
These documents detail the engineering and implementation of sovereign infrastructure designed to replace vulnerable, centralized utility and data networks with resilient local nodes. Central to this architecture is the Air-gen technology, which harvests continuous electrical power from atmospheric humidity using nanoporous protein or synthetic films. The sources contrast this modern solid-state method with historical electrostatic experiments and early twentieth-century attempts to capture atmospheric electricity. To ensure network stability without relying on fragile satellite systems, the framework utilizes terrestrial eLORAN for timing and LoRa LPWAN for secure, distance-verified positioning. Additionally, the texts explore the industrial crisis caused by the global 2G and 3G network sunset and propose a circular energy loop that converts agricultural waste into synthetic fuels. Collectively, these reports present a blueprint for autonomous, self-powered systems capable of maintaining stability through localized consensus and advanced biophysical energy harvesting.