The Third Option
Libertarian strategy has oscillated between two poles for fifty years, and both have failed. One path promises to reform the state from within, electing the right candidates, passing the right legislation, slowly rolling back the apparatus of coercion through the mechanisms that apparatus controls. A second path promises escape, whether to seasteads on the ocean, colonies in space, or micronations carved from failed states, places where sovereignty can be built on clear ground. The first strategy has produced co-opted movements and expanded government. The second remains perpetually fifteen years away, its proponents growing old while waiting for floating cities that have yet to materialize.
A third option exists, one that rejects both reform and exit in favor of something more immediately achievable: building parallel institutions that coexist with the state, operating alongside it. Call this the Two Spheres framework.
The analysis begins with a clear-eyed recognition of what the state is. Strip away the civic mythology and constitutional poetry, and you find a single operational definition: the state is whatever entity maintains a monopoly on violence within a given territory. This monopoly is constitutive of state power. Deprive it of the exclusive right to deploy force, and taxation, regulation, and enforcement all collapse. Everything the state does flows from this foundational claim, and everything the state defends ultimately serves to preserve it.
Opposing this monopoly directly has historically ended badly for the opposition. The state possesses overwhelming advantages in organized violence, and confrontation on those terms means fighting an enemy on ground they have spent centuries fortifying. Yet the state faces its own dilemma. Crushing dissent too visibly risks radicalizing the broader population, those millions who work outside the state apparatus and accept the existing arrangement as the path of least resistance. History repeatedly demonstrates that oppression can transform passive acceptance into active resistance, threatening the particular people currently wielding power, if not the institution itself. This makes the state cautious about how openly it suppresses those who reject its authority.
The Two Spheres framework exploits this caution. Strong individuals build a second sphere that operates alongside the official one. One sphere consists of public spaces, state-controlled infrastructure, the formal economy with its banking system and tax apparatus, the courts and police and prisons. Its counterpart consists of private spaces, encrypted communications, alternative monetary systems, and physical locations where those who claim self-sovereignty can meet, trade, and collaborate outside the state’s direct oversight.
The key insight is that these spheres need not be geographically distinct. They can occupy the same territory, even the same city blocks, while remaining operationally separate. The coffee shop where strong individuals meet to conduct business in alternative currencies exists on the same street as the bank branch processing payroll taxes. Systemic separation is what counts: distinct economic and communications infrastructure that minimizes intersection with state systems, regardless of physical proximity.
This separation must be maintained deliberately and consistently. Work in the parallel sphere, and use that sphere’s monetary infrastructure to settle transactions. Work in the official sphere, and comply with its requirements there. Mixing the spheres invites the attention that separation is designed to avoid. The goal is coexistence through mutual disengagement, each sphere operating on its own terms within its own domain.
The infrastructure for this framework now exists. Bitcoin provides precisely the monetary system the parallel sphere requires, one that operates independently of state banking and can settle transactions without counterparty permission. Nostr provides the communication layer, a protocol for social interaction that no central authority can censor or surveil. Signal and its successors have brought encrypted messaging to ordinary users. The digital components of the parallel sphere exist as mature, battle-tested infrastructure, proven in operation over more than a decade.
Physical bridgeheads have developed as well, though less extensively. Bitcoin meetups occur in most major cities, conferences gather thousands annually, and a growing network of businesses accept Bitcoin directly. These spaces serve an essential function: places where strong individuals can meet face to face, build trust that purely digital interaction cannot establish, and conduct commerce through physical delivery of goods or direct exchange of value. Immigrant communities have operated this way for centuries, maintaining parallel economic structures within host societies, and the pattern proves both durable and effective.
Opposition to expanded individual liberty stems primarily from unfamiliarity. Most people cannot envision how arrangements they have never experienced would function, and this failure of imagination keeps them anchored to the official sphere. As parallel-sphere infrastructure matures and demonstrates its viability, some portion of the skeptical will gradually experiment with it. The path to growth runs through demonstration, not persuasion.
What remains challenging is maintaining physical bridgeheads under regulatory pressure. The state has responded to Bitcoin’s growth by tightening control over the intersections between spheres. Know-your-customer requirements, anti-money-laundering surveillance, and aggressive prosecution of those who facilitate sphere transitions have all intensified. The parallel sphere’s digital core remains sound, but its physical edges face continuous pressure.
This pressure represents a strategic challenge, and underground movements throughout history have developed techniques for maintaining physical presence despite state opposition. Strong individuals possess advantages in creativity, resources, and motivation that make them formidable adversaries in this particular contest. Facing such opposition is far preferable to the alternatives: fighting a violent confrontation the state would win, or waiting indefinitely for territorial escape that fails to arrive.
The Two Spheres framework offers something political reform and territorial exit cannot provide: a strategy for living more freely today, incrementally expanding the space for sovereignty while accepting that complete victory lies beyond any individual lifetime. It requires patience and discipline. The parallel sphere will not displace the official one within any horizon we can see. But it need not displace it to matter. For those who choose to build its institutions and maintain its integrity, the parallel sphere is not a waiting room for utopia. It is home.
Loading comments…