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David W
3242fcf0fa1f46412a0ea452504ccde4b6717a38a42946c582b772fd20540bdb
Product, building in 🇺🇾
Replying to Avatar paulo

No, USA

Going from USA to Germany is like moving states in my opinion. It would be better to stay, rather than move from one potentially chaotic place to another.

My advice to most people would be to explore Central and South America or parts of Asia, sooner rather than later.

Europe has arguably more problems than the U.S. right now. They are intentionally creating a nationalistic reaction.

Think about immigration flows, political differences inside the country, family, protests, purchasing price index and access to resources. Germany is de-industrialising, just the rest of Europe to follow.

People fleeing to the West are going in the wrong direction, just at the wrong time IMHO.

The easiest way is to use vacations as scouting missions. Pick a region & hit-up 2-3 locations in 2 weeks. Get a feel for the place.

Family & belongings complicate things, but it can be done in stages. Once you have a place in mind, it will focus your mind.

If interested, I did a post on Uruguay, hoping for others to follow suit with their Plan B locations soon:

nostr:naddr1qqrrxv3kxvmrgq3qxfp0eu86raryz2sw53f9qnxdujm8z73c5s55d3vzkae06gz5p0dsxpqqqp65wjcxl57

💯 agree. Just to add:

- Prepare your documents in advance and get them apostilled. They are often only valid for 6 months.

- Have somewhere in mind, that you know you could settle. Ideally visit first.

- Ask yourself what would need to happen to pack-up and go. Write it down somewhere visible.

Options are available until they are not. You have a backup of your data, you should also have a backup for your life 🏠

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

Losing someone young, or losing an older person while you are young, is always hard.

When my father passed away from cancer while I was in my early twenties, it wasn't surprising at all. This fact had been coming for two years, slowly. But when it came, it hurt just as bad. And till this day it still hurts.

I was at work and got a call; it was a hospital. They said my father had been suddenly transferred to hospice, and it wasn't looking good. He probably had a week at most. He was in another state. The doctor transferred my father to me on the phone and my father was weakly like, "hey...." and I said hello, and I said I'm coming now. He said, "No don't... uhh.... don't worry... you are far and have work... I'm fine...." I asked then why was he transferred to hospice if things were fine. He was like, "uh well... well you know.... uh.... it's fine...." And I was like, "holy shit I'm coming right now."

So I went to my boss and looked at him. I had previously told him that there might be a moment where I would have to just immediately leave without notice, no matter how important the meetings and such, because of my father. So in this moment I literally just looked at him in the middle of a busy day and was like, "I gotta go" and he was like "of course". So I drove there, two hours away and went straight there. My father weakly said on the phone not to go, but he never sounded like that, so I went immediately.

I got there, and my father was in a hospital in the death ward, and the guy who greeted me was a pastor rather than a nurse, which was not a great sign. I asked what was going on and he told me straight up that this was not good, that my father was likely dying within a week. So he brings me to my father. My father is barely awake. His memories and statements are all over the place, but I just hold his hand and tell him that it's fine and I love him. I'm just there. He kept fading out and I was like, "it's okay, just relax". He could see me and talk in a rough sentence or two and thanked me for coming, but started to fade away.

And then after like 30 minutes, he went fully unconscious. He was still roughly gripping and shaking the bed headboard and so forth but wasn't conscious (and I was like, "Are you all giving him the right pain medicines, this doesn't look good", and even the pastor was like, "yes I have seen many and this is not comfortable" and I was like an angry 23-year-old so I went out in the center area like, "what do all of you even fucking do here?! He is shaking the bedframe and looks in pain, and even the pastor agrees. Holy shit." So I went and got medical attention to deal with this, but felt slow and ineffective at this. They gave him more morphine and it calmed him down, but while it relaxed him, he ultimately didn't wake up again.

I spent the next couple hours there, and then left and called various family members for my second round when he was unmoving. I said if they want to see him, come now, in the next day or two.

But a little while later after I left, I got a call and was told he had died. Only I (and the nurses) saw him while he was still briefly conscious.

During that call itself, I was stoic. I was like, "Yes, I understand. Okay." and then hung up. And then I sat there for like five minutes in silence... and then cried. I got over it quickly and we did the funeral in the following days. My father had been struggling with cancer for years, so this wasn't fully surprising.

But what lingered was the memory. It has been 13 years now, and yet whenever I am in my depths I still think of my father. The memory never gets weaker. I think of his love, or I think of how attentive he was, or how accepting he was, or what he would say about my current problems.

People we love, live on through us. We remember them so vividly, and we are inspired by them.

If he was a lame father, he wouldn't have so many direct memories 13 years later. But because he was a good and close father, he does.

All of those memories are gifts. All of them are ways of keeping aspects of that person alive in our world. It's how we remember them in the decades that follow. Their victories, their losses, and everything in between. Virtues they quietly did that you find out later. Virtues you realize only in hindsight how big they were.

Instincts are powerful and to be trusted. What a tough time that must have been. I’m really glad you got to share those moments and comfort your father, like he no doubt did for you during your youth.

You’re an inspiration to a lot of us, with your hard work & intellect. Not only us, but without doubt him also. Enjoy those fonder memories and enjoy your Sunday Lyn

The only positive is that we’re learning a lesson in real time of what not to put on-chain.

And driving people onto Lightning, potentially making fees there more lucrative

Genuinely should be one of these. I bet you it would get adopted big time by the adult industry 😂

nostr:npub1a8jzweysxa9qmtmht874736aalm0lwdsl306nrys9d05ktlrhw3qcr5pj4 has said for a while we need to do more for workers. More tools, more ‘hardware’, more adoption. Forever getting debanked.

Those we love never truly leave us. Especially such a unique spirit. I’m really sorry for your loss Jack. Lots of love for you and the Dorsey family 💜

Replying to Avatar rabble

nostr:npub1xfp0eu86raryz2sw53f9qnxdujm8z73c5s55d3vzkae06gz5p0dsxae7an has written what I think is the longest article I’ve ever seen on Nostr. It’s about el paísito, Uruguay the little country. I lived there for many years and a large part of the Nos team are Uruguayans: nostr:npub1uaajg6r8hfgh9c3vpzm2m5w8mcgynh5e0tf0um4q5dfpx8u6p6dqmj87z6 , nostr:npub138he9w0tumwpun4rnrmywlez06259938kz3nmjymvs8px7e9d0js8lrdr2 , and nostr:npub1k2dmnr47ejn6uw5x5q4tdnexpwhv7zvde4zja789l8z5nh7qurhsvwv5hn

One important thing left out about taxes is that if you can qualify your overseas income as coming from technology work then it’s tax free. It’s a huge benefit.

So check out the piece: nostr:naddr1qqrrxv3kxvmrgq3qxfp0eu86raryz2sw53f9qnxdujm8z73c5s55d3vzkae06gz5p0dsxpqqqp65wjcxl57

https://yakihonne.com/article/naddr1qqrrxv3kxvmrgq3qxfp0eu86raryz2sw53f9qnxdujm8z73c5s55d3vzkae06gz5p0dsxpqqqp65wjcxl57

Thanks 🙏 means a lot nostr:npub1wmr34t36fy03m8hvgl96zl3znndyzyaqhwmwdtshwmtkg03fetaqhjg240 🧉

Planning a few edits to tidy things up, so will make sure to add extra emphasis to that point.

When you’re next in town, would love to buy you a beer 🍻

Ever considered Uruguay? You might after reading this…🇺🇾👇

https://stacker.news/items/326364

Viva la libertad, carajo 👏

Replying to Avatar Shawn

nostr:npub1cwneqlnjgs3rdtk97c2ffy2df9dm5zycgj3dsg8c3z00hchxjmfqtvraju just added a fiat premium feature. Markup for dirty fiat. You love to see it.

Looks great & without doubt an awesome addition. Believe it would be better to allow the merchant to display it as a discount via Bitcoin.

20% off ⚡️, not 20% surcharge 💳

Normies will think a 10% or 20% surcharge is a bait and switch tactic, at checkout. An extra cost to the advertised price, damaging brand & trust.

Want to know the benefits of Payjoin? Read this 👇

https://brandonlucas.net/articles/bitcoin/payjoin

Make sure you are well stocked for tomorrow🍿

Things are about to get crazy in markets 📉

That’s convenient, if you’re BlackRock that is 🤔 nostr:note159uemgearxht7g940l73g0d6jdgln9mf585vczkdpksj43tec6gsjk74xn

Replying to Avatar armstrys

As nostr:npub1qny3tkh0acurzla8x3zy4nhrjz5zd8l9sy9jys09umwng00manysew95gx has claimed all along… it’s probably less about the money then it is tying an advertising target to your KYC profile from the payment.

And about having you ‘onboarded’ and identified onto their new payments platform

It’s an impossible game. Bots are here to stay and will probably outwit the barriers imposed.

Think we simply need to rely less on feeds and more on curated content, powered by trust graphs of people you’re following.

Pay to post also. There needs to be a cost of creating content and to be put infront of people’s eyeballs.

My point was that the moves X are making is not for protecting users from ‘fake news’. It’s about being able to have everyone use X as the value transfer mechanism. They want to be the biggest bank in the world. To be that they need your identity.