One of my favorite pastimes is reading long-form posts from nostr:nprofile1qqs2vxl33n2l5hq5w5p02cwgx482xzpu4w07mhapu2plmkp9mumddnqprdmhxue69uhkummnw3ezummjv9hxwetsd9kxctnyv4mz7qgcwaehxw309aex2mrp0yhxxatjwfjkuapwveukjtcpz4mhxue69uhkummnw3ezummcw3ezuer9wchsp68zwq and browsing the linked materials, like https://youtu.be/qFB1K1fXxYY

Zapping everyone who posts thoughtful comments and shares solid research... as I dedicate the evening to thinking about what great business leaders of past would do to push Bitcoin forward ⏩

nostr:nevent1qqs957q45wjj05ms3uhlkfpqe45u0a2wvywcd996t0z3hs7ks2mth8gpzdmhxue69uhk7enxvd5xz6tw9ec82c30qgs2vxl33n2l5hq5w5p02cwgx482xzpu4w07mhapu2plmkp9mumddnqrqsqqqqqphzq65h

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

As an unsung Bitcoin follower, I want to express my respect for you and these business leaders for your work in promoting Bitcoin by sharing this post.

nostr:nevent1qqsy905u06g36tvz504kkletfsf2q5d680kx52x0xpexl5vwj80ejpspzemhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuurjd9kkzmpwdejhgq3qj8y6tcdfw3q3f3h794s6un0gyc5742s0k5h5s2yqj0r70cpklqeqxpqqqqqqzlz5st6

This is a good book (available on audio) about some of the key players of the industrial era. Rockerfella, Vanderbilt, Carnegie, Morgan etc. absolute wild times. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/70231782-the-railroad-robber-barons This one is about the oil industry which started in the late 1900’s and has a section on JD Rockefeller and Standard Oil. (I’ve not finished this one yet) https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/169354.The_Prize

The prize is fantastic. Fascinating time.

Long-term thinking is non-negotiable, and it begins with primary sources.

Not interpretations.

Not influencers.

Not narrative wrappers designed to sell comfort.

Bitcoin is no different. You don’t understand it by scrolling through. You know it by reading the whitepaper, studying monetary history, reviewing code, following on-chain reality, and tracing incentives over decades.

Every monetary system that failed left a paper trail. Every durable system left first-principle constraints.

Bitcoin is documented in plain sight: the whitepaper, the code, the difficulty adjustment, the issuance schedule, the ledger itself.

If you haven’t read the source material, you don’t have an opinion you have marketing exposure.

Bitcoin doesn’t reward cleverness, speed, or social consensus. It rewards discipline, delayed gratification, and the ability to think in decades while others think in election cycles.

Fiat breeds short-term optimization and moral hazard. Bitcoin selects for rigor. It strips away weak thinking, weak incentives, and weak hands with mathematical indifference.

Fiat thinking optimizes for the quarter.

Bitcoin thinking optimizes for generations.

Those who study first inherit silently. Those who outsource understanding arrive later at a higher price and call it inevitability.

Those who do the work early inherit the future. Everyone else pays a premium later. ₿⚡🧡 💭

I tried my best, Uncle nostr:nprofile1qqsfrjd9ux5hgsg5cmlz6cdwfh5zv2024g8m2t6g9zqf83l8uqm0svspzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujucm4wfex2mn59en8j6gpr3mhxue69uhkummnw3ezucnfw33k76twv4ezuum0vd5kzmq82vrz6 🫂❤️‍🔥

Jonathan + research + thinking like a titan = plotting Bitcoin’s next leap 🫡

Infrastructure is only crucial after the opportunity is turned into something real.

Good example for today’s Bitcoin growth.

the convergence of the og cypherpunks, libertarians, sovereign individuals and the mainstream, be it normies or ruthless wall st sharks is the ultimate test of long term acceptance by both sides of the fence

On the road to mainstreamdom there will be many bumps in the road, from history we have seen many early adopters fall from grace, expect more current faces to show their true colors and be swept under the train, the true test is of a Bitcoiner is to not be corrupted by the dark forces that lay in the shadows

If James J. Hill was truly the business genius history paints him as, then leaving that money on the table wasn’t a moral victory. It was strategic malpractice. Imagine a "Hill Plus": a version of him who possessed the same obsession with low gradients and high-quality steel, intended to hold the asset for decades, but also took the government checks for every mile laid. That version of the company would have had the same operational efficiency as the Great Northern, but with a balance sheet fortified by federal cash. He would have crushed his "puritan twin" into the dust.

The failure of the subsidized lines wasn't that they received money; it was that they allowed the subsidy to become their primary business model. It is entirely possible to accept a per-mile grant and still build a straight, durable line. The grant simply creates an incentive to build winding trash - it doesn't compel it. A disciplined operator recognizes that the subsidy is merely cheap capital, a tool to lower the cost basis of a long-term asset.

By arguing that the subsidy caused the failure, we are essentially arguing that these businessmen lacked the agency to resist a bad incentive. It implies that free money is a kind of mind control that inevitably forces you to build a bridge that collapses in five years. It doesn't. It just exposes who is building a railroad and who is running a grift. Hill succeeded because he wanted to run a railroad, but he made his life infinitely harder than it needed to be by refusing the capital that could have made his efficiency even deadlier.

The long-form culture on Nostr is what sets it apart. Appreciate you incentivizing thoughtful discourse instead of just engagement farming. There’s a massive difference between a trader’s mindset and a leader’s vision. Who is the first leader on your 'historical board of directors' for the night? 🧐🏗️

nostr:nprofile1qqsfrjd9ux5hgsg5cmlz6cdwfh5zv2024g8m2t6g9zqf83l8uqm0svspp4mhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mqpr3mhxue69uhkummnw3ezucnfw33k76twv4ezuum0vd5kzmqqzqhqe

LFG 🦾 uncle 🫂💜