Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

One of the things that I find most troubling is audience capture.

People who work in corporations have to toe the party line. But then people who go “independent” often get captured by the most vocal parts of their audience. They often just get paid to rebel against whatever they left, and become as much one-sided as they previously were.

In its most benign state, many people with audiences will just not comment on certain things. They fear their audience. There is no positive ROI in it. When asked point blank, they will try to deflect. In the worst state, they will actively and consciously deceive, playing to their audience.

I can’t promise I will always be right on things. Sometimes I will be wrong.

But what I will promise is that I will always tell it like I see it. So when people agree or disagree with me, my goal is that at least they know it’s genuine.

I aggressively resist audience and platform capture.

I started talking about US fiscal deficits being the key macro issue to watch in the first Trump term. Then for four years during the Biden term I amplified it and started the “nothing stops this (fiscal) train” meme.

When Trump became president again, and Musk talked about specific deficit reductions by 2026, I re-iterated my view that they will fail, and that the deficits will continue.

When I was talking about deficits during the Biden term, I got a ton of comments saying I was too right wing. But they were in the minority vs those who found value in the commentary. And it was right. And then during the early Trump term I got a wave of critics saying I was some liberal. But I said it’s just math, your guy is wrong too like the prior guy, so I say it like it is.

When Musk took over Twitter I was cautiously optimistic at first, but then I pointed out that the platform was increasing its rate of censoring Indian and Turkish posts compared to prior management at the behest of their governments that are also potential rocket and car buyers. They did this while simultaneously broadcasting themselves as the new free speech platform in the US. I took heat for pointing this out on his own platform but I felt it important to do so. These various knee-jerk social movements are so shallow.

I am wealthy enough to not need income anymore, but purposely am not so high-up in anything that I have a gazillion employees that could get rekt if I don’t bend the knee to some asshole. I run a profitable, lean, wholly owned company by me, and have some additional partnerships.

I don’t take that middle ground lightly. People more hardcore than me chose not to take it. Too many employees eat because of those leaders. Meanwhile, I use time to analyze whatever it is I’m looking at.

The latest event is bitcoin spam.

Some folks want to increase the expressivity of bitcoin to put more spam in there. I disagree with that.

Other folks are mad at the spam that’s already in there, and want to censor it. I disagree with that approach too.

Many influencers are afraid to even wade into the debate and tell you their opinion.

I’m happy to talk and reply. Not that it really matters, but in case you care, since most of this is on social media anyway and I haven’t pushed anything hard and broad yet but have watched and analyzed it.

My first article on bitcoin in 2017 was interested but not committed. After Bitcoin’s price stagnated for several years and went through the blocksize war, my second article was strongly bullish. I basically said to buy the fuck out of this thing. It proved itself to have a dominant network effect and to be antifragile.

We are up 16x since then; and I’m still bullish. I don’t view any of the attacks as existential. I fade all of the moral panics that I currently see.

The JPEG attacks are weak, the token attacks are weak, etc. All of this is from 2 years ago and still weak now. NFTs and memecoins are weak as fuck.

Fees are low because16 years into Bitcoin’s existence, it is still less than 1% of Fedwire transfer volumes. And it’s normal to be low until Bitcoin cash balances rival gold’s or Fedwire’s at even 10%.

Part of why I am bullish is because until Bitcoin has another10x and becomes a common cash balance at scale, it will remain a niche spending unit.

I don’t agree that everything is good for Bitcoin. However, I am 90% there.

Everything that fails to break Bitcoin is good for Bitcoin. I am bullish on Bitcoin, having witnessed yet another attack crash upon its shores.

For those that are concerned about spam, I would 1) remind you of the existing blocksize limit, 2) point out that UTXO bloat is not occurring since the fad went out and Runes launched, and 3) few of the existing proponents represent permanent fixes.

Bitcoin can withstand this weak sauce. That’s why I bought it in the first place.

Good article Lyn. I've been tuning-in to a lot of your stuff; dating back to when you first got introduced to US and International audiences.

Was it David Lyn (when he was still hosting for Kitco) who first introduced you to a wider audience? David's a star. And I'm truly glad he got himself well away from under that female Kitco Editor who pretended to be his Senior ... especially after that torrid joint interview the two of them conducted, of Alexander Mashinsky (the CEO of Celsius) about 3 years back.

I don't follow you religiously because I'm already on-board. I don't need to be converted from anything, or made 'awake'. In reality, I've always been awake! F.F.S.! I was fully on-board with the "money is debt" mantra as long ago as 2006-08, thanks mostly to Bill Stills massive (1996??) pioneering work, which was first released on VHS.

You are someone who is known for explaining each problem from basics through to specifics, and this is what I appreciate most about you. And your verbal delivery is always nicely paced, with minimal American accent. You've been around for several years now, and you are still part of the elite A-List for those Bloggers and Podcast hosts who are looking for a popular guest expert. So you've got no worries. ☺️

I always knew (or at least my radars did) that the Establishment would feign their so-called adoption of Bitcoin just so they could work out a couple more ways to shape its speed of growth, and ultimate destiny vector, while sitting behind their proverbial curtain. That's been their modus operandi, and for centuries already. Am I right?

But I could never have guessed what methods they would actually deploy, and who would be leading that charge (e.g., Saylor??). What worries me most is the (alleged) relationship between Blackrock and the Miners.

Maybe you would like to write / publish some more in-depth articles on this "Blackrock vs. Miners" topic for us Lyn??

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Typo / Naming Error: I should have written ... David Lin ... in the 2nd para. (not "Lyn").

Apologies for any confusion caused.