Man, Economy & State is his best, most illuminating book, but it is a 1000 page economics text, so unless you want the knowledge bad, it's a beast of a read. "Anatomy of the State" is a bit more manageable and a good starting point. It's easier if you judge actions instead of people. Getting paid in unreported cash (or bitcoin) is an agorist action, while getting a paycheck with taxes deducted is not. Anything you do that is outside the control of the state is agorist, so in some sense we are all agorists whether we know it or not. Some people just take those actions because of the personal gain they can obtain, which is perfectly fine, but some do it as a conscientious objection and act of rebellion against the state as well. I'm out to turn unconscious agorists in to conscious active ones