New Publication: The Hard Rails of Rome - From Geopolitics to Systemics

The "Grand Gameboard" of the 20th century is officially offline.




​If my previous paper, FACTORIO 2027, was an alarm bell regarding the latency of the American-led operating system, then this new paper—just published on ResearchGate—is the schematic for what has replaced it.

​In "The Hard Rails of Rome: How Europe Replaced Politics with Protocols," I argue that we have moved past the era of ideological alliances and maritime power projection. We are now living in a protocol state where sovereignty is measured not by flags or borders, but by Metabolic Depth: the uninterrupted uptime of energy, logistics, and finance.

What’s inside the full paper:

  • The Venetian API: How mBridge and cryptographic validation layers have rendered SWIFT and dollar diplomacy mechanically obsolete.
  • Hard Rails vs. Maritime Power: Why terrestrial logistics (pipelines, high-speed freight, and SMR grids) are now invulnerable to the kinetic disruption of the 20th century.
  • The Populist Playbook: A deep dive into why leaders like Meloni and Le Pen perform the "theater of defiance" while quietly enforcing protocol compliance to ensure systemic stability.
  • The Cold Zone Trap: An empirical look at why states that resist the protocol—like Poland and the Baltics—are suffering deindustrialization and "self-imposed irrelevance".
  • The Mediterranean Citadel: How France and Italy converted the Mediterranean into a closed-loop "energy lake," effectively unlinking the region from NATO’s legacy OS.

​The conclusion is no longer a matter of debate, but of physics: The Factorio world is not a choice. The only remaining variable for a state is whether it plugs into the protocol as a functional node or atrophies into a relic of the Analog Age.

Read the full paper on Zenodo here:


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