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The BTC DDS
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Fighting dental, monetary, and spiritual decay Jesus Maxi. Proud dad and husband Bitcoin Class of ‘21

This is a super interesting perspective that I haven’t thought through enough yet.

My only counterpoint would be that my kids and grandkids will most likely know and love my great great grandkids, which means that I by extension love them too. I plan to instill generational work ethic and values that will compound in every subsequent generation, and a huge part of that is the legacy of immutable money (bitcoin). I may not care about my great great grandparents, but my great great grandkids will care about me if I play my cards right. To that end, the digital age means they will most likely have access to photos and videos of pretty much my entire life, whereas I have nothing but old black and white photos of a few of my great great grandparents, making them seem distant. I’d like to think that generational changes will mean even more in the future

Go ahead and give the makeup artist an Oscar now

I don’t know whether to be incredibly sad or incredibly siked about what you just said 😂 either way, enjoy your time away, Doc! We all need your wisdom and grounded insights more than you know 🫡

Plus, maybe we’ll all have enough money to pool together to occupy the pyramids ourselves soon 😂

Asia waking up rn

Easily one of the most impactful scenes I’ve ever watched in a movie. Staying humble is important whether we’re at $100, $100k, or $100 million

Andor might be right up there with GoT, Breaking Bad, The Wire, The Sopranos, etc. in my favorite shows of all time.

For a show I never expected to like, they knocked it out of the park. It made Star Wars great again, and my inner 8 year old will always be grateful for that

I live one street over from mine and I wouldn’t trade it for anything. They’re babysitters on standby at all times and we enjoy walking over there with the kids a few times a week. I happen to have great in-laws that aren’t nosy and dropping in at random all the time so maybe I’m the exception though 🤷‍♂️

Replying to Avatar Joseph Voelbel

Touted as a bitcoin book, the manuscript only mentions the word once throughout. While the interpretation of its reference remains open to debate, the half-cocked comment, “see how that worked out”, and the author’s own admission, indicate it was meant to be dismissive.

Despite this the novel is a kaleidoscope of sound money spawned literary themes complete with evident btc-vocab like “Citadel”. The book tackles the devolution of The United States in a rapidly-inflating economy, the “New IMF” releasing a world wide currency called the “Bancor” backed by gold, copper, and various amounts of consumable commodities (an idea floated by John Nash in his essay, “Ideal Money”, as well as many other Austrian economists), and a general real-world palpability to a society on the decline as framed up though the intergenerational experience of The Mandible Family.

From Great Grand Dad (GGD) on down through young Willing, the chemistry of the characters and the silent turned not so silent role a huge family fortune on the decline plays as a backdrop to all that occurs is compelling, authentic, and believable. Shriver tackles unique characters like a linebacker, and acerbic wit, economic prowess, and a love of the threads that tie a family across time and place are strident throughout.

The book rests on its dialogue, indeed 85% of the book is strictly conversations happening in a particular location or another. The “backdrop” of the dystopic future is more of an afterthought to the foreground of the characters. The plot - which I’m not going to spoil - progresses smoothly and naturally, up until the final section of the book, where an abrupt jump forward in years felt like a truncated and not fully cooked Act III. The novels apotheosis is the family crawling out of NYC pushing a bicycle stocked with the silver cutlery handed down from many generations prior - the vestige of The Mandible Family Fortune - on their way to Uncle Jared’s Citadel (a farm upstate).

As dystopic sci-fi is meant to do, there is some very reasonable forecasting. For starters, predicting the widespread absence of toilet paper prior to The Covid Era must been seen as not only literary foresight but literal forecasting. Reading a novel published in 2016 that discussed swapping roles of toilet paper for entire dinners, and romanticizing of how it might feel to reach up onto a shelf and grab a “cushy 9 pack of squishy TP” has an eerie sense of omniscience from a retrolooking 2025.

Moreover, the literary conceit of a sovereign state within the contiguous United States being located in Nevada also jives with something like what a Texas might still become. Terms like “The Other 49” became common expression in this new self-declared sovereign territory with low taxation and no subsidies.

Finally, the “chipped up” reality of everyone having a piece of tech stuck into their spinal cord at the base of their neck (so it couldn’t be dug out) is just too on the nose for something that could be incoming. All transactions digital, cash aboloshed, auto and instant taxation. The plausibility of such an outcome was well if not swiftly established by the author with the flick of a logical pen. It’s simply Google Maps, plus our Credit Card statements, on auto transmit to the new IRS every single time we transact. Not too big of a leap considering.

On par with other books that don’t really have anything to do with bitcoin but somehow map it’s future rather accurately, e.g., Jeff Booth’s The Price of Tomorrow, Nassim Talib’s Anti-Fragile, or David Rogers Webb’s The Great Taking, this book accomplishes a similar reality but does so in the form of something far stickier than books about economics, it does so with a story.

Willing is by far my favorite character and Shriver’s sense of humor runs through his emotionless drawl. There was a hue of The Glass Family, and young Zooey amidst these pages.

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So true for any challenge or sin in our lives.

Turning and facing sin is always painful in the short run, but redemption waits on the other side of it. We just have to lower our time preference

Looks like an obvious photoshop of Biden except for the hand behind the guy’s head on the top right. Totally something he would do 😅

What happens after we occupy the pyramids? Do we move on to the Great Wall? Stonehenge?

I’m ashamed to admit that there’s still a dopamine hit every time we go back above $100k. The psychology of unit bias is real.