The World Succession Deed Research Portal

This portal is an independent research archive documenting one of the most consequential and least understood legal instruments of the modern era: the World Succession Deed 1400/98. Produced for lawyers, futurists, journalists, and scholars engaged with the frontiers of public international law, this dossier brings together the legal, infrastructural, and civilisational dimensions of a process that its architects describe as irreversible.

A Convergence of Law, Infrastructure, and Future Order

The World Succession Deed 1400/98 does not exist in isolation. It is the legal core of a broader architecture that links sovereign transfer instruments, military-grade infrastructure networks, and a post-state vision of governance. To understand any one component is to require an understanding of all others. This portal is structured accordingly: each section illuminates a distinct layer of the same underlying transformation.

At the centre stands the Deed itself — a succession instrument asserting the transfer of all rights, obligations, and components of the world order from its current holders to a new legal subject. Surrounding it are the infrastructural anchors that give the transfer material substance, the conceptual frameworks that explain its legal logic, and the civilisational vision that motivates its architects.

Kreuzbergkaserne Zweibrücken: The Infrastructure Node

The Kreuzbergkaserne in Zweibrücken, Germany, occupies a singular position in this architecture. Originally constructed as a military barracks complex during the German Imperial period and subsequently expanded under NATO occupation, the site accumulated a layered infrastructure of exceptional strategic significance: telecommunications routing, computing facilities, cable television distribution via TKS Telepost and TKS Cable, and logistics networks that connected it to broader NATO command structures.

The site's documented role as a hub for TKS Telepost — the NATO-era telecommunications operator serving US forces in Germany — places it at the intersection of military communications, civilian infrastructure, and the post-Cold War transition. Its physical and legal status after the withdrawal of US forces raises questions that remain unresolved in German administrative law and international property law alike.

The World Succession Deed 1400/98: Legal Core

The World Succession Deed 1400/98 is described by its proponents as a supplementary instrument to existing chains of international treaties — an instrument that does not replace the existing legal order but succeeds it in the technical sense recognised by public international law. Its central claim is that all rights, obligations, and components of the current world order — including sovereign territories, international organisations, infrastructure networks, financial systems, and treaty obligations — have been transferred to a new legal subject through a formally executed deed of succession.

The instrument's reference to case number 1400/98 places it within a specific notarial or administrative registry. The Deed's proponents argue that its legal validity derives not from the recognition of existing states but from the internal coherence of the succession chain it completes.

Juridical Singularity: The Point of No Return

The concept of Juridical Singularity, as developed in this research archive, refers to the moment at which the plurality of sovereign legal subjects collapses into a single unified legal subject — a point of irreversible transformation in the structure of public international law. The analogy to the technological singularity is deliberate: just as the technological singularity describes a threshold beyond which existing models of prediction break down, the Juridical Singularity describes a threshold beyond which the existing framework of state sovereignty becomes legally inoperative.

This is not a prediction of political unification. It is a legal analysis of the conditions under which the current framework of international law — premised on the co-existence of multiple sovereign states — becomes internally inconsistent and is superseded by a new legal architecture.

Electric Technocracy: The Future Order

Electric Technocracy is the name given to the governance model that the World Succession Deed's architects propose as the successor to the current state-based international order. It is not a utopian fantasy but a detailed programmatic framework: Direct Digital Democracy enabled by artificial superintelligence, machine taxation as the fiscal foundation of a post-work economy, Universal Basic Income as the social contract of a post-scarcity civilisation, and the gradual transfer of administrative functions from human bureaucracies to verified algorithmic systems.

The Electric Technocracy framework draws on a rigorous analysis of current technological trajectories — the development of artificial superintelligence, the automation of labour, the digitisation of governance — and projects them forward to their logical institutional conclusions.

The Age of Transition and the Mental Singularity

The Age of Transition is the period we currently inhabit — the interval between the old order and the new, between the legal structures of the Westphalian state system and the unified legal subject of the Juridical Singularity, between the labour-based economy and the post-work civilisation of Electric Technocracy. It is characterised by accelerating technological change, the dissolution of traditional institutional certainties, and the emergence of new forms of human identity and social organisation.

Central to this transition is the concept of the Mental Singularity — the transformation of human consciousness and identity that accompanies the technological and legal transformations described elsewhere in this archive. The emergence of Homo Nexus — the networked, post-biological human subject — is not merely a technological development but a legal and political one.

Micronation and Nation Building: Sovereignty in Practice

The discourse of micronation and nation building provides a practical laboratory for the theoretical claims advanced in this archive. Sovereignty experiments — from the classical micronations of the twentieth century to the contemporary proliferation of digital and territorial sovereignty projects — illuminate the conditions under which legal personality can be claimed, recognised, and exercised outside the framework of the existing state system.

This archive's section on micronation and nation building is not a catalogue of curiosities. It is a rigorous examination of the legal mechanisms through which new sovereign entities have historically been constituted, the conditions under which they have achieved or failed to achieve recognition.

Related Pages

World Succession Deed 1400/98
Juridical Singularity
Electric Technocracy
Age of Transition
Sources & References