A Post-Nation-State, Post-Capitalist federation of communities
Under technofascism, state-backed constitutions become brittle. Centralized authorities enforce rules through embedded surveillance, algorithmic law, and corporate infrastructure, so any constitutional guarantees are hollow while civic behavior is managed by invisible systems.
Instead of expecting a state to grant rights, a Polity starts from the assumption that rights are created by communities and networks that can choose to federate.
A Polity is a networked federation of autonomous groups—phyles, intentional communities, worker cooperatives, existing states or municipalities in resistance, tech collectives, indigenous territories—operating outside the logic of a single nation-state.
It is not a centralized government. It is an ecosystem with:
Instead of a top-down constitution imposed by a sovereign state, the Polity uses bottom-up charters:
This framework enables overlapping governance and nested jurisdictions, where allegiance is to people and ecosystems—not to a border or centralized authority.
Borrowing from Rojava, each group creates an agreement that emphasizes:
The key shift is language: from "citizen of state" to "participant in polity" and from "nation-state law" to "network protocol."
Imagine a federation containing:
Each group keeps full autonomy and chooses relationships (peer-to-peer, nested, or bridge) while adhering to shared polity protocols for trade, mutual protection, and ecological care. Groups can also disassociate if protocols are violated.