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I toured the Bank of Japan recently with another Bitcoin buddy. It took many months to get on the waiting list. It was a surreal experience of windowless corridors, giant paintings of all the governors as if they were kings, and a quirky lecture on the primary roles of the central bank.
The emptiness and banality of it all was quite striking. The sense of unease, paranoia, and secrecy that permeated every corner of the building was palpable.
There were only a few places where we were allowed to take photographs. The old governor's office high up on the third floor had internal "windows" to look over the rest of the building like a panopticon prison.
Perhaps the most ironic bit, which was in all earnestness, were the ridiculous chocolate "gold coins" in the visitor centre and the teeny-tiny baggie of shredded Japanese yen bills that we were given as a thank you at the end.
It is hard to even mock or laugh at such a performance because it was done in such unashamed seriousness.
This is it.
This is what Bitcoin is going to replace. On a visual level, as well as a a conceptual one, there is a legacy system of empire and emperors that exist behind the cloistered veil of the institution of Central Banking. But by pulling back the curtain, or in this case, being welcomed inside for a tour, reveals that indeed the emperor has no clothes.
Yours truly.
The "gold" chocolate coins - hard money.
Shredded baggie of money that we received (Modern monetary theory?).
Nothing stops this train.
The governor's windows, looking down over the rest of the bank.
Back in 2015-2016 there was a guy in Japan that created some plastic "coins" - Satori coins loaded with BTC and people could buy them from dispensers.
Not sure if they are still a thing in Japan.
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68 sats \ 1 reply \ @AGORA 10h
they just released a new version this year https://satoricoin.com/products/gi
An auction on scare city sold plastic coin #0001 for over 8M sats https://scarce.city/auctions/satori-coin-gi-serial-0001
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oh this is cool
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This is what Bitcoin is going to replace. On a visual level, as well as a a conceptual one, there is a legacy system of empire and emperors that exist behind the cloistered veil of the institution of Central Banking. But by pulling back the curtain, or in this case, being welcomed inside for a tour, reveals that indeed the emperor has no clothes.
Yet, it feels like a big majority of "Bitcoiners" is perfectly comfortable with worshipping their local Saylor or Baily emperor. Rent-seeking is human nature?
Yet, I want to be optimistic...
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US federal reserve in Atlanta also gives out teeny bags of shredded money.
And they act like magic internet money is less legitimate than magic paper money.
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it's incredible how much the Japanese people have been able to tolerate despite the suppression of their consciousness and value of life... how technologically advanced they have been able (or allowed?) to become; i salute their spiritual strength; a giant tsunami is coming...
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Japan is monetarily and militarily a subservient tribute state to the USA. Just like the EU. UK, Canada, S.Korea, Australasia. Monetary and military systems are highly aligned. It is the power structure by which empire is sustained.
Whether Bitcoin can truly overcome these power structures is questionable. Yes Bitcoin provides an alternative monetary system but sweet fuck all people are using it as such. Most have been successfully convinced that Bitcoin is a scam and even those who are involved with Bitcoin are mostly NGU hoarders, not using sats to make P2P payments.
The narrative has been largely slyly and successfully manipulated toward Bitcoin being a KYCed and Taxed speculative commodity- not a P2P payments alternative to fiat.
As a speculative commodity Bitcoin is little to no threat to fiat monetary and power structures. Instead it is easily increasingly captured and controlled by them- and this is what has been happening.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @siggy47 8h
Great write up. In the belly of the beast!
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Thanks, I had no idea this was a thing, touring central/reserve banks haha! would've thought!
How long is the waiting list? I will be in Japan in the next year or two and would be keen to do this!
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Hey! It is a bit difficult to book. I had to get up early and refresh the website for a spot months in advance :(. They are very secretive and exclusive, unlike the open-source Bitcoin network.
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