So i don't know who the Harvard president is, but let me take a wild guess, as a non-American connoisseur of rampant leftist American politics that have a bad habit of metastasizing to the rest of the world...
It's a she, and she must me black, because black and woman is doubly oppressed, and I wouldn't be surprised if she's a lesbian, triple the oppression.
She's antiracism and antisexist, but was hired because of affirmative action, in other words, because of what she has between her legs, and because of the color of her skin.
In other words, her choice for hiring was actually sexist and racist, because other, more qualified candidates, were cast aside merely for their gender and race, which is the very definition of racism and sexism ...
Of course, she would have seen none of that and I am sure she spent much of her time as President whining about oppression and how what Harvard really need is more DEI and quotas.
How did I do?
It's not ironic though, as it's not a similar situation.
Presumably, nostr:npub1lnms53w04qt742qnhxag5d6awy7nz6055flnmjkr6jg39hm86dlq7arrnt is using the tech while.. using the tech.
Whereas the people depicted above are using the tech to the detriment of the full enjoyment of the present moment.
Which is all we ever had, have, or will have.
Presumably that pattern is recurrent in their lives.
Therefore, presumably, they are wasting prodigious amounts of time being distracted.
No harm in pointing that out. May it serve as a warning to others, and as a message to the future: some of us saw it for what it was.
Truly, you deserved them. Thank you for your very interesting and well-written thoughts!
Does it have to have a business model? Plenty of open-source projects seem to survive exclusively on donations.
Mixing sats doesnāt change the value of the sats. It changes the privacy of the Bitcoiner himself.
The first step in understanding the Austrian concept is to realize that value is entirely subjective, rather than something objective. Value, therefore, is something that each individual person weighs on a purely private, not a public, set of scales.
(from https://mises.org/library/introduction-value-theory)
Not sure if you agree with this view? Probably not? Bitcoiners generally do. I do as well.
Other people value tainted sats differently. If they all had the same value, I couldn't write a program to flag certain utxos. And yet this is trivial to do. Because they are not fungible, and thus are valued differently.
Sats have no intrinsic value. No other things does, at least if you buy (heh) Austrian Economics.
This is why certain coins are set to be delisted (by government coercion in the background, no doubt) - since each unit is really like every other unit due to inbuilt cryptography, the government's solution is to foolishly try to ban the tool.
With Bitcoin, no need - it's transparent (thus not fungible). They insist in attempting to outlaw mixing techniques (you can still do them, but good luck using sats from such txs in the aboveground economy, if they push this nonsense far enough.
If all sats have equal value, would you willingly switch your current onchain sats for sats obtained through mixers, and then try to deposit the new sats at a reputable centralized exchange?
If they had the same value - if they were truly fungible - then it wouldn't matter, and indeed, nobody would even be able to tell that this operation had been performed.
All sats *should* have equal value, but because Bitcoin privacy is dodgy at best (and yes, I am aware of all the workarounds and employ them myself), they don't - in every situation, but at present only in certain ways will that become a problem (most notably with CEX, which are bound to obey the law, which is employed to maintain pervasive financial surveillance of everyone, with no regard for the presumption of innocence).
Simply put, the pseudonymous nature of Bitcoin is not enough to enable fungibility. All sats have a history, if you try to erase their history, that becomes their new history.
Now if you ask me if that should matter - no, it shouldn't (but makes for a clumsy solution for financial privacy). But it does, and it is a weak point, and being a weak point it is being leveraged by entities hostile to freedom and self-sovereignty, and it will probably get worse before it gets better.
Sats are not fungible, if they were, it wouldn't be possible to end up blacklisted or help blacklist others by sending them tainted sats. As anyone who was mindless about this and who interacted with the wrong service can attest to.
It is no wonder the governments of the world are leveraring this weakness to attempt to enforce their draconian financial surveillance ideals.
I suspect it is also why Bitcoin was left mostly alone for as long as it was.. you can see what the real threat to their little surveillance is by what coins are getting delisted from exchanges in a coordinated, predicable, and behind-the-scenes move.
Having said all that, yeah the whole "rare eats" nonsense is... well, nonsense.
Making you wealthy isn't the only measure. What good is being wealthy if you can only spend with oversight and approval from those who believe themselves to be your masters?
Beyond that, basing the hope of becoming wealthy on price appreciation of an asset is taking a shortcut. Work hard/smart, save in hard money.
Died on his own terms....as a sovereign individual making decisions he thought best for himself.š
Yes... but also stupidly and unnecessarily in this case.
Oh, it's been obvious for awhile.
Wherever rampant leftism takes hold, you can eventually expect this kind of stuff.
They live in a fairy tale of lies, the only way to even try to uphold it is to silence everyone who disagrees with them (i.e, speaks the truth)
It is common knowledge that Canada has become cucked.
.... Weak men create hard times ....
It's worse than that. His pancreatic cancer was actually the very small minority that could have ended up NOT killing him.
But he ignored Western Medicine :)
As much as I like XMR, depositing $20k worth of XMR in a CEX would bring the same questions, and more (because it's untraceable, and financial surveillance has become normalized, and the presumption of innocence no longer applies)
Well, he was kinda right.. nostr:npub1mc20uche0cy599vpl850aschpu7wteundgsnf0msep79lu3fu5aq3r4ptv gives a shit
Well played, well played.
Considering a maxxed out #System76 Serval WS for my next #Linux daily driver...
Best specs I've seen out of a laptop with the Intel ME backdoor disabled and Coreboot bios preflashed.
No hardware switches for the mic/cam/wfi/bluetooth unfortunately...
https://system76.com/laptops/serval#specs

Look at novacustom. They take Bitcoin, also.
Nothing like calling the uninitiated "losers" to get them onboard. :p
Maybe, or maybe it was human free thinking that created ideology to begin with, and the issue really isn't subscribing (in whole or in part) to one per se, but turning one into your identity.
But anyway, I suppose we'll have to agree to disagree, no problem.
Btw, I'm not the biggest fan of ideologies either. Most people seem to sign up in full for them, and I almost always find it suspicious if someone just goes with literally every point that they were supposed to agree with.




