Avatar
Richard Martin
3141d9363ddfb5d9924154f299497a8d61e817bdbdc94a53a501d6056598e6b0
I equip leaders to achieve strategic alignment through nested hierarchical action, harnessing initiative for maximal effectiveness with minimal friction.

The Future Isn’t Stateless—It’s Layered

Parasovereignty doesn’t replace the state. It surrounds it. In the future, you won’t live under one system—you’ll interact with many, depending on what you need. Money, messaging, reputation, identity—each with its own protocol, logic, and community. This isn’t fragmentation. It’s pluralism with structure.

Power Without Permission

Parasovereign systems don’t ask to be recognized. They assert their own relevance by working—by delivering value that doesn’t depend on external validation. The state can’t shut them down easily because they aren’t in any one place. They’re topological, not territorial. They spread like language, not legislation.

Chokepoints and Checkpoints

Sovereign systems thrive on chokepoints—customs, compliance, jurisdiction. Parasovereign systems are built to bypass them. Every Nostr relay and Bitcoin node is an exit route. If one shuts down, another can emerge. The system routes around failure—not by grace, but by design.

State-Dependent vs. State-Resistant

Corporations, political parties, and NGOs are sovereign-dependent. They only exist because the state permits them. But a parasovereign system like Bitcoin doesn’t need permission to exist or operate. It runs wherever there are nodes and energy. The more pressure it faces, the stronger it tends to become.

You Don’t Opt In to Sovereignty

You’re born into sovereign systems. You don’t choose the state, the currency, or the jurisdiction. Parasovereign systems flip the script: you opt in. You choose to run a node, relay a message, verify a transaction. Participation is voluntary—and exit is always on the table.

Engineered vs. Emergent

Some parasovereign systems are ancient and organic—like family, language, or barter. Others are engineered with intention—like Bitcoin, Nostr, or Tor. What they share is independence from centralized enforcement. Their legitimacy comes not from authority, but from utility and persistence.

The Sovereign–Parasovereign Divide

Sovereign systems rule by law and monopoly. Parasovereign systems operate by code and consensus. One enforces compliance through institutions; the other encourages participation through incentive and structure. The state can tax, conscript, and censor. The protocol can only persuade—or be ignored.

What Is a Parasovereign System?

A parasovereign system operates alongside and beneath formal state structures—but it doesn’t depend on them. It’s not anti-state or post-state. It’s beyond state. Built through voluntary participation, enforced by protocol, and sustained by purpose, it creates a parallel order—resilient, self-governing, and hard to kill.

Platforms are entitled to set their own rules. But when the state compels private platforms to block, amplify, or demote specific content, it crosses a line. That’s no longer corporate policy—it’s state-mandated censorship. It violates the spirit of free expression.

Censorship isn’t the enemy—coercion is. Freedom includes the right to curate what you consume and share. Protocols like Nostr and Bitcoin protect that freedom by engineering decentralization into their design. They shift control from gatekeepers to participants, from platforms to protocols, from sovereignty to parasovereignty.

ensorship isn’t the enemy—coercion is. Freedom includes the right to curate what you consume and share. Protocols like Nostr and Bitcoin protect that freedom by engineering decentralization into their design. They shift control from gatekeepers to participants, from platforms to protocols, from sovereignty to parasovereignty.

TANSTAAFL: If the service is free, then you are the product.

This essay explores how recent U.S. crypto legislation marks a strategic effort to make the digital economy legible to the state. Through laws like the GENIUS Act and CLARITY Act, the government is classifying and enclosing formerly parasovereign systems such as Bitcoin and Lightning—systems designed to resist precisely this kind of control.

nostr:naddr1qvzqqqr4gupzqv2pmymrmha4mxfyz48jn9yh4rtpaqtmm0wffff62qwkq4je3e4sqppxxunewp6x7ttrv9e8gmm8wfshq6re946xsefdwdhhvetjv45kwm3dd3jkw6tzd9kxjare94hkvtt5dpjj6erfva5hgctv94jkxmmwdakhj7stvzh

Is anyone working on creation mnemonics for nostr private keys analogous to BITCOIN seed phrases?

What Sovereignty Really Is

To understand the world, you must understand where power lives—and how it stacks.

Sovereignty is not just legal authority or monopoly on violence.

It is the establishment and maintenance of a hierarchical order over territory—a full-spectrum system of rule that touches every dimension of human life.

At its core, sovereignty is structured as a seven-level strategic tetrahedron, from apex to foundation:

1. Leadership – Those who wield ultimate decision-making power.

2. Government – The administrative structure through which authority is exercised.

3. Public Order & Defence – Police, military, and security forces that enforce rule and protect the regime.

4. Total Economic Activity – Production, trade, taxation, and monetary control.

5. Infrastructure – Energy, transport, communication, logistics—what holds the system together.

6. Population – The people who are ruled, regulated, and mobilized.

7. Territory – The physical domain over which rule is asserted.

This is not just a diagram—it’s a strategic map.

Every sovereign system is a struggle to assert and align these layers: to make them legible, governable, and loyal. And every challenge to sovereignty—whether insurgency, exit, or protocol—targets one or more of these layers.

Parasovereign systems, for instance, bypass or invert this model. Bitcoin secures economic activity without sovereign currency. Tor enables communication without sovereign infrastructure. Nostr allows speech without institutional permission.

But sovereignty remains the dominant global order—because it connects symbolic legitimacy to territorial control, and turns power into durable structure.

The 6 Bs of Parasovereignty

Parasovereignty is not new. Long before digital protocols or decentralized ledgers, human beings built systems of order beyond the reach of states.

These weren’t lawless—they were rule-bound. But the rules emerged from ritual, kinship, consensus, belief, and necessity, not from statute or decree.

Today’s Bitcoin, Tor, nostr, and other cryptographic systems are simply engineered versions of what has always existed in some form. To map this, I’ve begun framing parasovereign orders through six fundamental patterns, which I call the 6 Bs of parasovereignty.

1. Before

Orders that predate the state: Kinship structures, ancestral codes, tribal customs, oral law, and mythic frameworks that regulated behavior long before formal institutions existed.

2. Below

Orders that operate beneath state visibility and authority: informal, underground, or subcultural systems that persist under or within sovereign structures. Think barter economies, unlicensed teaching, or black market logistics.

3. Behind

Systems that operate in secrecy or denial: smuggling, encryption, whistleblowing, samizdat publishing, underground railroads. These resist sovereign control by hiding from it.

4. Beside

Parallel systems that coexist with formal authority: diasporic networks, religious orders, mutual aid societies, or community courts. Not necessarily in opposition, but not subordinate either.

5. Between

Borderlands, liminal zones, and jurisdictional gaps. From steppe nomads to darknet nodes, these are spaces where sovereignty is blurred, layered, or absent.

6. Beyond

Aspirational, symbolic, or metaphysical orders: cosmologies, eschatologies, or ideologies that offer allegiance to something greater than the state. Often the foundation of long-term loyalty and resistance.

Why it matters:

We tend to view sovereignty as a monopoly. But humans have always built other systems when trust, legitimacy, or survival demanded it.

Parasovereignty is not about lawlessness. It’s about constraint without domination—order without permission.

In the digital age, we now encode these patterns directly into protocol. And when sovereign systems overreach or collapse, the 6 Bs become more than theory. They become strategy.

Bitcoin is not the blockchain. It’s a network of people enacting a shared protocol.

The blockchain is just a record—a historical ledger of transactions. But Bitcoin, as a system, only exists through the coordinated actions of people: those who run nodes, run hashing workers, mine blocks, write software, sign transactions, and hold keys. The protocol provides structure, but the network gives it life.

This applies not only to Bitcoin, but to any functional order—sovereign or otherwise. All systems are enacted by people through networks. Institutions, markets, protocols, states—none of these exist apart from the individuals who maintain, interpret, and embody them.

Sovereign orders remain essential—for mutual defence, public order, territorial infrastructure. Parasovereign protocols, like Bitcoin, offer new models for symbolic and transactional coordination. But in every case, the system is not the record or the code. It is the living topology of human action sustained by shared constraint.

It depends on what you want to do.