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Ambitioushumanbeing
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Good morning ☕️🔥☕️🥖☕️🥐

Replying to Avatar Street Cyber

I would like to dedicate all my #zapathon sats to this awesome project: https://amazoniabitcoin.org/

If you like the idea of bringing #bitcoin    to the indigenous people in the Amazon rainforst to give them more independence, then please help you can zap me some sats ⚡️ or you can donate directly tot his lightning address: donate@amazoniabitcoin.org

Currently the people living in the Amazon use small pieces of #gold and cash to trade. #Bitcoin can help them a lot. For instance, they will be able to buy and sell goods from a distance while they can't do that now and have to make long and expensive travels to the city. Nor can they be cheated with fake gold anymore.

These people are the guardians of the forest, and chances to maintain the #Amazon are bigger if they can continue to live there.

All donations will be settled by nostr:npub1lhufm09wzp42y67t3s8axlewwna8rmetak68w38yal7xjrwktpsscpt08x

Thank you so much for the zaps, it will all go to Amazônia Bitcoin!

Followed #plebchain

Replying to Avatar Daniel Batten

Love this headline because it captures a real shift in the bitcoin mining community.

Gone are the days when bitcoin mining companies tried to apologetically defend themselves.

They are now counterpunching with interest.

This strategy only works because there is now a huge body of peer-reviewed research, independent reports, revisions to old models (Bloomberg Intelligence and Cambridge), and narrative flips from previous antagonists (UN, WEF, Financial Times) now supporting Bitcoin’s environmental merits.

Yes, not just saying “it’s not that bad” like in the past but saying either “it is, or has the realistic potential to be very net-positive for the environment.”

Bitcoin mining companies are simply no longer taking 101-level nonsense from misinformed legacy NGOs, who have made no effort to learn about bitcoin or engage with bitcoin miners, and instead continue to peddle myths that are out-of-date, out-of-evidence and frankly out-of-integrity (funded by Ripple’s chair to run a smear campaign)

GreenpeaceUSA had the chance at the start of this year to review their anti-bitcoin campaign’s (many) mistakes and failures and reach out to the bitcoin community. But have chosen instead to double down on more misinformation, more mistakes, and with it even more loss of credibility with a generation of crypto-native millennials - the very people it should be cultivating as its future base.

We are no longer talking about a difference of opinion, we are talking about a grassroots movement of Bitcoiners who have taken the time to understand the nuances of a technology deeply, and a UUHNWI-funded former grassroots movement called GreenpeaceUSA who has not.

https://decrypt.co/222655/greenpeace-bitcoin-energy-environmental-debate

Followed #plebchain

Replying to Avatar Nyoro~n

Deflation anecdote:

My late grandfather bought a record player off an American GI leaving Taiwan in the 60s

The price? ~40,000 NTD which would have been enough for a plot of land in the heart of modern Taipei or a house+storefront at the time.

My late grandfather passed early so I don't have many recollections of him, all I have are stories. He seemed like a classy dude, smoked a pipe, played go, listened to opera -- enjoyed life. A well respected academic turned merchant, how could he have made the mistake to exchange money for technology which will only get cheaper over time?

Was it worth it to exchange money for a device that plays music instead of another plot of land? The elders bring up this question from time to time.

I've chewed on this a lot over the years. Hell yes 👀 "what is this noise?" "why is it so loud?" "what are they saying?" are the curiosities the money bought as my grandfather would blast opera records to wake up my aunts and uncles every Sunday. My aunts and uncles all have fond memories of the record player, even memories of how my grandpa was chastised for frivolous spending.

Was it worth it to get access to technology marginally sooner? The record player would have been infinitely cheaper just a short decade later. Whether or not by coincidence, both my uncles went on to work in tech, and one even contributed to many instruction sets used in audio decoding for CPUs. My tech background mostly comes from my uncles who let me play around with engineering samples to build computers, and got me on the Internet very early. Perhaps if it wasn't for my grandpa deciding to bring home a record player instead of sitting on another plot of land, I wouldn't have had the proper knowledge, skillset, and curiosity to be pulled into Bitcoin. The butterfly effect of my grandpa's decision put me in the right place at the right time. Maybe that extra decade of opera listening made all the difference, fun to think about.

Tl Dr; trying to find what this record player looks like, all I have are descriptions from 70+ year old Taiwanese folks. I spent hours on Google, the image above was the closest but the record player portion still isn't right. It was some sort of shelf instead of a top lid 🤔 any antique stereo experts on nostr? Will zap ⚡ a note that can help with details to help find the correct one

Followed #plebchain

Don’t worry! Be happy!