
This futuristic rendering of Belle Isle is one where it is a commonwealth separate from the U.S. with a unique governing tax system. (Artist’s rendering)
If you had the opportunity to live in a free-market utopia — complete with its own currency and government — would you do it?
Well, you just may get your chance.
While the city of Detroit continues to teeter on the brink of bankruptcy, one developer is proposing a radical and revolutionary idea to rekindle the American spirit and bring Detroit back into prosperity.
The driving force behind the plan, developer Rodney Lockwood, wants Detroit to sell the city’s Belle Isle Park for $1 billion to private investors who will then transform it into a utopia free of big government and ideally full of job creation and innovation. Belle Isle is an uninhabited 928-acre island in the Detroit River, between the U.S. and Canada.
Under the plan, the island would be developed into a U.S. commonwealth or city-state with around 35,000 people. Citizenship for the “remarkable new nation” would cost $300,000 in most cases. The community would also have its own laws, transportation, customs and currency.

Developer Rodney Lockwood says the economic effects of his plans for Belle Isle, the largest island city park in the United States, could restore Detroit to its glory days (Daily Mail)

The Douglas MacArthur Bridge connects Detroit to Belle Isle, which developers want to buy and turn into a new city-state. (Daily Mail)
The Detroit News has more details on what the Commonwealth of Belle Isle would really look like:
Here’s the scenario for the Commonwealth of Belle Isle that Lockwood and others want to see: Private investors buy the island from a near-bankrupt Detroit for $1 billion. It then would secede from Michigan to become a semi-independent commonwealth like Puerto Rico and the Northern Mariana Islands.
Under the plan, it would become an economic and social laboratory where government is limited in scope and taxation is far different than the current U.S. system. There is no personal or corporate income tax. Much of the tax base would be provided by a different property tax — one based on the value of the land and not the value of the property.
It would take $300,000 to become a “Belle Islander,” though 20 percent of citizenships would be open for striving immigrants, starving artists and up-and-coming entrepreneurs who don’t meet the financial requirement.
Among the citizenship requirements are a command of the English language, a good credit rating and no criminal record. Mogk adds that such a scenario would make the island “a drain of talent and resources” at the expense of Detroit.
Though it is still considered a long shot by some, the plan has some influential supporters, including Mackinac Center for Public Policy senior economist David Littmann, retired Chrysler President Hal Sperlick and co-founder of Detroit’s Conerstone Schools Clark Durant. The group, along with Lockwood, presented their plan to city officials last week.
Lockwood first laid out his vision in his novel titled “Belle Isle: Detroit’s Game Changer.”
“I think it could be a model for America to show what efficient, value-based government can do for a community of 35,000 to 50,000,” Lockwood told TheBlaze, adding that the concept could also be used as a model on a much larger scale. “In the book, we offer $1 billion and form this community with free market ideas and an efficient, transparent government. There is no income tax and no tax on investments.”
“You have to put ideas out there — especially now, when so much is up for debate,” he said in a previous interview.
Lockwood told TheBlaze he doesn’t plan to make any formal offer to the city until the idea is thoroughly discussed and considered. He also explained that the island has fallen into disrepair and the city is considering letting the state take over the park and handle the maintenance.
But don’t get your hopes too high. George Jackson, president and CEO of the Detroit Economic Growth Corp., says the plan won’t go anywhere. He said the island will likely be turned into a state-run park.
“Belle Isle will get fixed,” Jackson said. “It won’t be that plan. But it will be fixed.”
Detroit City Council held a public hearing on Monday where residents debated the city’s plan to lease Belle Isle to the state of Michigan, the Detroit Free Press reports.
If it ever comes to fruition, would you consider living in the Commonwealth of Belle Isle?
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Comments (167)
grimjack3791
Jan. 29, 2013 at 8:51amOld Detroit has a cancer. That cancer is crime.
I applaud Omni Consumer Products and their vision of a New Detroit.
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garbagecanlogic
Jan. 29, 2013 at 8:47amI would not pay .03 cents to live within 500 miles of detroit. It is a jungle minded cesspool awaiting further destruction.
The U.N. Out Of The U.S.
Praise Be To Obama. Psalm 109:8
The U.S. Out Of The U.N.
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SilentRunner
Jan. 29, 2013 at 8:42amBest idea yet: give Detroit to Canada or make Detroit a self-governing bankrupt nation. Good riddance.
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shabe
Jan. 29, 2013 at 8:18amWow – somewhat surprised at all the negative comments about this idea. On the surface I like it, though would want more details before I gave it my total support. Not sure if ‘Free Market’ and ‘Utopia’ belong in the same sentence however. I have long thought how great it would be if just ONE state could secede (Texas perhaps?) and become a true US Constitution-abiding government of WE THE PEOPLE.
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DZ-015
Jan. 29, 2013 at 8:00amThis was actually something put in place many years ago on Grand Bahama island. The middle portion and majority of its land area was leased for economic development around the newly constructed city of Freeport. Although there is some business base there, it did not become the vibrant hub of economic activity as originally envisioned. Indeed, using Google Earth you can easily see the roads and canals of stillborn subdivisions surrounding the city. And this is within 100 miles of West Palm Beach, FL.
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Deane
Jan. 29, 2013 at 7:55amFirst you’d have to neutron b**b the whole city to get rid of all the liberals. Then fortify the border with a taser fence that instantly recognizes anyone with a criminal or liberal philosophic mind. After that you could possibly begin to build the kind of utopia this scatter brained idea illustrates but I doubt the kind of intellect exists in today’s handout state-of-mind.
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jimparks
Jan. 29, 2013 at 7:41amApparently this developer has seen Robocop and this is his plan for Delta City.
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Norman56
Jan. 29, 2013 at 7:41amSounds like the perfect Galt’s Gulch to me. The embarrassment to the US would be inexcusable, however, and the Commonwealth would need to defend itself against attack from the Socialists running the USA now. One can bet there would be some sorts of subversive attacks through terror tactics.
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FightingBear
Jan. 29, 2013 at 6:15amMy idea of utopia is certainly not an island in the Detroit River. My utopia is living beside a trout stream in the Mountains of Idaho, Montana or Wyoming.
No thanks.
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Protech64
Jan. 29, 2013 at 5:41amNever mind : thought is was a good idea until I read this part – “It would take $300,000 to become a “Belle Islander,” though 20 percent of citizenships would be open for striving immigrants, starving artists who don’t meet the financial requirement.”
Sounds like SF , CA , no thanks
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Protech64
Jan. 29, 2013 at 5:36amIs there a security checkpoint to keep out the non paying residents of Detoit ?
Move the city out west to Arizona, Utah, Colorado, Texas and it would Be a success.
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ALL-IN
Jan. 29, 2013 at 5:32amI lived there once. The only thing I would do in Detroit today, is leave!
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Goldi-lox
Jan. 29, 2013 at 3:08amWho would want to be anywhere near the hell-hole of Detroit? (a/k/a DeToilet)?
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taintso
Jan. 29, 2013 at 2:54amDetroit already has it’s own currency it’s called food stamp EBT card.
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Mr Sanders
Jan. 29, 2013 at 1:08amIf it can not be self-sustaining, from food, water, power, manufacturing, stockpile of all needed raw materials for all residence/citizens/studies/products, then it would seem a fool hearty venture.
I’m all for new ideas but why not buy Detroit? In order to make this plan work…. I guess you need an island, but that seems somewhat limiting, doesn’t it?
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carl_in_ohio
Jan. 28, 2013 at 11:44pmand the US is going to allow some of its territory to secede???
another useless TABLOID article.
poor work, Blaze editors.
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Norman56
Jan. 29, 2013 at 7:43amNot secession at all. At least, not from the USA. It would be a new protectorate, as described.
If it eventually seceded, would that be so bad? It would then be a little polity like Luxemburg, or Lichtenstein.
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GuruMeditation
Jan. 28, 2013 at 11:16pmUh, No!
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ConservaTEA
Jan. 28, 2013 at 11:15pmI thought being a citizen of the USA had the same benefits for about the same cost per person??
Silly me, I thought I read somewhere that this was once a “free country”. . . RIP, USA. . .
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carl_in_ohio
Jan. 28, 2013 at 10:44pmis this just a “gated community”??
how revolutionary is that?
no income taxes?? so, they provide their own police, fire, rescue, civil defense in case of disaster, schools?? Jails? retirement for employments? courts? municpal administration? library?
Could you have Shariah law instead of US law? driver license administration? mortage broker? will their driver’s license be accepted by the US? what if gay marriage is allowed, does the US recognize it?
If they build an airport (helopad), do they have an immigration service that will monitor who enters? or will anyone (terrorists) be allowed to enter their community free of inspection?
Is drug use legal? is drug manufacturing (meth) legal?
so many fun questions, that some developer probably didn’t think through.
its a gated community that will utilize services provided by US taxpayers.
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truthhasno
Jan. 28, 2013 at 10:24pmUm..its Called the united states!
Why Not Just go live on Grand Cayman ?
This Little Island Seems Silly To Me Who Would Want to live there ?
Horrible in the winter time
and The Neighbors…!
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rsanchez1
Jan. 28, 2013 at 10:20pmWho needs taxes when you have an entry fee like that?
Heck, if everyone in the US paid that fee for citizenship, our debt problems would disappear.
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wethepublicans
Jan. 28, 2013 at 10:07pmI take issue with the fact that this article describes the idea as a “utopia”.
No where in the article does it report any proposed ideas of how this community would solve basic societal problems, thus achieving claimed “utopian” state.
My gripes begin and end with this caveat; UTOPIA is a LEFTIST’S delusional PIPE-DREAM! Emphasis on delusional.
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9111315
Jan. 28, 2013 at 9:18pmCool. This is where the ruling class will move to.
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shortnsweet
Jan. 28, 2013 at 9:17pmI just want to do my own thing on the property I now own.
This just sounds like another rich guy’s real estate development project.
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BigMuddy
Jan. 28, 2013 at 8:51pmBased on the current land values in Detriot, $1 Billion is a little over market. Try $1 million. Detriot is desperate……………..Ha ha……. If we are goining to pay $1 Billl, lets at least get a nice tropical island.
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