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Separation of Money and State

1. Central Banks Tighten Control

As citizens shift into parallel systems (Bitcoin, stablecoins, Web3 assets), central banks attempt to preserve fiat dominance:

  • Regulated on/off-ramps with strict KYC/AML.

  • Stablecoin licensing under central bank oversight.

  • Mandatory reporting of balances and transactions.

  • Crackdown on privacy tools and non-custodial wallets.

Goal: Close loopholes and keep citizens locked into fiat rails.


2. Adaptation as Trust in Fiat Erodes

Despite restrictions, adoption of non-state money continues. Governments adapt only to remain relevant:

  • CBDCs with programmable features and limited privacy tiers.

  • Tax gateways that accept BTC/stablecoins, converted instantly to fiat.

  • Treasury diversification in Bitcoin by corporates and some states.

  • Energy & trade settlements exploring Bitcoin as neutral collateral.

Effect: The state concedes parallel rails cannot be stopped, only delayed.


3. Gradual Separation of Money from the State

Citizens increasingly treat fiat as compliance money and Bitcoin as sovereignty money.

  • Fiat tolerated only for taxes and official obligations.

  • Parallel systems dominate savings, remittances, and peer-to-peer trade.

  • Exit pressure disciplines governments: abuse fiat, and citizens opt out.


4. The Endgame: Stateless Money, Protocol Governance

The gradual erosion of state control over money and governance itself:

  • Taxation power dissolves. Citizens allocate resources voluntarily; governments cannot finance wars or repression without consent.

  • Law decentralised. Property, contracts, and inheritance enforced on-chain by smart contracts and DAOs.

  • Military coercion fades. Collective security becomes DAO-driven; legitimacy flows from consensus, not force.

  • States reduced to services. Governments become optional providers competing with decentralised protocols.


5. Future Extension: Protocol-Run Society

Beyond the separation of money and state lies a deeper possibility:

  • Rules as Code: Governance routines embedded in smart contracts.

  • Consensus Enforcement: The blockchain itself enforces agreements, not courts or armies.

  • Voluntary Governance: Citizens choose which DAOs or protocols to align with, funding them transparently.

This vision transforms society itself into a protocol-run system, where rules are enforced by code and legitimacy is earned through voluntary participation.