As part of his continued international work, President Vit presented recently in both Vienna and London. Opening his talks he asked the audience “who has thought about founding a country?” In both cases, the audience responded with humour and some awe. And in London about six hands went up. Vit had hit upon a nerve which may or may not have been promoted by Brexit.
The Vienna show case was hosted by Bruce Porter of Washington Elite. The conference was held in the Schönbrunn Palace in old historic Vienna and was originally the summer residence of the Habsburg Rulers. There are some 1,441 rooms in this massive Rococo palace and its exterior is painted in a beautiful pale lemon colour. The choice of colour was later explained as it was the least expensive paint in he last century and the miles of paint required some frugality. The event also involved attending mass and an awards dinner with royals. The Austrians can certainly host events in style.
Vit attended the royal dinner and presented Bruce with the Order of Merit.


London’s CC Forum was not to be outdone. Two days in the Queen Elizabeth Conference in Westminster, the event was a blockbuster in terms of people, crypto celebrities and on (and off) stage drama. The speaker list was a who’s who of the crypto world including John McAfee, Tim Draper, Bobby Lee, Roger Ver, Craig Wright, Nouriel Robotina, Tone Vays, Vinay Gupta, Dinis Guarda, Thomas Power, David Siegel, Jonny Fry, Nick Ayton, Bruce Jeong, Mru Patel, Jon Matonis, Evan Luthra and more.
And of course Vit was also presenting on the main stage. After asking his audience that country foundation question he proceeded to explain that the world was becoming feudal, going backwards if you will. He explained that citizens of Liberland can chose to pay taxes – and if they do they have a greater say in the running of the country. You could see members of the audience nodding their heads in agreement.

“Liberland is also very beautiful – and only 40 minutes by boat from neighbouring Sombor,” he explained. The country is run by an elected congress and combines the best of a republic, a democracy and a meritocracy.
“I don’t much like democracy by itself – it can be mob rule – but we can create a better choice by adopting the Swiss voting model where people can veto where needed. People,” he said, “are not so good at creating positive policy but they are very good at vetoing bad decisions.”
Liberland bases its right to nationhood on the international legal rules which outline 4 key attributes. The first is a population, the second a defined territory, the third a government and finally the capacity to enter into international relations with other states.
In fact, the first attribute has been amazing. As President Vit explained: “The first day we had 2,000 applications for citizenship, the second 10,000 and by the third we had 200,000. This alone shows that there is a demand for what we are doing.”
Liberland was founded in 2015 and since then there have been many advancements. There is a tech team in place, Ghostbusters, building the world’s first autonomous decentralised government, there are 100 global representatives and even 10 diaspora villages. Liberland has signed a recognition deal with fellow micro nation Somiland and is actively talking with the UN for recognition.
And did I mention the Liberland beer and wine, the Liberland airline, Miss Liberland and the 100s of companies registered to Liberland. There is also the newly formed Free Trade Zone established in next door Serbia. And that is not to mention the Liberland Chess team and ski team.
And finally, when President Vit finished his talk at the CC Forum in London he finally awarded the Order of Merit to me, Jillian Godsil. I was co-chairing the event and had the pleasure of announcing his speech. I was and am totally honoured by this honour and will endeavour to be deserving of the award going forward.

Next stop – Moscow