Onarchy, your distinction between social and economic freedom is subjective.
You say that your "free state" will have zero regulation but various decrees on gay relationships, drugs, or whatever enforced by the host country.
We're not advocating those decrees, but it's definitely a possibility that we won't be able to prevent it.
But those decrees are regulations.
Sure, and in the constitution it will explicitly state that certain decrees by the host state are not in accordance with the principles of peace and the Free State, but are put their because there is no alternative, and the very second the host country should choose to lift any of these decrees, then they will be removed as fast as you can say "swoosh" from the Free State.
Objectively, regulations against an individual's sex life, or social life, or spiritual life, or whatever life are not different than regulations against an individual's money making life.
How true.
All restrictions on how an individual can achieve maximum subjective utility without violating the non-aggression principle, are equally immoral.
Again, true.
Your "free state" will only give people maximum freedom in the money making aspect of their life while still infringing on other freedoms, as dictated by the host country's arbitrary morality.
That's completely true.
You say that it doesnt matter so much because (according to your subjective opinion) freedom in the money making area is somehow superior to freedom in other areas, and poor people mainly care about economic freedom anyhow.
That's also true. Of all the liberties, economic freedom is by far the most basic because without it no other liberty can exist. Also to a non-gay, non-druggie Bangladeshi farmer the Free State DOES provide a humongous increase in liberty and no violations FOR HIM. If that Bangladeshi had the choice between 1) no social liberties + no economic liberties OR 2) no social liberties + full economic freedom, then to HIM that would be a giant step up, don't you think, even if was a gay drug addict. Later the host country may become more liberal and may lift its social decrees, OR later, when people have earned a lot of money in the Free State, they can afford to go to a country in the West that has all these social liberties. The Free State has been a stepping stone and without it they would have NO liberty.
I say, fundamentally there is only one kind of freedom, and let the individual decide which "flavours" of that freedom are important to her/him. Who is being the arrogant rich Westerner here, making that decision for them?
Today no Free State exists. No emigration opportunity exists for billions of people. With the Free State the opportunity and choices has INCREASED, and anyone who goes there goes there voluntarily. And you are saying that I somehow are "making that decision for them"?!?!? The choice people have is: 1) no Free State, 2) Free state with great economic freedom, but with some hampered social freedoms. I don't understand why this isn't a no-brainer.
Perhaps gay porn is a bad example, but it's simply not true that people from poor parts of the world are not concerned about the so called social freedoms. A better example is religion, and lack of freedom of thereof is bound to lead to the brutal oppression of some immigrant minorities in a theocratic host country. Either that or people from other cultures simply won't immigrate and the free state will never become your multicultural utopia.
This is true, and therefore freedom of religion will be an obvious premise.
Also, I'm curious about this: Imagine the host county mandates some really silly, religiously motivated decree, I dunno, like "driving a car on a Saturday is punishable by prison". When I move to the free state and challenge the decree in the supreme court, and the supreme court can find no evidence whatsoever, empirical or first principle, that the decree is beneficial, whos side will the court take? And if it does take my side, how will it deal with the host country's hostility?
As I said, the constitution will explicitly state that the decrees are in violation of the principles upon which the Free State is built and that they are nevertheless respected because the very existence of the Free State rests upon that respect.