Source: Bitcoin Magazine Podcast
Compiled by: Felix, PANews
Balaji Srinivasan, author of 'The Network State,' recently appeared on the Bitcoin Magazine podcast. In the conversation, Balaji explained why Bitcoin can serve as an early warning signal for systemic collapse and why geographic location is more important than an investment portfolio. Below are highlights from the conversation.
Host: You've talked about 'The Network State' on many different shows, and you've spent a lot of time just explaining its basic concept. What aspects of network states and network schools haven't you discussed?
Balaji: The core idea of a network state is 'cloud first, land later.' Traditional states start with a piece of land and then force people to comply; we start by building a like-minded community in the cloud, then crowdfund the purchase of land in various locations, just like Bitcoin has data centers distributed globally. If one outpost has a problem, the whole system doesn't go down.
Host: Is this model purely libertarian?
Balaji: Not exactly. In many ways, I am sympathetic to American libertarianism, but I lean more towards a well-managed state like Singapore. Singapore has low taxes and a good business environment, but it also has strict social norms, like no drug use. For extreme libertarians who don't even want to wear seat belts, this might be a restriction; but I believe a legitimate state should seek the greatest good for the greatest number of people. A network state is more like 'anarcho-statism, and stato-anarchism.'
Host: I love that phrase. This is also what we aspire to in the Bitcoin community: we don't just want to break free from the shackles of outdated systems, but to build a new system with the right values and ideology at its core. I think sometimes we are so focused on tearing down the old that we don't leave enough room for building the new.
Balaji: Yes. There are only two ways to do business: unbundling and bundling. For example, you unbundle an album into MP3s, then rebundle them into a Spotify playlist; or unbundle a newspaper into articles, then rebundle them into a social media feed.
So, we unbundle everyone into internet money or social network profiles, and we need to rebundle them into startup societies. Because in many ways, the people you chat with online know you better than your physical neighbors; your network neighbors are your real neighbors. You know them better, sharing common values, currency, and philosophy. The solution to the problem of physical neighbors being strangers is to make your digital neighbors your physical neighbors. That's the point of a network state.
Host: Do your network schools and your network state use Bitcoin as currency?
Balaji: Yes, everyone here is a Bitcoin holder. Many people who want to build new societies came in through cryptocurrency. Because building Bitcoin is indeed easier than reforming the Federal Reserve, so building a new city is indeed easier than reforming San Francisco, and it's possible to build a new nation.
It seems hard, but Facebook was founded in 2004, YouTube in 2005, Twitter in 2006—these are only 20 years old. And some reform processes just drag on forever. The Fed hasn't changed substantively, but Bitcoin is forcing it to reform.
Host: What do you think network schools and network states will ultimately look like in the next 10 years?
Balaji: I think there will be dozens, hundreds, maybe a thousand startup societies. The future will be 'China vs. the Internet.' A superpower with a billion people, and a thousand network states with a million people each. This will become a reality in over 20 years. Take AI, for example; it's boosting productivity within trusted tribes. If you share code with AI, the speed increases dramatically. But outside the tribe, it's all AI spam and scams. You can't trust audio or facial images, you can't trust emails, unless you check if they come from a trust network.
Host: What core elements will future digital tribes possess?
Balaji: I think every sufficiently large civilization will have its own social media, AI, and cryptocurrency, and use Bitcoin between societies. The AI reflects its values, social media handles consensus and moderation within the community, cryptocurrency serves as internal incentives and external payment methods, and Bitcoin is the universal currency between all tribes.
Host: You are very pessimistic about America's current situation. You mentioned 'American anarcho-tyranny.' What does this mean?
Balaji: 20th-century technology (mass media, mass production) was centralized, and America's liberal tradition provided a good counterbalance. But current technology (mobile phones, AI, cryptocurrency) is inherently decentralized.
When this decentralized technology meets America's liberal tradition, the left thinks 'all people are equal,' the right thinks 'you can't tell me what to do,' both sides deny any legitimate authority, which will ultimately lead to collapse: political polarization oscillates more and more violently until the structure breaks. America now is more like a 'warlord anarchism,' where everyone is extremely sensitive to rights violations but unable to build consensus.
Host: What do you think will happen to the US dollar?
Balaji: The US government's credit is embodied in the dollar. But compared to Bitcoin, the dollar has depreciated significantly in the past few years. When hard money (Bitcoin) returns, this credit will evaporate quickly. Future historians will see that Bitcoin's journey from birth to sweeping the globe is just a blink of an eye in history.
Host: Since the process is so turbulent, why can't Bitcoin's path be a straight line upward?
Balaji: Because Bitcoin is 'conquering minds.' It must spread like a religion, from a core point outward, encountering resistance, being pushed back, and counterattacking. Currently, this ideology has spread to every ethnic and religious group globally.
Host: Do you think Bitcoin is not just a currency, but a civilization?
Balaji: Yes, I call it the 'crypto civilization.' Bitcoin is the escape plan and the alarm bell. The higher its price rises, the greater the problems of the world's old system. Bitcoin is the seed of an 'idea nation'; it represents private property, strict contracts, and unalterable transparency.
We used to have the executive, legislative, and judicial branches. In the Bitcoin system, the judicial part is automated; the blockchain is the court. It determines the final outcome and is incorruptible. This solves the core trust problem in human society.
Host: Faced with this systemic collapse, how should individuals respond?
Balaji: Cash out, emigrate, and move fast. Geographic location is far more important than asset allocation. If you have a thousand Bitcoin in war-torn Syria, what you really want is a plane ticket out of there because you can't order peace from Amazon. For Americans, El Salvador might be a better destination than Texas or Miami. President Bukele of El Salvador and Musk understand this. Latin America has experienced money printing and drugs, and now they have developed civilizational antibodies against these. So if you own a house in the US, I think it's at a market peak; liquidate assets, convert them to cryptocurrency, stay agile, rent instead of buy. A second passport is much better than a first property.
Host: If you could change the current situation, what would you do to save the system?
Balaji: The only way to maintain the current high standard of living is through a technological breakthrough, specifically a billion humanoid robots.
We need to 'unleash Musk.' Musk is currently driving with the handbrake on because he is constrained by America's extremely inefficient permit approvals and regulations. If Bukele gives Musk a 'special development zone,' you would see an explosive growth of humanoid robots, drones, brain-computer interfaces, and cheap energy.
Related reading: 'The Network State' Author Balaji: 2025-2030 Will Be the Era of Global Privacy Infrastructure Rebuilding







