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Onyyn Muk ∞/21m
428c7eb534e106bba3ada46710f4e9e36291318b632b12de0fafdaa53d55283e
Constantly learning to try to keep up and not trip up.

If it breaks gold's market cap he's worth at least one order of magnitude more in fiat terms if that's what he wants. Helping to make it more broadly adopted and moving toward MoE more quickly is still very much to his benefit and aligned with his incentives. Just my opinion and I may certainly have my own blind spot(s) on that position.

I really wish nostr:nprofile1qyfhwue69uhkcmmrv9kxsmmnwsargwpk8yq3gamnwvaz7tmpv4nkjueww468smewdahx2qpqs05p3ha7en49dv8429tkk07nnfa9pcwczkf5x5qrdraqshxdje9sgjmwnq could break through to him and cure his blind spot on this point. If Saylor would push development in this direction it could do wonders for the world (I realize we likely have to surpass gold's MC first to be of large enough scale to support MoE). I'm with Jeff 100% on MoE being a required victory/survival condition for the network or the experiment failed.

Having just read the Blossom announcement a few minutes ago, is it possible that can be an effective base for your envisioned solution?

πŸ’₯ #Scardust has entered Nostr πŸ’₯

We're a progressive metal band blending orchestral arrangements, anthemic choruses, our own metal choir, a wide range of vocal styles, and hard-hitting riffs. If you like epic, emotional, complex, cinematic, and intense music - we think you'll feel at home 🧑

Why Nostr? Nostr is Punk Rock, Prog Metal, Freedom.

We love the idea of decentralized VFV and we bitcoin.

🎧 Start here: https://scardust.co

You can find our music on all normie streaming platforms.

We also produce EPIC videos on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/Scardust

Check out our Satoshi Nakamoto music video for the song RIP (from our upcoming new album!) https://youtu.be/AW1Vmg6S5bI

Say hi, share, zap us if you dig the sound, and stay tuned - we’ve got music, stories, behind-the-scenes content, and exclusive Nostr drops coming your way ⚑

#Scardust #ProgMetal #NostrMusic #DecentralizedSocial

Interesting Saylor nod in the paintings at the end. πŸ˜„ Don't forget to distribute your videos to Rumble (rumble.com) if you want to help push VFV music further, and consider tunestr.io and wavlake too. πŸ’ͺ

He's enabling the destruction of inefficient capital that Fed interference has allowed to persist well past markets signaling the natural death of it's current custodians. He just announced the beginning of a controlled burn that will clean out the zombies that should've lost their balance sheets long ago. The next 5-10+ years are going to be wild.

The US economy will be worse with his tariffs. It will be worse with her entitlement programs.

#WriteInSatoshiNakamoto

It’s late enough at night and I didn’t see this clearly on my phone and thought at first you said β€œThe girls are coming! The girls are coming!” πŸ˜‚πŸ€£

What you’re asking for exists on Umbrel, in case that scratches the itch for you.

I feel like I have a slightly better understanding of the push for covenants after listening to nostr:npub1pxyknnjeme22kekzd2fj5dasrezgv23wx026ae5rqa74h8pc7j7sn57nke chat with nostr:npub1q5un2zq6d93ygesrg3rwmgehfkg9v5kah7pp0jy8pqvzdparxpnqkk6dh3. Appreciate the episode!

https://fountain.fm/episode/6ui2qsJOr8Y6CzelTFQk

a.i. seems like it’s currently roughly akin to bandages and splints in medical history, and one day will work its way into being more like nervous system-integrated prosthetics.

So, option d, I guess. 😊

I see roughly the same complexity in this image as I feel trying to run a Lightning node (still don’t have I found liquidity running yet) and getting a wallet correctly connected to my Nostr profile so people can zap me (still no clue if I’ve done it correctly or not!). πŸ˜‚

Replying to Avatar jimmysong

# "Free" is Slavery

Thae Young Ho is the highest ranking defector to ever have come out of North Korea. He was an ambassador to Sweden and then to England. At the Oslo Freedom Forum back in 2019, I got to talk to him for a few hours, and it's a conversation I'll never forget.

It's rare that we get such a high ranking official to come out of the country to tell us how they operate, but Mr. Thae is one of those people. He was able to enlighten many of us what North Korea's process for the currency revaluation was and why they backtracked. He also told us about how they had to execute someone so that the regime wouldn't get blamed. If you read any works of Rene Girard, that shouldn't surprise you, especially given that it's an atheist country.

## Kim's Rise to Power

But the story that struck me the most was about Kim Il Sung's rise to power. Mr. Thae explained that after being installed as the hand-picked leader of North Korea in 1945, he wasn't that popular. His Korean was marginal as he had grown up mostly in China. His education was a scant 8 years, all of it in Chinese and communist guerrilla tactics weren't exactly beloved by the people. Yet if we look at how he's looked at in North Korea today, he's essentially viewed as a divinity. Somehow, this poorly educated, barely comprehensible puppet of the Soviet Union became the god of North Korea.

So what happened? How did he gain all that power? What did he do to take control? You would think that given what we're generally told about communism that it would be based completely on fear and ruthlessness that consolidated his power. And certainly, there was plenty of that. But according to Mr. Thae, Kim Il Sung relied on something else: free stuff.

## The Cult of Free

Everyone loves free stuff. Think about how popular the free stuff section on your local craigslist is. I'll bet you anything it's the most visited and monitored part of the site and rarely will you find stuff that's that valuable that someone hasn't taken already. It's part of the human instinct to try to get something for nothing and Kim Il Sung exploited it.

As with most socialist/communist programs, the way he won over the North Korean people was with lots of entitlements. They got free health care, free food, free housing, a guaranteed job. They got everything they needed. And with Soviet subsidization, it worked great. People supported him and for a time, a lot of international observers thought that North Korea was doing better than the South.

But there's a darker side to "free stuff." What happens when they run out of a scarce resource? How do you determine who gets it? Say there's medicine that will help two different people, but there's only enough for one. Who gets it?

In a free market, prices help you decide that, and a high price spurs greater production of the scarce resource so that the prices come down. But if it's free, what do you do? When you have a central controller of everything, the answer is obvious. You reward those that are loyal and punish those that are not. Instead of money being your currency, it was loyalty to the regime that was your currency.

## Markets Build Community

Soon, the only people that really got the free stuff were near the top of the ideological hierarchy. Instead of prices determining what you got, it was your perceived compliance and loyalty to the regime that determined it.

In the absence of a market, compliance was what determined who got what. Mr. Thae's point of the story was that there's something sacred about market transactions. Market transactions cause both parties to have obligations to the other. There's a mutual desire to satisfy the other party and it binds us together in a community. That's precisely what they lacked in North Korea and why the regime was so powerful.

It's easy to listen to these stories and think of it as "out" there, that it's got nothing to do with us. But after listening to this story, I started thinking about what stuff I got for free from centralized entities. I get GMail for free. I get Facebook for free. I get YouTube for free. I realized that the cost of getting these things was indeed compliance. In these walled gardens, they can kick you out at any time and that is indeed what they do. The reason why these companies have so much power is because they give you this stuff in exchange for compliance. They give you this stuff to *enslave* you.

## Western Governments

Fact is, there's way more of the communist/socialist system of free embedded in our supposed democracies than we think. Remember during the pandemic how you had to get a vax to keep your job, visit your sick relatives or travel? There were people in the US suggesting that unvaxxed people should be denied health care services. Such tactics really only work when the service is "free." The central controller of the resource extracts its pound of flesh, just not in money. Many governments have gone down this route. We're much closer to communism in western societies than we'd like to believe.

Prices and paying for things are a good thing. They obligate both parties to the trade to satisfy the other. The instinct to get something for nothing is not one that builds civilization. The reason communism has led to tyranny every single time is because the central government ends up with all the resources and wields absolute power through "free" stuff.

Reject free. Pay for value.

## Markets Build Community

## Governments Build Corruption of Markets, Corrupting Community

Hopefully by committing a civilly disobedient and appropriate pirating of a copy so he doesn’t receive money for it.

nostr:npub1h8nk2346qezka5cpm8jjh3yl5j88pf4ly2ptu7s6uu55wcfqy0wq36rpev and nostr:npub1s5yq6wadwrxde4lhfs56gn64hwzuhnfa6r9mj476r5s4hkunzgzqrs6q7z are two of my favorite listens independently. When they get together, it’s waterproof-speaker-in-the-shower-so-I-don’t-have-to-stop-listening worthy. πŸ˜‚πŸ’ͺπŸ˜‰πŸ‘

https://fountain.fm/episode/7WLwHEDi8rlaF2qInWeM