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There's a scene in The Matrix where Morpheus tells Neo that the world he thinks he knows is an illusion, a construct designed to keep him in place. That moment resonates with me because, for many people, the world really does work that way—especially if you were born with the "wrong" passport.
For as long as I can remember, I’ve wanted to see the world. Growing up in Nigeria, my first window into the wider world wasn't a passport, a plane ticket, or even a map. It was books. A lot of Enid Blyton. And then, television—cartoons on NTA 2 Channel 5.
But getting to watch TV wasn't a given. First, there had to be power, which was never guaranteed. Then, the TV station had to be transmitting.
If both conditions aligned, I'd get my two-hour ticket out of Lagos, stepping through the CRT screen into the worlds of Sesame Street, Magic School Bus, Spider-Man, Dora The Explorer, Teddy Ruxpin, The Little Prince…and of course, Enid Blyton's The Famous Five, adapted for TV. The list is actually much longer, and it’s what I blame for my weird, not-quite Nigerian, not-quite American accent. By the time I finally set foot in the U.S., my first ever trip abroad, at the ripe old age of 27, it felt like I had already been there.
Yet, there was a fundamental difference between me and the kids whose lives I had lived vicariously through those screens: for them, the world was open, and they could go places. If they chose to. For me, a Nigerian passport holder, it was not, because sometime in the 1980s, the Nigerian passport’s travel access began to decline.
The sovereignty stack
In The Matrix, some people could defy physics and walk vertically up walls. In real life, international borders are semi-permeable barriers that some people can walk through, and others cannot, based on specific legal attributes. If you've ever tried to open a business bank account and been blocked because of your nationality, or struggled to get a visa to attend an industry conference that could change your career, first of all, congratulations — you’ve discovered the edge of the matrix. Except, of course, the edge is different for everyone, depending on their sovereignty stack.
A sovereignty stack is the set of attributes that determines how a person can interact with the physical and virtual world — what they can and cannot do, where they can and cannot go. Citizenship is a critical component of the typical sovereignty stack, but there are other attributes like visas, residence permits, corporate vehicles, bank accounts, dual citizenship, and more that interact to create interesting second and third effects.
International travel is typically the first place Nigerians encounter the edge of the matrix. One time, I was on a group trip with other African nationals where I had to turn back at country 3 of 5 because of "unique" visa access problems.
But in a world flattened by technology and instant communication, these edges become apparent even quicker than ever before. I first encountered the edge of the matrix years before I even boarded a plane, nearly fifteen years ago when I tried to open a PayPal account to become a freelancer on the Envato marketplace. I was enthusiastically learning PHP to develop and sell WordPress themes. At the time, opening a PayPal account from Nigeria was out of the question, and to even buy a theme from Envato, I had to seek out and pay a third party in Nigeria who happened to have access to PayPal to manually make the transaction on my behalf. Of course this roundabout workaround would not work if I was aiming to become a vendor myself. After months of research and frustration, I abandoned that enterprise and went a different direction. But I’ve never stopped thinking about what could have been, and what could still be, if I could get past the edge and expand my ability to interact effectively with the global economy. That’s where the premise of upgrading one’s sovereignty stack begins.
Leveling up
Think of it like a role-playing game. When you start, your character has default stats: strength, agility, intelligence. As you progress, you acquire stat boosts—new weapons, armor, skills—that make you more powerful.
In real life, those "stat boosts" come in the form of second passports, business residencies, international bank accounts, global work structures, and professional certifications that unlock access to new opportunities, by effectively leveling up one’s sovereignty stack.
Anyone from the “wrong” area code who aspires to build a global business or career will eventually encounter some critical speed bumps. If you're an entrepreneur from a country with capital controls, how do you raise money from international investors? If you're a skilled professional, how do you ensure you're earning at a global rate, not a local discount?
Of course most people don't think about these things in these terms. When they hit the edge of the matrix, the invisible ceiling that is defined by their current sovereignty stats, they either figure it out intuitively, or they quit.
This is the essence of the book I’m writing with my friend, Adim. We're not inventing anything new—people have been doing this intuitively for centuries. If you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you already do quite a bit as well. What we're doing is articulating and distilling our thoughts and experiences from our journey as global citizens into a coherent framework that anyone can access and operationalise.
By optimizing your sovereignty stack, you gain access to a world of expanded possibilities. You can expand your global mobility by obtaining residencies or visas that have second-order effects. You unlock financial infrastructure by setting up banking and payment systems that allow you to operate internationally, freeing yourself from local constraints. When you incorporate strategically, you can register businesses in jurisdictions that actively support fundraising and expansion, giving your ventures the strongest possible foundation. Perhaps most importantly, you position yourself to work and get paid at global rates by structuring your employment or freelance work to avoid unnecessary local restrictions, ensuring your talent and services are valued at their true worth.
Optimizing your sovereignty stack isn't about abandoning your home country. It's about increasing options, access, and leverage, regardless of where you choose to settle.
Where we are born is not up to us, and our birthplace comes with default stats, for better or worse. But just as you probably wouldn't try to complete a game like Elden Ring with your starting character's default abilities, it makes sense to pursue a deliberate strategy for improving your hand in the game of life.
Most people will never need to bother with this concept. Some of them already won the citizenship lottery at birth, and have other things to worry about. Others will lead typical lives within the constraints of their birth circumstances. And that's fine.
But if you've ever felt like you've hit an invisible ceiling—whether in business, mobility, or financial access—then this is the red pill. You don't have to accept the default stats and settings. You don't have to be stuck playing by rules that exclude you. You can reconfigure your build. You can level up.
That's what The Sovereignty Stack thesis and framework is all about— we’re articulating a blueprint for breaking past the edge of the Matrix and unlocking your full potential. It’s a work and journey in progress.