A quick note about rights. I have issue with it because it's irrelevant to the subject matter, and if we don't have the same understanding of what rights are and are not, we're going to be talking past each other, which again, serves neither of us.
I'd be happy to talk to you about rights sometime if you would like.
You did clarify, that your definition of a Sovereign is that the Sovereign can subject some of their Sovereignty through voluntary Association.
This is called "agency". I can ask someone to act on my behalf, but they can never act beyond what I could do for myself.
Example; I am harassing you. You ask Jake, who is a really big tough guy, to step in and defend you. This is something you can assign to an agent, because you can engage in self-defense.
An opposite of this (but what many people accept as part and parcel of statism) is you hire Jake, to get $100 from me so your kid can go to public school. Since you never had capacity to take money from me, you can't assign this right to Jake as your agent (or, a politician/bureaucrat).
I think it is a mistake to not specify this ability plainly because its presumption is not as plain as you may think.
Dude, this is the story of my life. Believe me, I know.
Your definition of a free market at its core is then voluntary associations and private property?
No. It implies voluntary associations and private property. If you have private property, then every exchange must be free market.
See, this is what I am always talking about. If you presume peace, you have to assume private property (or something compatible). Once you assume peace and private property, you have to assume that exchanges would have to be voluntary, or you don't have peace and private property.
If one is inclined to be logically consistent, then if you are for peace, that implies a lotta other stuff ethically, politically and perhaps philosophically.
A free market is simply exchange based on voluntarism and private property. It describes both the conceptual idea of exchange, the actual exchange and the potential for such an exchange.
So are we now in agreement that I understand the definition of AnCap?
Sure. Just make sure you understand the implications of this (and conversely, opposing it).