Jason and others have answered a lot of your issues, so I'm just answering the comments directed at me.
Our spokesperson recently indicated to a newspaper reporter that the FSP has no position on eminent domain. What?!?!? If we can’t even admit that we do have a position on eminent domain (we’re AGAINST it!!!), what the hell do we stand for? What’s the point of joining this organization? 
If you had bothered to ask, I would have been happy to clarify. The reporter quoted only part of what I said, and he quoted me out of context. What I said was that while the FSP as an organization has no position on specific political issues, it's safe to say that most of our individual participants strongly oppose eminent domain. The FSP's goal is to move 20,000 libertarians and small-government activists to New Hampshire where we can enhance and expand upon the freedom that already exists in New Hampshire.
Our Director, President and Media Representative, Amanda Phillips, has recently enrolled in Harvard Law School. It appears very doubtful that she will relocate before finishing her program. And when she does, she will presumably have a mountain of school debt and will need to find as high-paying a job as possible to work on paying it off. Do you think she’ll be taking her first post-law school job in New Hampshire… or staying where she is in greater Boston?
Again, if you had bothered to ask, I would have been happy to tell you my plans. I'm attending Harvard Law School because the academic credential will be enormously helpful to our movement. While Yale Law School is slightly more prestigious, I didn't apply to Yale because I didn't want to move away from NH. Yale is ranked #1 and Harvard is ranked #2, depending on what year it is. I chose to attend the #2 ranked school, so you see... you're not the only one who has sacrificed for the FSP.
I plan to take the bar in both NH and MA, and unless I obtain a prestigious Supreme Court clerkship (which would delay my move to NH one more year) I will buy a place in NH after graduation. It's completely unwarranted for you to assume, with no basis for your assumption, that I am staying in MA long-term when it just is not true.
Addressing another of your unwarranted assumptions -- I don't have "a mountain of school debt" because Harvard gave me a decent grant. I will still have some student loans, but could you let me worry about my finances? I'm a little shocked that my finances were even brought up on the forum in the first place.
And to address yet another of your unwarranted assumptions -- it's fairly easy to work in Boston and live in NH; it's not that far. Even if I do decide to take a job in Boston, I can easily move to NH. So what's the problem?
I’m not trying to slam Amanda and Jason too much; they have both been extremely dedicated to the FSP concept for years, and have dedicated countless hours of their lives in promoting it.
Then don't. Offer to help, stay positive, give constructive criticism, make specific suggestions, or go off and work for freedom in NH. We're an organization with limited resources (both financially and human) and like you we are doing the best that we can. I'm sorry that isn't good enough, and that this freedom thing didn't happen yesterday. We all want the same thing. Why can't we work together toward our common goal instead of slamming wach other?