The first concepts to be fixed are therefore the load-bearing operators that already govern the entire corpus: Socioplastics itself as framework, the Decalogue Protocol as invariant analytical engine, and the operative vocabulary of Lexical Gravity, Proteolytic Transmutation, Scalar Architecture, Semantic Hardening, Topolexical Sovereignty, Stratigraphic Field, Systemic Lock, and Compact Dense Series. These terms do not merely describe the project; they constitute its operative regime. Their inscription on Wikidata would establish a minimal yet powerful semantic perimeter, rendering the corpus discoverable, queryable, and interoperable within broader knowledge infrastructures. Such modelling must remain rigorously asymmetrical. Each Wikidata item should point outward through precise references, qualifiers, and linked identifiers to the sovereign textual body preserved in structured datasets, DOIs, and numbered nodes. A concept such as Proteolytic Transmutation can be named and relationally positioned on the graph, yet its full argumentative density remains irreducible to triples. Precisely in this tension lies the operation’s value: by fixing only the operators of its own regime, Socioplastics converts Wikidata from a vector of potential flattening into a controlled instrument of semantic hardening and external legibility. The graph becomes an extension of the mesh, not its replacement.