We are accustomed to living within states that hold sovereign authority over law, force, and public life — powers we have seen both constructively applied and disastrously abused. What if those functions were instead dispersed among independent organizations, with no central governing state at all?
Removing the state eliminates the risk of its power being captured and turned against the very people it was meant to serve.
Without an ultimate authority, resolving serious disputes and enforcing shared standards becomes deeply problematic.
Decentralized governance can be more adaptive, locally accountable, and harder to corrupt at scale.
Coordinating collective action — such as defense, environmental protection, or large infrastructure — is far harder without a central authority.