🟪🟧 I’ve noticed this clear pattern: Bitcoin adoption grows where it’s needed, NOT where it’s hyped.

It isn’t random, and follows pain points.👇🏽

→ In regions with inflation, capital controls, or weak #banking, Bitcoin isn’t just an #investment. It’s a tool.

→ Companies use it to move funds between offices, settle cross-border #payments, and maintain liquidity outside fragile #financial systems.

→ Energy-abundant manufacturers are turning to Bitcoin: mining it with surplus power or holding it on their balance sheets as a hedge.

But where #regulations are restrictive - or traditional finance still holds public trust - adoption slows.

So where are we seeing the most movement? (From my personal experience)

- East Africa is pushing ahead. Demographics, #innovation culture, and a lack of legacy systems make it fertile ground for Bitcoin adoption.

- West #Africa, though rich in natural resources, faces challenges with access to education and financial infrastructure. The upside? Bitcoin serves a real need among the unbanked.

- The #MiddleEast sits somewhere in between: wealth is there, but capital controls, #energy opportunity, and political dynamics create unique use cases.

Meanwhile, in the West?

The infrastructure is stronger, but the urgency isn’t. And where there’s no urgency, adoption lags.

Look, #Bitcoin doesn’t wait for ideal conditions.

It spreads where systems break, where people are ready to build something better.

What are your thoughts on this #Nostr?

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Discussion

Of course! Global south is where the signal is!

I think you are 100 percent correct on this. The people in these regions understand Bitcoin sooner because they have to to survive. While in the west it is seen as a novelty not knowing they need just as bad as everyone else. It’s going to be a shock to people in the west when their 401ks, retirement accounts turn to ashes… it’s not like they weren’t warned.

21/21⚡️

Bitcoin can be banned in the west and nothing changes for the westerners. In the global south it’s the opposite.