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Brad Mills
148d1366a5e4672b1321adf00321778f86a2371a4bdbe99133f28df0b3d32fa1
Angel Investing into #Bitcoin & p2p web Companies, supporting bitcoin culture at Geyser.fund Grants.

#[0]​ told me about this limited edition Bitcoin guitar that Martin is releasing.

It has a 1 oz gold coin embedded.

Replying to Avatar ShiShi21m

Great meme. Original?

What are the most zappable notes today? Anyone curate a list?

Are the muun ppl on here? Maybe it’s something they have to change

I do put 2 capfuls of canola oil in the bucket

Thanks. Can you make it so muun doesn’t need a note? It makes me type something every time

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

Back in the 1930s and 1940s, there were a lot of capital controls, lending restrictions, securities restrictions, etc. And it was for two different but intertwined reasons.

One obvious reason was that, among countries involved in trade wars or shooting wars, they wanted to reduce capital flows to the enemy.

A second reason was that, due to the war, sovereign debts became so high relative to GDP that they had to inflate away the debt, which was a form of default. It wasn't just 6102; it was a broad range of controls. Carmen Reinhart described it well as “creating a captive audience” in an

IMF Working paper:

“High public debt often produces the drama of default and restructuring. But debt is also reduced through financial repression, a tax on bondholders and savers via negative or belowmarket real interest rates. After WWII, capital controls and regulatory restrictions created a captive audience for government debt, limiting tax-base erosion. Financial repression is most successful in liquidating debt when accompanied by inflation. For the advanced economies, real interest rates were negative ½ of the time during 1945–1980. Average annual interest expense savings for a 12—country sample range from about 1 to 5 percent of GDP for the full 1945–1980 period. We suggest that, once again, financial repression may be part of the toolkit deployed to cope with the most recent surge in public debt in advanced economies.”

-IMF Working Paper No. 2015/007

Unfortunately, as most here know, both conditions are once again present in the 2020s. The US/Europe vs Russia/China contest is providing a useful excuse for governments to crack down on privacy, p2p exchange, money transfer, etc. Meanwhile, western governments have a similar sovereign debt problem that ultimately necessitates inflating the debt away.

Some of this Operation Chokepoint 2.0 stuff is just targeting scammy crypto companies and things like that. And the SEC enforcement actions are also going after crypto securities fraud and so forth. For bitcoiners, those things are not particularly relevant.

But under the surface, the bigger risk is all of the ongoing pressure on privacy, p2p, and the free flow of capital, including tighter bank restrictions and debanking.

Lyn was this a strategy that they employed to those ends, or was it just an effect their authoritarian policies & money printing ways had?

I mean to say, is this an ex-poste rationalization or was this a planned strategy with the desired effect of taxing bond holders and savers?

1 sat per view? Not worth it

in for 10-15 min, out for 5 (cold water shower with the hose or jump in pool), 3 times.

So about 45 min split up in 3 sessions