Over the course of my (24) adult years, I have befriended several self-sovereignty advocates who most basically desire to live w/o unnecessary burdensome bureaucracies of Fed, State, and large Cities of the USA, usually attracted to living slower, simpler lifestyles in lower-populated towns, of say several thousand population. In spite of the legion of wild arguments passing through those communities (morphing to & from various social structures, and then dissolving), most of the diligent individuals that I met were simply unable to align their (moral) standards to their lives as USA citizens following the rules (as I was).
Typically from what I understood, the philosophies focused on TWO main desires:
i) generate the least amount of harm (first & foremost) and
ii) maximize generation of value, to self and others (secondary to i).
This latter was clearly difficult because the Fed survives by taking 33 - 50% of ii), only to re-direct half of those tax funds into "creating jobs" for the industrial military complex or "war machine" or whatever you call it (not my terms of course, but AFAIK, not controversial descriptions), and so most of them had basically given up on ii) in an attempt to be in harmony with i).
If interested in this topic, please at least create an in-line response HERE: Is the USA Fed an "industrial military complex", to any (what?) degree, and if not, do the actions of military agents (soldiers) generate much harm (to individuals)?
The second most common objection to USA Fed that I hear is the resulting financial instability of the various systems that are directly controlled and indirectly influenced. I first noticed such complaints after the dot-com days (when I was young & starting out w/ good hard work in Silicon Valley), where/when most of my friends and family were joining dishonest exaggerative "start-ups", & asking for my small savings to "invest" in hopes of winning a lottery, (or two), followed by begging for bailouts. The same complaints resurfaced strongly post-911 spending, and then again post-"financial collapse", and now&then w/ any tremendous printing of cash at the Fed Reserve. With the trillions of debt, to be paid (to whom exactly?) and by whom, I stop to think too (and thus share my questions).
These two issues (contributing to harm & financial instability) seem to be the strongest arguments for those not participating in the USA Fed, and while these types of complicated, historical schemes are common in: all Western democracies, USA's States, larger Cities, etc., the USA Fed seems to be by far the biggest generator of harm. These folks just want to relieve themselves of that major relationship while still living life to the fullest, which means exchanging value for value at one's highest abilities w/o being threatened or forced to be in jail for not funding these two apparent blunders.
Recently, the conversation seems to become more sophisticated, and maybe alarmist (as though the system will collapse but somehow other systems will be untouched or acceptable), as many claim to be preparing for themselves and their children the ability to:
1) enable oneself to be easily mobile, out of "harm's way" across the largest number of country "borders",
2) enable (assuming parallel moral/ethics growth as freeperson) increasingly highly-skilled education/practice for self-sustaining and high-value trading w/ others, and
3) most easily transfer personal wealth (obviously w/ minimal confiscation).
As an example of a simple early-stage confusion in context of the above desires & preparations, one such USA couple here in Nevada is stuck at the earliest step of "signing up" their nearly-newborn for an SSA contract for the SSN. The questions that really got me thinking:
Is it insane to act like (as parents) that one is really writing up this contract between our newborn and this harm-generating institution?
Should not (or is not) the Fed simply assign(ing) the SSN to each newborn USA citizen; why should we bother?
Why describe the SSA as a "voluntarily" arrangement? since an SSN is absolutely required for all expressions of living as a human, such as: exchanging value for value in a USA-bounded community, communicating agreement on ownership of USA-jurisdiction property, preparing to travel via automobile, airplane, or to transverse "boundaries", ad

Anyways, I am curious for each of your thoughts. Such a broad subject that hurts my brain, and makes me think in new ways. I think this is a good place to post these questions because from my reading of the Forum discussions, the quality of thinking is deep, w/ the writers adhering to coherent & common philosophies on moral conduct in private & social contexts while constructing integrated arguments about various details w/in schemes. I hope those sentences are clear enough to express that I look forward to each of your thoughts and advise to give to any citizen of USA that thinks s/he is self-sovereign (self-owner, self-ruling, self-responsible).
Thanks for considering, Henry