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We’re around the USD 100,000 mark, and many promises are made in this context as newbies enter our beautiful, clunky, and anarchic system that allows us to escape the overlapped monopoly of monetary policy. A few days ago, I had a conversation with a friend who came to me excited with ideas about trading, crypto, web3, and a very long list of things we could do to make the world a better place.
Forgive me for not being too optimistic about these things. While I deeply admire people who build new projects in search of innovation, there are things that have been overhyped by the unnecessary noise of nascent marketing on social media.
With Donald Trump at the forefront and his promises of creating strategic reserves, people focused on their portfolios but forgot Bitcoin’s purpose and what it truly serves. So, to bring everyone back to the same page, I sent my friend a two-slide presentation accompanied by a three-minute audio clip.
In that same audio, I told him (more or less in these words) the following:

Let me explain this quickly:
  • Bitcoin can’t make your life better because doing so would require a change on your part, which, whether or not you own satoshis, has nothing to do with money.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t help you evade taxes. A well-known saying goes: nothing is certain except death and taxes. As long as there is a government institution, there will always be taxes, and Bitcoin won’t destroy that social relationship regardless of what name it’s given.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t prevent cancer. It might help you raise money for treatment, but that’s about it.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t destroy banks. Let’s recall Satoshi Nakamoto’s words in the original whitepaper, where at no point is the destruction of anything proposed—it simply offers a viable alternative to no longer depend on institutions. In fact, today, we have banks exposing their clients to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t make you (bi)millionaire. Ironically, Bitcoin’s function to protect us from inflation through its salability in time and space makes our money “worth more,” but it’s not because we’ve earned interest—it’s because other currencies lose value relative to Bitcoin.
  • Bitcoin won’t create strong governments. Let’s assume the U.S. enacts some reform and turns Bitcoin into a “strategic reserve.” The problem has never been the money; it’s the institutions that have destroyed monetary policies over time.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t overthrow governments. Governments overthrow themselves. We, with our self-custodied satoshis, watch from a privileged balcony as those who continue playing with an obsolete system—which we’ve pointed out countless times—called us crazy. Now that we’re protected, the government says inflation has a multi-systemic cause and that it’s not entirely their fault.
  • Bitcoin doesn’t prevent wars. In fact, during wars, it’s often better to pay with Bitcoin, as demonstrated in Ukraine, where Bitcoiners, shitcoiners, and others raised funds for weapons. Bitcoin is money that can be used in war and peace alike. It’s a protocol/money that doesn’t distinguish between the two.

NOW THEN...

What can we do with Bitcoin?
First, let’s understand that the main role of miners, nodes, traders, friends, and foes is to safeguard two things:
  1. That there is never double-spending. The Byzantine Generals’ Problem was cleverly solved by Nakamoto, ensuring that everyone has access to the same information.
  2. That there will only ever be 21,000,000 bitcoins. Each of us constantly monitors this rule to ensure it holds true.
With this certainty, we can start building our future as doctors, engineers, writers, musicians, and so on. We no longer need to worry about whether our money will lose value because Bitcoin, supported by all hard (and soft) sciences, allows for a robust, transparent, and auditable system accessible to anyone with doubts.
By using Bitcoin, you’ve defeated monetary uncertainty. The rest—whether you choose to support animals, North Korea, build shelters, or fight cancer—is entirely in your hands.
Don’t forget to always smile, support others, and save your satoshis.
Bitcoin doesn’t help you evade taxes.
Wrong. It can if:
  • you keep your BTC in self-custody
  • create bitcoin circular economies
  • never go back to fiat
  • stop being a clueless obedient slave shitizen and start being a sovereign individual
Bitcoin doesn’t destroy banks.
Wrong. It can, if you use Bitcoin as money every fucking day of your life and never touch anymore fiat (banks).
Bitcoin doesn’t overthrow governments
Wrong again. In a Bitcoin full world, govs (in actual form) do not have any power and nobody will fund them anymore. We are literally debanking them
Bitcoin doesn’t prevent wars
Wrong again. If nobody will pay anymore govs and banks (defund them), the military complex will not have funds anymore. If somebody wants to start a war, will have to come to you with an invoice to pay (with your BTC). Are you willing to do that? How many others will do it to be a feasible war? Watch and learn:
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About the evasion taxes, you have a point sir...now..
If somebody wants to start a war, will have to come to you with an invoice to pay (with your BTC). Are you willing to do that?
Good Lord, no. I see no reason for wars.
How many others will do it to be a feasible war?
War is hell but also a political tool. Your enemies embrace also bitcoin because they can buy more weapons, so...many other are willing to do that1.
if you use Bitcoin as money every fucking day of your life and never touch anymore fiat (banks).
A big and outstanding if you put it sir. In the short and medium term, it won't.
In the long run, I hope so.
In a Bitcoin full world, govs (in actual form) do not have any power and nobody will fund them anymore. We are literally debanking them
Wrong. You're not debanking them, you're forcing them to evolve into new ways. Of course, these (new) types of governments will be less authoritarian and (probably will) exclude their monetaries policies from their framework. However, telling they don't have power is like saying oxygen has no power over me because I stopped breathing.
Next time just send this guide (link)
I zapped for that article to you like a year ago because I loved it.

Footnotes

  1. Don't forget in the cyberwar space that Lazarus works exclusively with bitcoin.
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I am not evading taxes... If you evade taxes it means you are violating a contract. DISHONOR.
I am rebutting their existence because a sovereign individual is not a slave shitizen that MUST pay taxes (according to the contract they agree upon). This is key difference that many people still don't get it.
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I like this post but have some thoughts with a bit of nuance to share.
Bitcoin doesn’t destroy banks. Let’s recall Satoshi Nakamoto’s words in the original whitepaper, where at no point is the destruction of anything proposed—it simply offers a viable alternative to no longer depend on institutions. In fact, today, we have banks exposing their clients to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
The incentive structures of bitcoin as adoption grows will likely transform bitcoin. I think its a logical mistake to assume Satoshi was correct about everything or that x thing wasn't something he foresaw. Satoshi is and was not a deity. Just a human. I think its clear that bitcoin was designed to replace fiat money which is created and controlled by the banking systems of the world.
There's a lot of debate about banking in a bitcoin world. Personally, today I am of the opinion that there will always be banks of some sort because people prefer to delegate some things to experts rather than valuing self-sovereignty. I don't see this changing anytime soon. But IMO banks are the biggest evil in the world. Central banks are a different story. Far to much power is centralized in these institutions and bitcoin I hope will destroy that system.
Bitcoin doesn’t make you (bi)millionaire. Ironically, Bitcoin’s function to protect us from inflation through its salability in time and space makes our money “worth more,” but it’s not because we’ve earned interest—it’s because other currencies lose value relative to Bitcoin.
This is partially true. It is true that people are measuring bitcoin with fiat which has no bottom. But, if you measure bitcoin with purchasing power it is actually increasing in market value over time. It is a drastic increase. Why this increase? Because humanity is just in the first 0.5% of the way to understanding how useful and powerful bitcoin is. The market is still discovering the value of bitcoin. The truth is, no one knows what that value actually is yet? One human or a group cannot out calculate the free market pricing system.
Bitcoin doesn’t prevent wars. In fact, during wars, it’s often better to pay with Bitcoin, as demonstrated in Ukraine, where Bitcoiners, shitcoiners, and others raised funds for weapons. Bitcoin is money that can be used in war and peace alike. It’s a protocol/money that doesn’t distinguish between the two.
I agree that bitcoin doesn't or won't prevent wars but sound money limits the size of wars. The money printer fuels endless wars. The banking system makes massive profits off of war debts. This is all fueled by fiat. I don't have the resources handy but moving off of gold pegged money is what allowed the world powers to increase the size and scope of conflicts. So yeah, bitcoin doesn't end war but it sure would help minimize them.
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Wow. Nice views. To strenght the debate...
I think its clear that bitcoin was designed to replace fiat money which is created and controlled by the banking systems of the world. (...) But IMO banks are the biggest evil in the world. Central banks are a different story. Far to much power is centralized in these institutions and bitcoin I hope will destroy that system
Agreed. Institutions around bitcoin is inevitable at least for the next 10 years of development. I think this prevails because banks are in the business of looking profit working with currencies...so, in the end, banks are going to do what they always does, well...at least what they were doing it for the last 500 years: follow the money.
Do I think banks have lost their moral compass? Yes sir, I think banks today are not here to help mankind and accelerate transactions or onboard people. Banks are ethic and morally broken1 but that doesn't mean they lost their capacity to transform themselves.

Footnotes

  1. I wrote about the BIS (central bank of all central banks) and their relationship with genocide. See for #561669 more
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I don't think we disagree. I think banks will adapt or die is my point. But central banks are not the same. I believe many will be destroyed if not all.
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I believe that eventually, eventually... governments will remove 'capital gains' taxes on spending Bitcoin, at least for small transactions (to start with a few thousand $ worth a year).
This way, businesses and small start-ups can accept Bitcoin for goods and services without worrying about the tax headaches and hassle... driving the Bitcoin economy forward improving the education around Bitcoin which is the main thing Bitcoin needs imo.
'Hiding in the shadows' is not the answer. Instead, a political process, which I believe is what we are witnessing in the United States, to bring Bitcoin mainstream, to include spending and saving in Bitcoin openly is the future. Bitcoin cannot be stopped... and the companies businesses and governments that embrace it will outperform.
The United States has 2 choices: either 'get ahead' of this wave with preferential treatment for Bitcoin, to include greater transactional adoption, or watch other countries get ahead first.
It looks like the PTB are realizing that option # 1 is better... and so that is what is going on.
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It's a great initiative, mainly tell him that bitcoin is the only way to true freedom, "Systematic freedom" Bitcoin is the only tool that helps us break the cycle. Send him to @DarthCoin and @Lunaticoin and if he's an awake man, that's enough for him to start pulling the thread, and launch himself into the rabbit hole of bitcoin and the sub-rabbit holes that lead to bitcoin
  • money
  • counterparty risk
  • sovereignty
  • portability
  • cryptography
  • scarcity
  • non-dependence on third parties. (self custody)
among others that you are learning.
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Bitcoin 100% can help evade taxes and I for one will never pay a penny of tax on my hard-earned btc
I imagine that in the future when it's more widely accepted, i simply won't trade out for fiat
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It can't do those things but it is a powerful potential tool in aiding mankind towards those things of they choose them. When the incentives change world wide, the world will tend to get better.
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