I think that's a question for Jordan Peterson to answer
"A wealthy slave. That's no life man."
-Jordan Peterson
ஒன்றே குலம் ஒருவனே தேவன்
I'm a simple man.
If I see someone shilling stablecoins backed by US Dollars in India, I consider that person a colonial devil that has to be warded off with a spell that goes like this: 'Go fuck yourself.'
🖕🏻
Phoenix has a quality-of-life feature that displays the fiat value of the Bitcoin you spent at the time of spending it and the fiat value of the same amount now in the transaction details page.
It's a very good feature.
This man is probably one of the biggest critics of Modi in India. He is a long-time member of the party Modi is in. Former Upper house MP and cabinet minister, academic, econ Ph.d at Harvard.
What Bitcoiners would be interested in is that he believes income tax in India should be reduced to zero.
They're taking the hobbits to Isengaard bro https://nostrcheck.me/media/34f1aaa6b1508de0bab3f086c4bd5bbd7b50f8599451c6e68ac955fc836e3cd6/fc3a2d7bf5ac97a894317298b35635949234a886c8ff160234728dabf1de444a.webp
It's a long, long road to freedom in a country where every political alternative leans socialist


TBK has to be read patiently I think
Yes I think so too
It is on my reading list
Currently reading Bitcoin is Venice by Allen F and Sacha M, For a New Liberty by Rothbard, Power of the Powerless by Václav H and The Brothers Karamazov by Dostoevsky
Pretty packed list already
Oh where do I start
While learning about libertarianism, anarcho-capitalism and Austrian economics in the last few months, I've realised that Bitcoin isn't enough to achieve freedom.
Cultural, social and political conditions of where you live is very important. Bitcoin can be a good and probably necessary tool to achieve those conditions.
The internet is humanity's evolving project
It's insane that we're living at a time like this

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