I think that Balaji's ideas are important but I'm unimpressed with the implementations so far. We need more Nostr development and then we can show the shitcoiners how to do a state without Twitter and Discord.
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Your body is YOUR NATION
The Convention on the Rights and Duties of States is an international treaty signed in Montevideo, Uruguay, on December 26, 1933.
The convention establishes the definition of the State, its rights and obligations.
In Article 1 it establishes four characteristic criteria of a State that have become part of customary international law.
They have been recognized as confirmation in International Law, establishing that a State as a person of International Law must meet the following requirements:
ARTICLE 1 The State as a subject of International Law must meet the following requirements:
I. – Permanent population. II. - Determined territory. III. - Government. IV. —Ability to enter into relations with other States.
Under these guidelines, any entity that meets these criteria can be considered a sovereign state under international law, whether or not it has been recognized by other states.
You do your own Public Notice and announce you are a sovereign man in your own nation (your body) and meets and fulfills the 4 requirements of Article 1 of the Montevideo Convention on the definition of the State. If you really like to have an ID, make your OWN ID and copyright it. Nobody will dare to deny it. It is your OWN creation.
ARTICLE 3 The political existence of the state is independent of its recognition by other states. Even before being recognized, the State has the right to defend its integrity and independence.
ARTICLE 7 The recognition of the State may be express or tacit. The latter results from any act that implies the intention to recognize the new State.
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Srinivasan defines the network state as a “highly aligned online community with a capacity for collective action that crowdfunds territory around the world and eventually gains diplomatic recognition from pre-existing states.”
Stripped down to the basics, the idea is you start with an online community – one that’s economically prosperous, engaged and has shared values – and then manifest it into the physical world. Srinivasen considers the current nations of the world to be “geographically centralized” but “ideologically disaligned,” and given the entrenched polarizations of the United States, for example, this is a tough point to argue. The network state is the inverse: “ideologically aligned but geographically decentralized.”
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An archive of the article is here. An archive has no paywall, no subscription requirement, and can be easier to read.

See also another post, found here on SN, which shared the Network State Dashboard:
The Network State Dashboard #50605 https://thenetworkstate.com/dashboard
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