Builders, Not Talkers
Several decades have passed since cryptoanarchy and agorism entered the minds of more than a few people. In recent years, real progress has accelerated: Bitcoin works, decentralized social protocols are gaining users, Encrypted communication is mainstream. Privacy tools that once required expertise now run on phones. The theoretical work of the cypherpunks and agorists is bearing fruit.
The gap between what exists and what a parallel economy requires, though, remains vast. We have built communication rails and money rails. The society that runs on them still needs to be built. Closing that gap demands something the movement has always been short on: builders.
The situation
More people every year see that the world built on hierarchy, centralization, and endless intervention has failed. Public services are bankrupt or collapsing. The mainstream explanation is always the same: too little regulation, too little oversight, greedy capitalism. That diagnosis is wrong. Reality holds its shape regardless of the wishes applied to it. The masses believed that fixing the problems caused by the last fix would produce paradise. It has produced misery for those at the bottom of the pyramid, reliably, every time central planning runs its course.
Humanity has achieved much. Hunger and plague have been largely overcome for hundreds of millions. The satisfied masses of the West have chosen to spit on what made this possible. Rule of law, functional markets, economic freedom. The call has been for more democratic control, more government blessing, more protection from above, as if history were irrelevant, as if only a productive lifestyle can advance the human condition while a parasitic one consumes it.
Our systems are fragile. Built on redistribution and top-down control, on collective decision-making over individual achievement. Economists and complexity theorists increasingly understand this fragility. Two options remain: delay the decay or accelerate the collapse. Every third path turns out to be the first two paths wearing a new label.
The task ahead remains what it was decades ago. We need a more disentangled world, more decisions made by individuals, more diversity. One rule suffices for human cooperation: respect what belongs to others.
You probably know all this already. The question that matters is: where do we go from here?
Three steps
First, stop waiting for mass approval. Deprogram yourself from collectivist thought and the hope that the masses will wake up. Politics, majorities, mainstream validation: these are traps that consume time and yield nothing of substance. You are on your own for now. Every achiever is alone at first, often for a long time. Societies break down collectively, but they are rebuilt individually.
Second, realize that you must be a builder. There is no one to wait for, no blueprint to hand to future architects. If you do act on your goals, they materialize. If you leave them for someone else, you become a free rider, and free riders have no claim when the thing they wanted never appears.
Third, cooperate and compete. The division of labor was one of humanity’s greatest discoveries. Cooperation and competition both require producing something. Sitting around waiting for the market to fulfill your dreams produces nothing. The market amplifies the actions of those who do comparatively well while eliminating those who produce waste. Entrepreneurs bring things into existence: people who act and face reality, who invest, think, build, then compete and cooperate. The market rewards and punishes but creates nothing on its own.
These three steps build on each other and are complete only together.
Opposition
Understand that what we do is cultural entrepreneurship. We create cultural systems. The current culture opposes everything we represent. The dominant culture offers security through numbers, comfort in conformity. Everything we build threatens its structure.
Present the ideas of cryptoanarchy or radical individualism to your peer group and watch the reaction.
This opposition has consequences. Developing the current system into something new would consume enormous energy with little probability of success. Building independently of what exists is the rational path. Mass approval will follow only after we have already outcompeted existing systems; even then, approval is a consequence, not a goal worth pursuing.
The competition with dominant culture involves real risks. Those who defend the current order will take action against alternatives they perceive as threatening. Being active as a cultural entrepreneur building a competing way of life carries personal risks. Take reasonable security measures. Avoid naivety. Locking yourself in a castle until you become ineffective is also a form of defeat. You can lose by being overpowered or by being scared into submission while your capacity for action withers. Good security defends against the first. Courage defends against the second.
Beyond the digital
We have made progress in some areas. Decentralized communication exists. Censorship-resistant social networks are being built. Cryptocurrency provides an alternative monetary rail. These are real achievements.
They are nowhere near sufficient.
A parallel society cannot run on social networks and payment rails alone. The cypherpunks gave us the communication layer. Bitcoin gave us the money layer. What remains is nearly everything else: the production layer, the physical infrastructure, the human institutions that make daily life possible without dependence on hostile systems.
The future will be built by more than coders and financiers. Coders and financiers create platforms and tools, but life comes from those who produce real goods and services: thousands of trades and products that people need. The farmer, the carpenter, the machinist, the small merchant. A society of app developers and traders starves in a day. If you are reading this and you are neither a coder nor a financier, you may be exactly who is most needed.
Embracing the physical is essential. Life does not happen on the internet. Because we are unwelcome in contemporary institutions, we cannot delegate the physical to them. Mixing our activities with their banking, their justice systems, their identity infrastructure makes us vulnerable. Create physical places to meet and trade. Physical currency and barter networks. Warehouses, marketplaces, workshops. Protect your personal perimeter without hiding entirely. There is no progress in staying dug into a digital fortress.
The combination of digital and physical creates real power. Digital communication enables coordination across distances. Physical production creates the goods and services that sustain actual human life. Together they enable something new: a distributed society that can grow slowly across geography while building real economic substance.
You are in this with others. Division of labor requires peers. We need people who bring new capabilities, new perspectives, and actual understanding. Trade and economy are about relationships more than transactions. Business relationships become friendships, collaborations, new ventures. A new society requires social fabric. Invest in relationships. Find or build your tribe.
What is required
You will feel fear. This is appropriate. Fear keeps you alert, ensures you maintain security practices, protects against carelessness. Rule it; use it as a tool. Your future depends on whether you can act in its presence or be paralyzed by it.
Many have asked where the networks are, the movements to join, the leaders to follow. What exists is a distributed collection of people who have decided to build. Entry requires becoming one of them.
What we do is risky, and we know it. What we build has value, but our implementations may fall short of optimal. We have learned that quality of associates matters enormously. Energy spent on those who only consume is energy unavailable for building.
Passage here is earned. If you wait for others to solve your problems, implement your vision, lift you up, you will wait forever. Do the work yourself. Do it, and others who build will notice, and collaboration becomes possible.
Action is the point: building, trading, producing, creating. Talk has its place, but talk without action is noise. Those who act are rare and valuable.
Our world is not a place of entitlements. What we build costs us dearly and continues to. Compensation matters. Honor matters. Keeping commitments matters. We are merchants, craftsmen, builders, entrepreneurs. Contrary to stereotype, this requires being civilized and trustworthy. Trade depends on reliability. We hold ourselves to this standard and expect the same from those we work with.
Be patient. Good things take time. Be quick to act, but patient in building.
The rewards of building are real, even when the work is hard. The alternative is waiting for a freedom that never arrives.
If you are ready to build, begin. The only credential that matters is action.
Keep reading…
Started reading The Second Realm. Uhm … what did I sign up for? I’m confused.
Both The Second Realm and Vonu The Search For Personal Freedom address exactly your question, they’re worth a read!
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