025, https://stephankinsella.com/2025/08/announcing-the-universal-principles-of-liberty/.