Sovereignty depends on legibility—the ability to make people, land, and activity visible, countable, and governable, as James C. Scott argues in Seeing Like a State. But this need to simplify and standardize produces its own resistance: parasovereign systems, both ancient and engineered, often thrive by remaining deliberately illegible. From kinship networks and mutual aid to Bitcoin and Tor, these orders do not reject rules—they redesign constraint outside the reach of centralized authority. In an age of expanding surveillance and institutional fragility, the real strategic question is no longer just who rules, but what can be seen, and by whom.