No, I was attacking your idea that it's somehow common sense that the best way of storing BTC is by working with multiple banks (!!!) to store various key fragments, by showing a more extreme version.
Of course, if someone did follow your example, and then the government compelled the banks to hand over access to the physical tokens, other people similar to you would come out and say "not your keys, not your bitcoin", or insist on even more byzantine forms of secret protection.
Not to mention, with your proposed scheme, actually using your BTC becomes significantly slower than any international bank transfer.
Of course, if someone did follow your example, and then the government compelled the banks to hand over access to the physical tokens, other people similar to you would come out and say "not your keys, not your bitcoin", or insist on even more byzantine forms of secret protection.
Not to mention, with your proposed scheme, actually using your BTC becomes significantly slower than any international bank transfer.