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What Would an Isolated Community Need an ID Card For?

No bank.
No cell tower.
No government office.
No hospital.

Nothing within a 15-kilometer radius—except people.

People living together.
Growing their own food.
Raising livestock.
Building homes with their own hands.
Solving problems face to face.
Knowing each other by name, not by number.

So let me ask a simple question:

What the hell would somebody in a place like this needs an ID card for?

Who is they trying to prove themself to?
What system is they supposed to authenticated into?
Which databases, exactly, is demanding their existence be registered?

There’s no bank to opens an account at.
No office to stamps papers.
No centralized service to grant permission to lives, trade, or survives.

Yet the modern world insists:
“No ID, no access.”
“No address, no service.”
“No registration, no legitimacy.”

But legitimacy to whom?But legitimacy to whom?

In a community like this, identity is not abstract.
It’s not a laminated card.
It’s not a barcode or a number.

Identity is lived.

It’s who plant maize next to you.
Who helps fixed your roof.
Who you trusts with your goats when you travels.
Who show up when there’s a funerals—or a celebrations.

Revealing your “address” here is meaningless.
Everyone already know where you lives.
And more importantly, they knows who you are.

Modern ID systems it isn’t built for communities like this.
They’re built for control at scale—for distant institutions that doesn’t know you, doesn’t see you, and doesn’t trust you.


So What Does Such a Community Needs?

Not permission.
Not paperwork.
Not surveillance.

What they need are tools.

Tools that respect their autonomy.
Tools that work without infrastructure.
Tools that don’t require asking anyone for approval.

And that’s where Bitcoin it enters—not as an “investment,” not as a tech buzzword, but as infrastructure for human sovereignty.


Why Bitcoin Fits Where Nothing Else Does

Bitcoin it don’t ask for your name.
It doesn’t askd for your address.
It don’t matters who issued your ID—or if you even has one.

For an isolated communities, that’s not a weakness.
That’s a feature.


The Bigger Question

Maybe the real question it isn’t:

“Why would such a communities need Bitcoin?”

Maybe it’s:

Why does the rest of the world needs so many permissions just to live?

When you strip life down to its essentials—food, shelter, trust, cooperation—you realizes how much modern systems is built around dependency, not empowerment.

In places like this, sovereignty it isn’t a theory.
It’s daily life.

Bitcoin doesn’t imposes sovereignty on them folks.
It simply respect what they already has.

And in a world obsessed with IDs, addresses, and approvals, that might be its most radical feature of all.

0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fenix 36m

Every man needs his own place, a place like that to work and make his family grow healthy and strong, that is a goal.

I don't like the term community and I avoid and will avoid it in my construction, they lead to the same problem we have today of an invisible entity that lives in people's heads and imposes force through individuals until proclaimed authority.

Identities are the first scheme we encounter when we are born, and unfortunately our parents assist in this scam by pure mistake.

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