I've gone back to it numerous times over the years, mostly through limited/draft play. It's always hard to tell whether a set is fun to draft from reading card spoilers or comments, just go play 🤭
keeping up with constructed formats is difficult for any playgroup, and collecting is an ever-expanding cash grab. Fiat ruins everything 😤
Paprika, then the rest of Satoshi Kon movies 🫡
For a second I was like "wait, fuck isn't in the bip39 wordlist, is it?"
Look out stingy nostr:npub1guh5grefa7vkay4ps6udxg8lrqxg2kgr3qh9n4gduxut64nfxq0q9y6hjy is compared to the generous nostr:npub1qny3tkh0acurzla8x3zy4nhrjz5zd8l9sy9jys09umwng00manysew95gx
nostr:note18vx39xn33svl2tc6ez3569rp0xvnyfe6utdj6pzsarkdsk3fkjwsdcnktd

What a scrooge 🤭
i still can't believe toriyama is gone 🥲
Glass hearts break easy 🤭
🥳🥳 two time men doubles champs
I blew out a tire on the freeway once on a section of a highway poorly lit at night. A kind stranger stopped and asked if I needed help. "I'm fine sir, I can put on the spare"
"Well I'll just hang back here and give you some light"
What kindness 🥹 glad I haven't forgotten how that happened, was like a over a decade ago
tl dr; sorry guys, regular expressions are hard 🤭
誰管他們同不同意啊🙂↔️
中華民國能混到現在還不是因為有台灣水喝,有台灣米吃 民國政府可是欠台灣人不少呢 🙃 難道黃金能吃喔~ 要回大陸是個人自由,回去之前先買單,別當奧客
黃金和寶物是否要留在台灣就看民國政府願不願意當台灣人啊。(不見得呢)難道紅毛城還是屬於西班牙的?🤷
再怎麼說文園的黃金不是屬於大陸的,要的話就只能打仗,難道還要幫他們搬🤣
As Chiang-kai Shiek would respond: "come get it 😡🚀"
On a more serious note, I wouldn't say it was robbed, it was basically the only capital that was allowed to leave during wartime because by all measures the bulk of industry and human capital remained seized in China. (Communism is predicated on theft) The gold that left mainland China certainly doesn't belong to the CCP -- there's a pile of artillery shells on Kinmen to make that point. The narrative that KMT bankrupted mainland China is just another entry to the long list of excuses of how communists mismanaged resources; for the purpose to draw blame away from the central planners. For example, Chinese visitors to the National Palace Museum often say that the treasures were stolen but all it takes to shut them up is to say "well, you'd have all of this stuff and more if you guys didn't burn down everything in the Cultural Revolution"🤷
That's a Chinese problem 🙂↔️ Taiwan was a part of the Japan empire at the time (fun fact: the period in question is also when Japan left the gold standard)
Taiwan’s goal should be to accumulate 83,000 #Bitcoin for its reserves
~Samson Mow nostr:npub1excellx58e497gan6fcsdnseujkjm7ym5yp3m4rp0ud4j8ss39js2pn72a at #ABS2024 in Taipei

I believe Samson arrives at this 83,000 BTC total by looking at the reported gold reserves of the Republic of China (colloquially known as Taiwan) in proportion to the gold supply held by central banks around the world, building off of RFK Jr's strategy. Very cool.
For reference, the gold supply for the Central Bank of China (🇹🇼 ) was mostly brought over by the Chinese Nationalists at the end of the Chinese Civil War. The gold is currently held in the mountains of Wulai, Xindian District under military guard. Our "Fort Knox" is called 文園. Central Bank of China has the world's 12th largest gold reserve
83,000 BTC sounds fine for the Republic of China. I personally think that Taiwan should set their sights higher. It's important to remember that Taiwan is the name of the island; it is currently a territory of the Republic of China. Strictly speaking, there is no "Taiwan" to hold Bitcoin, just individual Taiwanese.
While they are often discussed together, Taiwanese independence and global recognition of Republic of China (which left the UN in 1971) aren't the same thing. Both worthwhile pursuits.
Taiwan has had a rough century with fiat money. The story of the current iteration of the New Taiwan Dollar issued by the Central Bank of China in Taipei is actually fairly new (2000).
Taiwan didn't have an island-wide circulating currency until 1899 when the Bank of Taiwan issued gold-backed yen notes when it became a Japanese colony near the end of the Qing dynasty.
Prior to an island-wide currency, the pirate island of Taiwan used Spanish and Dutch copper and silver coins (15-16th centuries), which eventually turned into silver taels from the Ming and Qing dynasties. Taiwanese history shows that Taiwanese understand the prosperity (and chaos) that can occur when economic actors (pirates) have the freedom to choose their own money.
Taiwanese exported gold and lumber to fund the Japanese war efforts, but by the end of WWII, the Taiwanese gold vaults were effectively empty, unable to back the circulating currency. When the retreating Chinese Nationalists came over (in the midst of their own hyperinflation), the currency fell into disarray as it was no longer backed by the banks of the Japanese empire.
Taiwanese yen was converted to the "old Taiwan dollar" at a rate of 1:1. In two short years (1949) as the Central Bank of China in Shanghai fell into its own hyperinflation, the exchange rate became 40,000:1. At this point, the Central Bank of China had collapsed, and the only remaining bank operating in the territories of the Republic of China was the Bank of Taiwan. The Bank of Taiwan then issued the first iteration of the New Taiwan Dollar (1949) backed with whatever could be seized by force. The Bank of Taiwan had this peculiar structure where it issued currency for circulation sitting outside of the Republic of China constitution; this was rectified in the year 2000 when the Central Bank of China was reinstated in full, returning the power to "print".
In short, Taiwan never had its own money.
The gold doesn't belong to Taiwan and the notes are printed by a bank that isn't from the island. To change the status quo would be very difficult because the constitution of the Republic of China is notoriously hard to change. Taiwan would need another solution.
Bitcoin's 21 million offers a unique opportunity for Taiwan's 23 million people. Taiwan's greatest export of the last few decades has been affordable secure computing, which aligns well with Bitcoin. I believe Taiwan benefits from Bitcoin's success whether or not politicians do anything. A money without a state for an island without a country has a nice ring to it.
Taiwan has always been a bastion of free trade, often shared across empires even under colonial rule. Taiwan has never been a winner-takes-all. From a historical standpoint, the role as a geopolitical chess piece to check global powers is an anomaly.
I believe one day "Bitcoin" will be known in the future as Taiwan's greatest export (far more important than smartphone cpus and boba milk tea). Whether from the ASICs hashing away the next block, to the memory and storage chips for the saving transactions and block data, to the cpus to run the software that validates everything, and all the networking components to tie it all together even down to tiny screws and bolts to put them all together. There's a lot to be proud of for what Taiwan can offer Bitcoin.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHf2qm-8I0Y
For Taiwanese who understands Freedom better than the Republic of China, they should aim to stack much more than 83,000 BTC. 🥳
I don't know why I wrote all of this 😅
nostr:note13czydeal72uklx6hvu3c92yt8hdrdmk3wh326uhgcfr05xtaq3rqd5yqk3
yessss! 
Soybean milk is a great way to start the day from time to time 🥳



