The lone frontiersman. Rifle over one shoulder, axe in hand, squinting at the horizon with bacon fat in his pack and destiny and dust in his eyes. His boots? Homemade. His mule? Raised from birth. His clothes? Woven by candlelight, stitched with sinew, cinched by a belt carved from last winter’s elk. He is America’s favorite fiction.
Because that’s what he is: fiction.
He sounds self-sufficient, but he didn’t get there alone. He followed roads surveyed by the federal government. Claimed land acquired by government treaty or conflict. Relied on supply chains, currency, forts, railroads, and laws. His bacon fat probably came by boat. His independence rode on the back of infrastructure built stone by stone by collective effort, tax payers, and the many generations before him.
The idea of being “off-grid” was, in reality, made possible by the grid. Take the westward expansion:
• Land policy: The Louisiana Purchase, the Homestead Act, the annexations and territorial acquisitions of Texas, California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Hawaii, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming, along with the purchase of Alaska years later, gave millions access to land they had not settled themselves. These examples do not even include the many wars and forced removals of Native Americans.
• Movement systems: Roads, canals, and railroads were surveyed, funded, and maintained by governments, tax payers, and networks of engineers.
• Knowledge flows: Land-grant universities spread the agricultural and engineering know-how required to prosper.
• Enforcement systems: Property rights, military security, and legal frameworks secured claims.
Similar myths live on in technology start-ups. Founders in garages eating pizza and wearing hoodies programming world changing software capture headlines, but under the surface are venture capital, cloud infrastructure, open-source libraries, universities, intellectual property law, federal research grants, and global labor markets.
The myth of the self-made hero persists because it flatters. But the truth is more useful: civilization doesn’t grow from grit—it grows from grids. The myth sells. The grid delivers.

