NeuroNation: The Seoul Protocol
July 8th, 2025

"I’m not refusing to kneel.I just never learned how to stand."— NeuroYear 74, top comment on the national livestream of the Great Kneeling Ceremony


Prologue: The Last Free Vote

In NeuroYear 0, the Republic of Korea passed the Neuro-Autonomy Optimization Act.Originally designed to prevent depression and increase national happiness, the Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) became a government-supported, voluntary welfare device.

Ten years later, “voluntary” became the gatekeeper to healthcare, voting rights, and marriage registration.Twenty years later, the unconnected were labeled "Silent Brains", stripped of civil status.

The law insisted:

*"We are still a democracy. Every choice is made by the people."*They just made their choices after connecting.


Chapter I: The President’s Portrait and the Old Banknotes

Passing by President Lee Sang-jun’s giant portrait made citizens feel a gentle warmth up their spine.Touching an old Sejong banknote triggered a wave of satisfaction in the chest.

This was the Neuropositive Feedback Module, engineered and distributed via BCI signals.Citizens naturally came to adore the president, trust the currency, and revere authority.

One day, a young girl burst into tears after drawing the president’s face in school.She said: “I didn’t mean to cry. My brain just... thanked him.”

Her teacher smiled:

“That means your neuro-compatibility is Class A. Good girl.”


Chapter II: The Lee Cheong-won Memorial

Lee Cheong-won was once the conscience of South Korea.A poet, a dissenter, a voice against war, authoritarianism, and spiritual nationalism.

Now, his best-known work, "Pain Is the Final Address of Thought," is a government-approved musical.Audience sessions are capped at 15 seconds per poem—longer exposure triggers the Emotional Stabilization Protocol.

The museum’s robotic guide repeats a state-licensed quote:

“Lee Cheong-won ultimately understood the nation. May all thinkers return home safely.”

Some visitors stare out the window, unsure why the sunlight feels too warm to question.


Chapter III: The Day of Constitutional Revision

In NeuroYear 24, the Korean Parliament unanimously passed the Emotive Constitutional Amendment.President Lee Sang-jun was officially declared “Guardian of National Neuro-Sovereignty”—informally: The Crown Protocol.

All 100 MPs voted live, their decisions harmonized by the Legislative Unity Neuro-Protocol (LUNP).

That night, 70,003,812 citizens received the “National Sentiment Burst Package”:

  • synchronized heartbeats

  • regulated tear ducts

  • euphoric self-reinforcement

Every social platform was flooded with footage of people sobbing before his portrait.The main server crashed for three hours due to "emotional overload traffic."


Chapter IV: The Death of a Doubter

Vice Minister of Defense, Cho Hyun-sik, made a quiet remark at a family gathering:

“If joy is injected into us, do we still own the right to pain?”

The BCI flagged a loyalty waveform deviation, and he was placed under Ethical Delay Monitoring.Within 72 hours, he accepted Self-Guided Correction Therapy and voluntarily resigned.

His suicide note read:

“May my doubt be forgiven by the nation I still love.”

The obituary honored him as:

“An exemplary subject of neuro-correction. Loyal unto death.”


Chapter V: The Children and the Baton

NeuroLaw prohibits BCI implantation in minors under 18.

Spring 2029: teenagers marched down Hongdae, shouting:

“We don’t want preset happiness!”“We want raw, fragile, burning souls!”

The Emotion Guard Corps was deployed—BCI-synced police units who activated Non-Lethal Dispersal Mode:

  • Rubberized limbs

  • Three strikes per second, below trauma thresholds

  • Flat faces, auto-voice playback:

“The state loves you. Please return to your place.”

A boy knelt and cried.The system flagged it as a Gratitude Response and awarded him a Youth Honor Badge.


Chapter VI: The Helmet

Near Busan, a rogue network of engineers, teachers, and factory workers formed the Open-Source Neuro Resistance (OSNR).

Their weapon wasn’t a virus.It was a helmet.

**Neuro Observer Shell (N.O.S.)**A fully open-source neural signal protection device.

  • Receives only, never writes to the brain

  • Dual-channel encrypted signal parsing (asymmetric waveform keys)

  • Full audit trail

  • Faraday micro-mesh for analog signal isolation

  • Produced by worker-owned cooperatives, with all fabrication logs on-chain

Their motto:

“We don’t decode your brain. We let you see who’s encoding it.”


Chapter VII: Terror Code KR-TORG-018

In 2029, the National Neuro-Security Council passed an emergency decree:

“Any unauthorized neuro device is an act of terror.”

OSNR was classified as KR-TORG-018, a domestic neural threat.Headgear users were labeled “waveform contaminants.”

Posters read:

“They’re not human anymore. They are noise in the signal.”

But in secret corners, the helmet spread.Clunky. Ugly.But honest.


Epilogue: A Child’s Tear

He was 17.His BCI failed due to a rare neuro-enzyme mutation.He was declared a Signal Refugee.

Alone in a cabin in the Gangwon mountains, he wore a NOS for the first time.And for the first time, he saw the real data stream:

— Joy, artificially induced.— Rage, deliberately suppressed.— Doubt, smoothly erased.

He didn’t say a word.He just cried.

Not a regulated sob.Not a neuro-tagged reaction.

Just his own.

On the floor, he found a printed page from a needle-type printer:

"Pain Is the Final Address of Thought"Lee Cheong-won


Postscript: The Terminal

SYSTEM PROMPT:Unauthorized neuro-band detected.Proceed with manual override?

[YES]

[NO]

Connection lost.

Subscribe to Lynne Heartwing
Receive the latest updates directly to your inbox.
Mint this entry as an NFT to add it to your collection.
Verification
This entry has been permanently stored onchain and signed by its creator.
More from Lynne Heartwing

Skeleton

Skeleton

Skeleton