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Tim
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My government borrowed $36 Trillion and sent it to their friends and donors, and agreed that me, my children and grandchildren would pay interest on this astronomical debt forever. They literally sold their people into slavery. An accountant doesn't fix that.

Think about the worst thing that's happened to you, and how you survived and ended up okay. Realize that nothing can hurt you, and you will feel more free. Most of the time all the "maybes" that stress people out are nothing. The stress from anticipation is more harmful than the actual bad stuff that happens.

Just take life as it comes, and hold BTC for 10 years. You'll be fine.

My 2 sats.

Hey did you take your name from Prince Myshkin in The Idiot? I love that book, and the character.

You sure about that? How do you know?

Not copper. Red.

I believe that Bitcoiners have a special relationship with the concept we refer to as "truth."

I'm not saying that we are more honest than others.

But we appreciate more than most others being able to verify the correctness of something.

For instance, we like the fact that everyone can verify the software code as well as each and every transaction.

Nothing is hidden.

Everything is in the open.

We value that we don't have to trust someone who says that "Everything is A-OK."

It's possible for everyone to check things out, without having to ask anyone for permission.

I have had the same fascination with the concept of truth as long as I can remember.

Like my father, I have also always been curious about how things work.

He had an amazing talent for understanding technologies.

My grandmother once told me a wonderful story from when he was a kid.

I think he was 12-13 years old.

He sat by the kitchen table and picked apart a mechanical sleep alarm clock, while he carefully studied how the pieces functioned together.

After he had taken it all apart, he patiently reassembled it.

It must have been very satisfactory for him to wind it up and hear the ticking.

The final test was the alarm bell.

"Ring ring ring!"

It worked perfectly.

My father had verified the truth about how the alarm clock worked.

In the 1980s he became a computer engineer.

I remember him sitting for hours in front of his PC, and how he used to fill up all empty spaces in the basement and his home office with all kinds of computer hardware.

He passed away much too early due to cancer in 2011.

Although I didn't inherit my father's understanding of technology, I got the same passion for diving deep into things, into the very core, and for understanding how things worked.

Social subjects and books have been two of my main interests, which is something I have from my mother.

She has always questioned things, and I'm exactly the same.

I discovered at a very young age how important it is to accept the truth.

I went to kindergarten from I was about two or thee years old.

When I was four, I was moved out of the unit with the small kids and to the unit with the big kids.

Some of the older kids started bullying me.

They shouted:

ā€œRune has red hair, Rune has red hair.ā€

The people who worked there were unable to help me.

So, I found myself in a hopeless, prison-like situation.

I complained to my mother, and told her that I wouldn’t go there anymore.

She tried to comfort me, and said:

ā€œIt isn’t true what those kids say. You don't have red hair, it's copper brown, and it's beautiful."

The only problem was, this couldn't solve a damn thing with the bullying.

And of course, it didn't.

The day after, I went to the kindergarten as usual, and the bullies pushed on.

It's quite possible that I tried to yell back at them:

"It's not red, it's copper brown!"

If I did, it probably just made things worse, because it would be a confirmation to them that their bullying had the intended effect on me.

However, something must have clicked inside me that day.

When I came home, I met my mother in the entrance.

I ripped the beanie off my head, and shouted angrily to her:

ā€œNo, mama, look at this! It’s true - my hair is red - just see for yourself!"

When I came back to the kindergarten the next day, I had accepted my faith.

They had blond, brown or black hair.

My hair was red.

These were facts, nothing more.

They noticed that I suddenly was OK with it.

And then they lost all interest in bullying me.

Accepting the truth had made me impervious to their insults.

My mother told me this story many times, when I was a child, and also after I became a grown-up man.

She says she's convinced that it was a life-changing experience for me, and that it would shape my personality.

Looking back, I think I realized that ignoring the truth comes at a significant cost.

And just as important, I think the episode taught me that embracing the truth could set me free.

Today, it makes me sad to think back on the fact that my father and I often disagreed on many things.

We had very different ideas about the relationship between individuals and the state.

What started as civil conversations, too often ended in quarrels.

It felt like our opposing opinions on politics drove a wedge between us.

If he had lived today, he probably would have developed a fascination for how Bitcoin works.

He wouldn't have trusted Bitcoin, just because others said it's immutable.

I'm confident he would have picked apart every little piece of the technology, in an attempt to verify Bitcoin's promise.

Just like I try to do with the socio-economic aspects of it.

If my father had been alive today, I suspect Bitcoin would have brought us closer together.

He could have explained the technology for me, and I could have explained Bitcoin's socio-economic functions to him.

Possibly, he would have realized that I had been right when I challenged many of the things that the powers at be want us to believe.

It's just guessing, of course.

But it makes sense, because it seems to me that Bitcoin attracts truthseekers like a magnet.

And at the same time, Bitcoin forces us to search for the truth together, instead of quarrelling about the correctness of something that others have fed us with.

***

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Great post.

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KYC'd Bitcoin isn't KYC'd anymore once we start trading in Bitcoin, to and from our own wallets. This is a bandaid on a cracking dam. And on the other side of that dam is a whole lot of freedom.

Bitcoin is nothing less than the complete destruction of the old system, through obsolescence. Leaders of finance have controlled the world for centuries, possibly thousands of years. They're the cause of every war, including both world wars. The Rothschilds are the reason Israel exists.

Mankind is dawning on a new age of peace and prosperity, and governments that serve us, if only we can prevent the old regimes from blowing up the world for like 5 more minutes. But expect turbulence.

It's amazing what things are infinitely better without centralized control.

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Can you not anymore? I think you still can, it just has to be shipped to an FFL.

Unity is overrated. Let people divide as they please. Freedom of association.

That will be 3 times more people than those that overthrew the British in the American Revolutionary War.

Oh I think I understand what you mean. The 10% will fight with the 90% about making changes or something? In that case, I think it's far more likely that they just didn't understand the analogy.

The "chosen people" will literally bomb hospitals, aid workers, and embassies, and call everyone else a terrorist while doing it.

Then all the central bankers and all the central bankers men went to Israel where they thought they'd be safe. But the United States stopped supporting Israel, and the Palestinians through all the Israelis into a lake of fire, and the rest of the world lived happily ever after.

When my cat had surgery I put her in a premie onesie with the bottom cut off so she could avoid the cone. I thought that would be more comfortable but she just flopped around like a retard until she got out of it. Cats just don't like having things on them.