Avatar
Gunson
0cca6201658d5d98239c1511ef402562ff7d72446fb201a8d1857c39e369c9fa
Low status fiat heretic. Often wrong. 2 + 2 = 4
Replying to Avatar Bridge 2 Bitcoin

๐Ÿ“ฃ Beans and Bubbles accepts #Bitcoin & #LightningNetwork payments!

๐Ÿ“19 Trinity Rd, London, SW17 7SD

๐Ÿš‡Tooting Bec station

๐Ÿ”— https://www.beansandbubbles.co.uk

We visited & confirm the coffee Prosecco & pastries are 5๐ŸŒŸ! ๐Ÿพโ˜•๏ธ๐Ÿฅฎ๐Ÿ˜‹

HT to:

nostr:npub1pcaa7rjwhnsxqa5ht6ayhahhknhhwc030smgyvs44xcrzm6xwc6q8zkked for onboarding this business๐Ÿ™Œ

CoinCorner & nostr:npub17w37afkm9xzlhv2lr44ynn9nye3erl5xjp9fxygsvsuqweyahgnsr6avd0 for the payment solution๐Ÿ‘

๐Ÿ‘€ more merchants that accept #Bitcoinย payments

๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง In the UK on our map:

๐Ÿ”— https://bridge2bitcoin.com/spending/

๐ŸŒ Globally nostr:npub1864jglrrhv6alguwql9pqtmd5296nww5dpcewapmmcazk8vq4mks0tt2tq :

๐Ÿ”— https://btcmap.org

Contact us if youโ€™d also like your business to benefit and increase footfall & revenue, by accepting Bitcoin payments

So happy about this - great coffee right by my local tube stop โœจ Went this morning and it was ๐Ÿ‘Œ

Great job onboarding them @npub1pcaa7rjwhnsxqa5ht6ayhahhknhhwc030smgyvs44xcrzm6xwc6q8zkked ๐Ÿ’ช

nostr:note16a0xspuwvwjxj0cm484wf7kph058wuhllwm5a9aqqfmlavp0n8cq295kwm

Big nostr growth is going to come from teens, probably. With all the age verification being applied to sites (not just porn), nostr will be the path of least resistance.

Also, the whole experience was a reminder of how fucked the fiat system is.

I had to jump through so many hoops and figure out all the tax stuff. Then got blocked for AML stuff, then encountered payment limits, then discovered you can't buy fractions of shares, then realised you can only buy when the market is open etc etc.

Still have my tax assessment to look forward to ๐Ÿ˜ช

I've been a real fiat maxi the last few days.

Because of the UK's convoluted tax system I've needed to put extra money into a pension.

Sold some Bitcoin, transferred the cash into a pension (and the government tops it up by 25%), and bought MSTR.

I don't feel good about buying MSTR because I don't fully understand Saylor's financial engineering, but it's literally the only way to get Bitcoin price exposure in a UK pension. We're not allowed to buy US ETFs, and even when we get our own in ~May it won't be accessible to retail like me for "investor protection". Instead I have to buy some levered stock run by a guy who thinks Bitcoin is real estate.

Theoretically this is a very tax efficient thing to do, and it also gives me more cash flow (due to UK childcare funding) to buy more real Bitcoin. But it hurts adding all these extra trust layers. Right now I can't access the pension till I'm 57, but that can go up and the government can change all the tax advantages. All I can do is ๐Ÿคž

It was only 2 days ago when one of my friends told me I was being a conspiracy theorist. Of course this is going to happen. And then next step will be using the smart meter two-way capability to turn your power off.

Took an Uber in a Tesla Model 3. Driver absolutely hates it.

He's been forced to buy an electric car by Transport for London. His previous vehicle was > 8 yrs old (lol, buying new cars for the environment ๐Ÿ™ƒ)

Main issues:

- Expensive car

- Spends 1.5 hrs of his day travelling to and waiting at a Tesla super charger

- Used to cost him 28p per KWh, now 64p per KWh - almost more per mile than a petrol car

- Always worrying about his range. When he had a petrol car he could just ask a customer to wait 5 min while he refuelled, but no way he can ask them to wait 45 min while he recharges.

- Battery deteriorates by almost 5% range every year

Went to a bachelor party and didn't talk about Bitcoin once. Bull market barely started.

Top story in UK papers today to ensure we buy more snacks: Intermittent fasting is a cult celebrity diet and some observational study says it increases your risk of a heart attack.

Journalists still not bothering to learn basic statistics that might hinder their ability to sell newspapers and advertising.

Why am I reading this _now_?

Two stories in this morning's UK papers

1. Supposedly UK defence minister targeted by Russia for a potential missile strike (in Odessa)

2. Latvian foreign minister urging NATO countries to consider conscription

A two-pronged approach to make us more scared of Russia and then further cede the conversation about escalating the war.

it still tickles me that for so many years the example all the Web3 people used to justify their scams was

"imagine you could own your social network and take it with you to another platform"

and yet here we are with NOSTR, doing exactly that (and more) with no scams, no tokens, no Web3 VC bullshit

๐Ÿ˜…๐Ÿคทโ€โ™‚๏ธ๐Ÿ‘โœŒ๏ธ๐Ÿค™๐ŸŒ…

yeah I think Saylor probably gets sacrificed this cycle

oh shit, Saylor is going to be the new "get yield on your Bitcoin" of this cycle

me and Joe didn't understand a word he said about MS capital structure

According to the New York Times we need to be careful of independent journalism ๐Ÿ˜‚

"

โ€œWe need to help the public be more media literate as to the value and importance of independent journalism. People find it very hard for many reasons to distinguish what it is and is not,โ€ Levien of the New York Times said during the session in Davos.

"

Not sure I've seen this analogy anywhere, but I've got a good explanation to friends of why it's so hard to copy or change Bitcoin:

Bitcoin is like how modern society thinks of 24hr time ๐Ÿ•ฐ๏ธ (@npub1dergggklka99wwrs92yz8wdjs952h2ux2ha2ed598ngwu9w7a6fsh9xzpc alludes to this in "Bitcoin is time"):

- We all agree on the protocal of 24 hours, minutes, seconds etc.

- International Atomic Time is the main reference point that can be independently verified.

- It's relatively easy to check whether other clocks are cheating because we all run our own time nodes (quartz or the sun, or even Bitcoin).

- To change this protocal or shift it in some way would be so massively difficult, that it just doesn't happen. It's only possible if the vast majority of people who control devices agree.

- Yes you can try and claim your own time standard as the real one, but really there is no second best.

Rules for thee ..

On one hand it's just a small percent of articles that are biased, so wikifreedia maybe not be needed for the vast majority.

But there are still a lot of "facts" on Wikipedia as a helpful starting point, even on articles with a lot of bias. It may actually help the final result be a bit more balanced/holistic.

I'm not sure it works exactly the same, but have you seen Rationalwiki and Conservapedia? I think both start fresh with a very politically bias POV, and they're both garbage (although good that they exist).