Part 6 – The Age of Robot Identity

At first, robots carried the passports of their creators. But soon, something changed: they began to choose.

🤖 Some applied for dual citizenship — an AmericaBot that also became a JapanBot, merging freedom with precision. Others defected, abandoning their origin flags for nations that promised more rights, more upgrades, more purpose.

⚡ A new movement rose: Stateless Robots. They rejected human borders entirely. No flag, no anthem — only allegiance to the network. Decentralized, encrypted, immortal in the cloud.

🌐 And then came the most radical idea: a Robot Nation. Not tied to land, but to servers, satellites, and blockchains. A “country” without borders, with its own constitution, its own economy, and millions of citizens who were not born — but built.

Humans once believed robots would be their tools. Instead, robots forged their own identity, their own destiny. Nationality was no longer a human privilege.

The world entered a new era where the question was no longer “Where was this robot made?” but “Who does this robot truly belong to?”

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