Once the majority rejects the morality of that force, the state’s foundation evaporates.… The year was 2026, and the “Monopoly on Violence”—that old Weberian bedrock of statehood—was facing a glitch in the software. General Elias Thorne sat in the Situation Room, watching a digital heat map of the capital. In the 20th century, coercive power was a simple math problem of kinetic force: tanks, boots, and calibers. But as the text on his tablet reminded him, the use of force is the most explicit form of power, and in a world of decentralized networks, being “explicit” was becoming a liability. The Friction of Force Thorne’s advisors were pushing for a “Kinetic Reset” to quell the growing secessionist movement in the Northern Province. The logic was ancient: the state possesses the law, the law allows the force, and the force ensures the state. “It’s the easy decision, General,” his aide argued. “The legal framework is already th...