Part 8/13:
While Kas acknowledges the natural tendency for states to form and reform, he argues that Bitcoin and related cryptographic tools enable the decentralization of power. His view is that the state as a centralized monopoly on violence can atrophy if smaller, autonomous entities increase their resilience and sovereignty through these technologies.
He draws historical parallels, noting that modern nation-states emerged from loose federations and sovereign communities, suggesting that the current global structure too can evolve toward smaller, more localized units that resist overarching centralized authority.