In my opinion, I believe that the family is the most important pillar of the seven pillars of society. Families are composed of adults who are considered to be a guide for children to play a role in children and society. Usually, adults are parents who are responsible for guiding children to a better future, understanding goods and bad things. Parents provide the basis of the seven pillars of children's society. They lead their children to choose the right path, whether they are religious or interpersonal.
There are many ways to solve this problem, but here Libertaria is considering pillars that must be executed in a single society to make a difference. Because there is no clear hierarchy, we call these pillars rather than the more traditional pillars. Each pillar provides important functions and any pillar can be built independently. However, if even one of them is not enough, the entire building becomes unstable. We need to be able to communicate before we can do something with other people. In a decentralized society, this communication needs to be private, not via a centralized third party. There are two main requirements. The first one is truly a distributed Internet. This was originally conceived without ISP or centralized data storage. This includes peer-to-peer networks such as BitTorrent and Libertaria's proprietary Mercury network. Secondly, because strong encryption technology is required, we believe that our communication can only be seen by those who want it.
Last week I talked about the four pillars needed to build society, financial, communication, production, and law. In order to be decentralized, it is necessary to divert all four pillars and it is necessary to build a reliable, decentralized reputation and identity system to maintain smooth operation. It is important to regard this pillar as a part of the integrated system if it makes some meaningful progress on true decentralization. For example, it is not difficult to imagine that the transportation system is completely filled with fully automated driving vehicles, regardless of whether this is a good idea or not. Complexity occurs during the confusion and autonomous vehicles must safely coexist with people controlled by cars. Established systems do not disappear overnight, and the initial transition period is usually the most unstable