“We live in a control system driven by money, and that control system is an exploitative system globally… humanity overall loses from that control system.” — nostr:nprofile1qqsg86qcm7lve6jkkr64z4mt8lfe57jsu8vpty6r2qpk37sgtnxevjcprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuumwdae8gtnnda3kjctvqy28wumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnyv9kh2uewd9hslp9cja w/ nostr:nprofile1qqsvfr3f7p95stxqrjslnmuvsmhcxxxqt8swjdfjx5tz7zq0yms5cygpp4mhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mqpzamhxue69uhkummnw3ezuendwsh8w6t69e3xj7s4tacsm
Discussion
I’ve been thinking about a podcast concept: a dedicated series that methodically debunks every “Bitcoin can be hijacked” myth.
Hijack the code?
51% attack?
Control miners?
Override supply?
Capture governance?
Most of these arguments collapse in seconds under scrutiny, yet they keep circulating — academic papers, Twitter threads, cocktail parties.
Imagine a curated compilation of the sharpest Bitcoin thinkers — each tackling one attack vector, laying it out clearly, and exposing why Bitcoin remains sovereign and antifragile.
A single source for anyone lost in “what if” fears.
A living archive of calm, technical, reality-grounded responses.
Because Bitcoin isn’t just code — it’s a global, adversarial consensus immune to easy capture.
Control miners is an interesting one to me
Every time I hear Jeff Booth talk, I feel like i need to make changes in my life.