| name | one-commandment-generator |
| description | Help a founder identify and articulate their startup society's single moral premise - the one commandment. Use when someone says 'what should my community be about,' 'how do I define my startup society,' 'one commandment for my community,' 'network state moral innovation,' 'what's my movement's core belief,' or 'help me build a startup society.' Tests whether the commandment can sustain a community and determines which tier it requires. |
One Commandment Generator
Help a founder identify and articulate their startup society's single moral premise. Test whether it can sustain a community, whether it requires physical infrastructure, and whether it needs diplomatic recognition. Determine which tier of community it generates: digital network union, physical network archipelago, or recognized network state.
Background: Why One Commandment?
Balaji's framework sits between two failure modes: zero moral innovation (just another social network with no unifying purpose) and too much moral innovation (trying to write a complete social operating system from scratch).
"We do think you can come up with one commandment. One new moral premise. Just one specific issue where the history and science has convinced you that the establishment is wanting."
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The [[network-state-ten-components|Network State]], Ch 2.9
The founder of a startup society is not a technology entrepreneur telling investors why their innovation is better, faster, and cheaper. They are a moral entrepreneur telling potential future citizens about a better way of life.
"As the founder of a startup society, you aren't a technology entrepreneur telling investors why this new innovation is better, faster, and cheaper. You are a moral entrepreneur telling potential future citizens about a better way of life, about a single thing that the broader world has gotten wrong that your community is setting right."
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The Network State, Ch 2.9
The Consultation
Step 1: Find the Moral Premise
Ask these questions:
- What is one thing you believe the world has gotten fundamentally wrong?
- What's the historical evidence for this? (Not your opinion - the documented failure.)
- If you could change one rule of society, what would it be?
- Who else believes this? Is there already a community forming around this idea, or are you the first?
- Would people move for this belief? Would they change how they live?
Listen for: The one commandment should be:
- Specific enough to build a community around (not "make the world better")
- Controversial enough that it differentiates from mainstream society
- Defensible enough that history and evidence support it
- Actionable enough that people can actually live by it
Step 2: Classify the Commandment's Tier
Balaji identifies three tiers of startup society, each requiring different levels of infrastructure. The one commandment determines which tier is needed:
Tier 1: Digital Network Union
Can be accomplished purely online, through collective action in the digital realm.
Examples from Balaji:
- Cancel-proof society: "Cancellation without due process is bad." Implementation: A guild of professionals who support each other through cancellation events, provide backup employment, and maintain internal due process. 99% peacetime mutual aid, 1% crisis response.
"Those who agree that normal online behavior shouldn't come with risk of a social death penalty imposed by random people are the basis of your new society."
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The Network State, Ch 2.9
Test questions for Tier 1:
- Can this commandment be lived out entirely through digital coordination?
- Does it require changing only behavior and norms, not physical infrastructure?
- Can members practice this while living anywhere in the world?
Tier 2: Physical Network Archipelago
Requires physical infrastructure - buildings, neighborhoods, or territories - but not diplomatic recognition.
Examples from Balaji:
- Keto Kosher (sugar-free society): "Processed sugar is poison." Implementation: Crowdfund properties, apartment buildings, gyms, and eventually small towns where processed food and sugar are banned at the border. A physical "Keto Kosher" community.
- Digital Sabbath (partially offline society): "24/7 internet connectivity is harmful." Implementation: Buildings with Faraday cages, neighborhoods with offline zones, internet shut off 9pm-9am.
"You might take an extreme sugar teetotaller approach, literally banning processed foods and sugar at the border, thereby implementing a kind of 'Keto Kosher.'"
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The Network State, Ch 2.9
Test questions for Tier 2:
- Does this commandment require physical spaces designed differently from the mainstream?
- Do members need to be physically co-located (at least some of the time) to practice this?
- Can it operate within existing legal frameworks, just with different physical environments?
Tier 3: Recognized Network State
Requires diplomatic recognition from an existing sovereign because it involves changing legal frameworks.
Examples from Balaji:
- Post-FDA society (medical sovereignty zone): "Every person has the absolute right to buy or sell any medical product without third-party interference." Implementation: Requires a jurisdiction that doesn't enforce FDA-style regulations - either a foreign government (Malta) or a US state declaring itself a "sanctuary state for biomedicine."
"With this diplomatic recognition, you could then take the existing American codebase and add one crucial new feature: the absolute right for anyone to buy or sell any medical product without third party interference. Your body, your choice."
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The Network State, Ch 2.9
Test questions for Tier 3:
- Does this commandment require changing laws, not just norms or physical spaces?
- Does it conflict with regulations in most existing jurisdictions?
- Would members need legal protection that only diplomatic recognition can provide?
Step 3: Write the Historical Narrative
Every one commandment needs a history. This is the founding story that justifies the community's existence.
"Fourth, each of these one-commandment-based startup societies is supported by a history. Listen to someone from the Keto Kosher society and they'll be able to rattle off an account of how the USDA Food Pyramid led to epidemic obesity."
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The Network State, Ch 2.9
Help the founder draft their historical narrative:
- The failure: What specific historical event or policy created the problem?
- The evidence: What data, studies, or documented outcomes prove this was a failure?
- The victims: Who was harmed? (Be specific - not "society" but specific populations)
- The alternative: What does the evidence say would work better?
- The moral case: Why is this not just pragmatically better but morally right?
Step 4: Test for Sustainability
A one commandment must sustain a community over years or decades. Apply these tests:
| Test | Pass/Fail | Notes |
|---|
| Would people move for this? | | If not physical relocation, would they change their daily behavior? |
| Does it create daily practices? | | A commandment that only matters in crisis won't sustain community |
| Can it scale without diluting? | | Does the commandment hold with 100 members? 10,000? 1 million? |
| Does it attract missionaries, not mercenaries? | | Paul Johnson's insight: for-profit colonies failed; religious ones survived the brutal winters |
| Is it one commandment, not ten? | | Complexity kills. Can you state it in one sentence? |
| Does it have network effects between societies? | | Can successful innovations from this society be copied by others? |
Step 5: Design the Peacetime Function
Balaji's insight: 99% of the time, a startup society is doing peacetime activities. The one commandment defines the crisis response, but the community needs daily utility.
"99% of the time this startup society is just doing 'peacetime' activities, like helping people find jobs, organizing promotion for new product launches of members, facilitating introduction, or just hanging out at meetups."
-- Balaji Srinivasan, The Network State, Ch 2.9
Help the founder define:
- What does the community do on a normal Tuesday?
- What's the daily/weekly ritual that reinforces the one commandment?
- How do members benefit from membership right now, not just in crisis?
Output
Deliver a structured One Commandment Brief:
# One Commandment Brief: [Community Name]
## The One Commandment
[One sentence statement of the moral premise]
## Tier: [1 - Digital Network Union / 2 - Physical Network Archipelago / 3 - Recognized Network State]
**Rationale:** [Why this tier and not a different one]
## Historical Narrative
### The Failure
[The specific historical event or policy that created the problem]
### The Evidence
[Data, studies, documented outcomes]
### The Moral Case
[Why this is morally right, not just pragmatically better]
## Community Design
### Peacetime Function (99% of the time)
- Daily/weekly: [What members do regularly]
- Mutual aid: [How members help each other]
- Culture: [What the community feels like]
### Crisis Function (1% of the time)
- Trigger: [What activates the one commandment]
- Response: [How the community responds]
- Due process: [How decisions are made fairly]
## Sustainability Assessment
| Test | Result |
|------|--------|
| Would people move for this? | |
| Daily practices? | |
| Scales without diluting? | |
| Missionaries, not mercenaries? | |
| One commandment, not ten? | |
| Network effects? | |
## Staging Plan
### Phase 1: Startup Society
- Platform: [Discord / dedicated app / other]
- First 100 members: [Where to find them]
- First collective action: [What to do together]
### Phase 2: [Network Union / Archipelago / State] — depends on tier
- Milestone: [What needs to happen to advance]
- Resources needed: [Capital, people, technology]
## The Pitch
[2-3 sentence pitch that a moral entrepreneur would use to recruit the first 1,000 members]
Source Material
- The Network State, Ch 2.9: "[[one-commandment-three-tiers|The One Commandment]]" (full framework, all examples, three tiers, parallel society concept)
- The Network State, Ch 5.3: "On Network States" (network state definition, staging from startup society to network state)
- Substack: "Popups are the New Startups" (Oct 2025) - practical examples of digital communities materializing physically
- Reference:
references/frameworks/one-commandment-three-tiers.md
- Reference:
references/frameworks/network-state-definition.md
Disclaimer
This is a community design framework based on Balaji Srinivasan's published thinking. Starting a new community involves legal, financial, and social risks. This framework does not constitute legal advice. The network state concept is aspirational and has not yet been fully realized at scale, though experiments like Zuzalu provide early evidence of viability.