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Sedj
56cc5caf1ddd312185910e9bc0731b4a55196453b43ffa51514dc3abff5b3ec1
Disagreeable. Prove me wrong.

Things I am not concerned by:

1. Tax

2. Tariffs

3. Prices

4. Markets

I will work to better myself. I will save to better those who will survive me. I exist in the world that I experience. None of the above changes this.

The past, waving to you in the present - 🫂

A basic #asknostr mining question - Is it worth it to switch from slushpool/braiins to ocean or sonewhere else? Single s9j, with braiins firmware, kicking out about 14Th.

First night of the season I expect the temp to dip below freezing. So, time to fire up my s9 garage warmer. A few sats to keep the chill off

Gn. One day closer to when I leave this suffering behind.

It was remarkable that Marc brought up nostr during this interview. I think he mis-attributed it to Jack, but it was a fairly positive take, and Joe didn't seem aware of it.

Kill all your heroes.

There are many people who I would otherwise respect, but who poison themselves with alcohol. It saddens me, and diminishes them.

I could almost make the same claim regarding sugar, but I won't. I doubt anyone actually believes consuming alcohol is really a net benefit, if they take the time to think it through.

I am lucky. I was able to stop, and I can't imagine the damage I may have caused if I hadn't. I am thankful for that.

I hope that as people re-examine health as part of time preference, they find better, less dangerous options.

No one can censor you?

I don't think this is really true. Relays can censor your notes, or your npub - but you are free to use other relays, or your own relays. Content hosting (image hosting) can refuse to host your images or content. Anyone can ignore you, block you, or otherwise curate their content to not include your notes.

So everyone can censor you, individually. As it should be. The difference here is there is no central control over censorship. No one person or organization that can determine your content is not worthy of being transmitted through the nostr protocol. Each relay operator, content hoster, and user is able to censor for themselves.

Replying to Avatar Cyph3rp9nk

There are several communities in the world that live without a formal state or outside traditional political systems. These communities are often organized through alternative social structures, based on principles such as autonomy, self-organization or respect for ancestral traditions. Here are some outstanding examples:

1- Autonomous Indigenous Communities.

Many indigenous communities maintain their own systems of governance, based on ancestral traditions, and do not depend directly on the central state.

- Zapatistas (Mexico): In Chiapas, the Zapatistas declared their autonomy in 1994. They are organized in "Caracoles" and "Juntas de Buen Gobierno," which function without intervention of the Mexican government. Their model is based on direct democracy, gender equality and social justice.

- Indigenous peoples in Bolivia and Ecuador: Some indigenous communities such as the Quechua or Aymara manage their own territory under traditional rules and customs, which are partially recognized by governments.

2- Nomadic Societies

Nomadic groups often live beyond the reach of States due to their itinerant lifestyles.

- Bedouin (Middle East and North Africa): These nomadic Arab communities have lived for centuries in the desert, guided by tribal codes. Although some have been integrated into modern states, others maintain their independence.

- Roma or Gypsies (Europe and elsewhere): Although they live dispersed in various countries, many Gypsies have maintained their own social structures, prioritizing clan life and rejecting state structures in certain aspects.

3- Anarchist communities

Groups that reject the existence of the state and seek alternative forms of social organization.

- Christiania (Denmark): An autonomous neighborhood in Copenhagen, founded in 1971, where residents manage the community through anarchist and cooperative principles, although it is technically under Danish sovereignty.

- Rojava (Syrian Kurdistan): Although not fully independent, the Kurdish-controlled region of northern Syria has established a system of self-government based on direct democracy, gender equality and ecology.

4- Isolated Religious Communities.

Groups that organize around religious principles and seek to remain outside of states.

- Amish (United States and Canada): The Amish live in closed communities with their own rules, based on a literal interpretation of the Bible, avoiding modern technology and state intervention.

- Hutterites (North America): They live in communal and self-sufficient colonies, with strict rules that limit their interaction with state systems.

5- Areas of Enforced or Failed Autonomy

In regions where state control is weak, communities create their own structures.

- Somalia: In many parts of the country, where the central government has little authority, local communities organize around tribal and religious systems.

- West Papua (Indonesia): Some indigenous communities in this remote region operate autonomously, resisting full integration into the Indonesian state.

6Ecosustainable and Alternative Communities.

Groups that choose to disconnect from the state system for philosophical or environmental reasons.

- Ecovillages: Such as Auroville (India), where people of different nationalities live together in a self-sustaining community without a formal government.

Reflection

These communities are a reminder that not all societies are organized around a modern state. Many achieve autonomy through tradition, philosophy or resistance, though they often face legal, economic or coexistence challenges with surrounding states. Are you interested in any of these in particular?

I didn't see it mentioned, but some communities are also living under direct rule/control of local warlords, cartels, gangs, or other coercive body that has supplanted state control for their own. These societies are also not living under rule of a modern state, and enjoy a form of autonomy.

On an even snaller scale, cults and communes have also established autonomy in their locales, at least for a period of time.

I could draw some conclusions or judgments here, but would rather not at this time.

Gm nostr.

This one's a tough one for me. Laying low.

Ok, I'm going to expand a little on what I've been posting lately.

Here's how I see it:

1) you can't trust anything you hear from outside your own circle of trust / area of influence. For most of us, this is a few friends, some family, and maybe a few dozen acres of geography, if that. Anything you don't observe yourself is only as trusted as the source (so Aunt Patty spewing whatever was on TV news - complete bullshit, and Aunt Patty probably shouldn't be in your circle of trust.)

2) Even if you hear something true, there is fuckall you can do about it. This where area of influence comes in hard and heavy. You might relay information, but that is not really useful outside of your CoT. You can send money, but better than fair chance, that money won't get to where you were hoping, or have the impact you were hoping it would, if the problem is even legit and the solution is money, both of which are often enough false. Unless the problem is directly affecting those in your CoT/AoI, chances are the best thing you can do to react is nothing at all.

3) So what CAN we do? Don't react, prepare. Assume all possibilities you hear (and even ones you imagine or dream) are true, and prepare for those. This isn't necessarily prepper shit, buying bottled water and tubs of shitty "food". This means preparing for a reality where you may need to harvest your own resources, purify water, hunt, etc. And if you stockpile, you may need to defend - so stockpiling may not be your best preparation. I think the best preparations are learning new skills, and doing the mental work necessary. Keeping your mind in a healthy state of readiness. Assess your threats and your ability to respond to those threats, and make adjustments where practical. Your threats could easily be from within your CoT/AoI, so you must assess those as well - and make adjustments.

4) Preparing isn't about reacting; it is about acting first, every day. If you live in a state of preparation and action, others will notice. You may gain their respect; or worse, their dependence. But you can mask some of your preparation, if you are careful.

5) Some things I did to prepare - bought, then learned how to ride, amotorcycle. I see mobility as an issue in most adverse circumstances. If I can commandeer any vehicle, from a quad or dirtbike to a dump truck or fishing boat, my mobility options increase. I should also learn how to properly ride a horse, although I've never been a fan of horses. Smaller motored vehicles take less gas and need less roads. Horses need neither, but do need to be fed. Or they can be food, I suppose. I also bought a diesel truck. Utility, power, and I bet I'll find diesel sources long after gas is gone. I also wanted to learn more about diesel engines, and keep up on manual transmissions, hadn't had one in a while.I bet anyone that saw me buy the bike and truck just thought mid-life crisis. This is the masking. Bitcoin is part of preparation, and so is gold, some cash, bullets. But more important than having them is knowing when and how to use them, and how to hide them. Nostr is also a preparation, because this is at its roots a communications system that can be implemented over any network. A relay can be on your phone. Your phone can be on wifi, which can be on a LAN, which can be expanded over satelite, radio, LoRa, whatever. There's also a ton of information here that could be valuable, even if it is historic rather than contemporary. I think Wiki projects are important, as would be any cataloguing of information, recipes, 3d prints, whatever.

Paranoid? Not at all. I don't believe anything bad will necessarily happen. The point of my preparation is just readiness, for whatever may happen, good or bad. Learn. Act. Conceal. Prepare. Frankie MacDonald and the Boy Scouts weren't wrong about being prepared.

Then you can laugh! Most of what you see is comedy, farce, manufactured drama, and complete horseshit. Laugh at it! This is how you remove its power over you. Don't take things so seriously, because you know that you have already prepared for far worse, and will likely experience far better. Yes, by preparing, you become free to enjoy the better outcomes, the good times, the relief.

There is no single thing that is more important than the mental and emotional fortitude and attitude of constant learning and assessment. Be ready for the worst, and hope for the best! If nothing happens, which often happens, at least you will have learned some things, done some things, and probably met some good people along the way. This is living your best life.

Learning things doesn't have to cost money, although I don't regret any money I've spent on learning things. It is all attitude and the desire to learn; if you want to know something, you will find a way to learn it eventually, even if it does end up costing you.

Do.

Ge nostr.

Whatever your plan may be, whatever you are thinking happens next...

It often doesn't work out that way.

Don't believe the hype.

Personal debt. Most normies are deep in the hole. Without framing a bitcoin conversation around a debt planning converaation, neither is likely to be resolved to their benefit.

Ga nostr.

Hard take: you spend your time at the price you deserve.

If you think otherwise, I believe youmay be choosing the wrong medium of exchange.

I would correlate this to radical responsibility.

#philosophy

Ge nostr. Chill AF. The views along this lifelong path can truly be awe-inspiring to witness.

Gn nostr. I don't care what is happenng on inferior social platforms. My filter on economic and political content is also a bit too open at the moment. I can fix this.