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MAHDOOD
45f195cffcb8c9724efc248f0507a2fb65b579dfabe7cd35398598163cab7627
I own the greatest folder of memes on nostr. ⭕️ Opinions expressed are mine, not expert advice. Information shared is for educational and entertainment purposes only, not as a substitute for professional guidance.

I thought most already do that. Still you can find ways around it.

I'll never understand how people can hand off their children to complete strangers that are responsible for developing them

Some of these apps seem to only work with snap. Like brave browser and bitwarden.

I’m just barely seeing it up lol it shouldn’t be this hard

Someone told me that SNAP packages on Ubuntu are bad. What’s wrong with them? Is this true? I downloaded some apps there already but uninstalled them after.

#asknostr

I would think it’s funny if I was like 8 years old… maybe

Nothing makes me want to rip my hair out and down a bottle of bleach more than running a bunch of terminal commands, exactly the way a tutorial tells you to do it, and getting back an error message.

Yeah super cringey levels of retard

That’s how most of human history looks. A few people make these discoveries or invent something that changes the world. The masses benefit without contributing to those discoveries.

Replying to Avatar stache

Stache I tried watching that movie major payne. I couldn’t finish it. It was so bad and cringe. Didn’t laugh once.

Replying to Avatar HannahMR

A big long rant on the madhouse that is Bitcoin...

Ever find yourself in a room full of people who just give you the ick—and you can’t help but wonder, “How did I end up here?”

That’s been me looking around at the Bitcoin world for the past ~3 yrs. It’s been a rough few years on the personal front. I changed my social circle and parted ways with dear old friends. But don’t get me wrong, there are still amazing people here and the Bitcoiners that I now hangout with I genuinely find to be the most interesting and impressive people on the planet. I’d pass on a ticket to the Met gala to go to a dive bar with my fav Bitcoiners! But, looking around at the broader space… it’s ugly out here.

Blatant misogyny, political boot licking, tyrant worship, nonsensical infighting. This is not the behavior of humanity's best and brightest. And we think so highly of ourselves in this space, we are geniuses… right? Well how did all this madness wind up here, with us?

The breakdown of my relationship with one particular Bitcoiner friend of mine is very illustrative of what’s been happening here. This is a person who was a long time anarchist deep in the libertarian world. We connected over shared values, or at least I thought we had. Then the values got eroded, one by one. Liberty! …unless you are a woman, because of course women want to be led by a man. No rulers! …well except Trump, because he’s going to beat those evil libtards with the satanic agenda.

Pain will motivate you, and so I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what happened there. I see three recurring patterns: the perpetual rebel, the disillusioned, and the power hungry.

1. The Perpetual Rebel

Someone suffers a deep injustice at a formative point in life. They engage in righteous rebellion, and that becomes their identity. When one fight ends, they seek another, just to keep feeling like themselves. They aren’t just fighting for something—they’re fighting to stay someone.

2. The Disillusioned

Sometimes there are reality breaking moments in people’s lives. Someone has been told their whole life that the sky is blue, but one day, they look up and it is red. Their whole model of reality breaks, they question everything, they trust no one. They become stuck in disillusionment, always doubting, never grounded.

3. The Power Hungry

Some rebel against their rulers. Their rulers are unjust and are suppressing them. They are filled with righteous anger and join the movements to remove the oppressive leaders. But, while they may have spent years chanting it, it wasn't that they actually wanted “no rulers”, they didn’t want “freedom” in a general sense. They wanted to not be ruled themselves. They wanted freedom and power for themselves. And so, when the time comes, they will support the tyrant that they see as giving them the power to be the ruler of others.

My former friend was to some extent, all three of these things, and the Bitcoin world has a way of attracting these types of people. Bitcoin is a wildly powerful and “disruptive” technology. When you see that, when you get it, it’s mind blowing! It’s a powerful tool for the rebels. It’s a bit of hope for the disillusioned trying to find a new map of the world. It’s also a method of enrichment for those who wish to be above others.

But the perpetual rebel and the disillusioned don’t just get caught up in Bitcoin, they also get caught up in social causes, politics, and all sorts of movements that offer them an enemy to fight or a new grip on reality. And when those seeking power are feeling wealthy, they will exert that power and seek to expand it. And when we recognize the high concentration of these volatile people in the Bitcoin world, it really shouldn’t be a surprise that we have the madness that we do.

But then, it gets worse. Bitcoin gets picked up by a lot of these people and becomes their identity, their religion. … In some circles, Bitcoin is a cult. Beards, guns, steak, and toxic maximalism. Those with a cult-like mindset are also drawn to Bitcoin.

I was born into a Christian doomsday cult and I have to admit, that’s probably a factor in why I find myself standing in this room.

My family left the cult that I was born into when I was 7, and both of my parents then drifted away from Christianity and religious extremism. But that mind set, the us-vs-them, the occult knowledge elitism, the righteousness obsession, that mindset was installed deep in the back of my head during those 7 years, and parts of it have stayed with me.

What really stuck with me was a sense of elitist righteousness as a form of safety from the evils of the world—a kind of magical thinking that promised security and fulfillment if I could just follow a rare, enlightened path and avoid the sinful, misguided sheeple. Given my history with religion, I couldn’t find this path through a church, though I did try a few times. Instead, I found it in economic and political ideologies—first in Austrian economics, where I railed against the evils of communism; then in Libertarianism, railing against the evils of collectivism and authoritarianism—and ultimately in Bitcoin, which seemed to unite these ideas and offer both a sense of purpose and a righteous path.

Bitcoin with its fringe status and world altering potential can really appeal to those seeking elite knowledge—the kind that feels like a righteous path to salvation.

But not everyone in this space is a cultist, a perpetual rebel, the chronically disillusioned, or power hungry. There are brilliant, principled people here. And people who came for the wrong reasons but stayed for the right ones. Still, it’s undeniable: Bitcoin is a magnet for the unbalanced, and that causes real problems.

It’s kinda an asshole move to rant about a problem without offering a solution. But I needed to find the patterns before I could start addressing them. I’m finally in a place where I can begin looking for solutions. And I will.

What do you think the solutions are? What do we do about this? What can we do about this?

I had a fallout with a bitcoiner, maybe 2 years ago, because he disagreed with me regarding the fact that the constitution is just a piece of paper that literally cannot limit government. I was surprised how big of a statist he was.

The nonsensical infighting is what really blows my mind. I see them arguing about such trivial things. Last week I recognized the fact that these people will make an enemy out of someone when there isn’t clear evidence of malicious intent.

I don’t think it’s your experience in a cult that made you adopt this us vs them mindset. This is our tribalism that we evolved with. It exists in every aspect of life. Politicians dems vs republicans. Sports lakers vs Celtics or whatever team. Video games PlayStation vs Xbox vs pc gaming. In comics marvel vs dc. Race. Religion. Money. Whatever you can think of, you’ll probably find some tribalistic tendencies of humans behind it.

The last point I’ll make it is that Bitcoin is not a thing. It doesn’t actually influence you to change your life. Not directly right. It’s a tool. It’s just digital money. I know this is blasphemy. “Bitcoin fixes this” is a fun meme but in reality we simply use Bitcoin and we make our own changes. It gives us more power over our lives and more options about how we build our future. Bitcoin has normies too but we don’t hear their voices because they’re arguing about other things.

I think your recognition of the 3 recurring patterns was spot on.