We're in a war.
And most bitcoiners, privacy minded people and (especially) crypto' boyz, don't realize yet, that they're sitting in a military tank created out of Papier-mâché. While sending each other memes, tokens and supporting their favorite football team.
Meanshile your fellow 'soleiers' are getting muted, chocked and thrown in jail.
I vouch to be the hardened soul, the uncompromised out-caller, a free mind, un-compromised defender of bitcoin as a solution.
Soms ppl won't like it, while they fester on the backs of others.
That's good.
You ain't seen nothing yet.
Een repost die velen nog eens moeten lezen:
Dear Nostr crew: what's the best and most handy blog-option for running a blog on nostr? Or just as a note? A good friend is trying to start a new blog as an anonymous witness to something, and we really want it to be nostr only and anonymous, manageable through a vpn and such. It's rather sensitive content.
We have launched our new podcast, Mr Obnoxious, and our first episode is out - UAPs, Simulation Theory and Consciousness with Matthew Pines.
https://www.mrobnoxious.com/episodes/matthew-pines-uaps-simulation-theory-consciousness-001
Over the next week we will be releasing the following:
- Gavin Sathianathan on the medical Cannabis industry and it's alignment with #Bitcoin
- Anna Chekhovich, covering Putin's Russia, corruption and the need for privacy with money
- Allen Farrington on the broken capitalist system, misallocation of human and financial capital and the need for a sound money standard
Thank you for all the feedback so far, loads of good stuff coming and this is the natural evolution of the show.
Big love 🤘

thanks, will give it a listen for sure
We are bitcioners, we outperform you.
(chart taken from a BEL20 stock specialist posting
his returns today)
I've recently switched from writing in Dutch and English, to using English more and more. Also the podcast itself will probably switch over time.
The reason is complex: I really want to let the voice of Belgian / Dutch speaking bitcoiners be heard. But there's zero, and I mean zero interest in that outside of our country. Not one podcaster internationally reached out.
Of course they're happy interviewing the same 10 big names over and over again, to the point where we even know their dog's favorite squeaky toy.
The community itself is also complex and infested (in my opinion) with blatant "soft scams" in the bitcoin space itself. The 10 plus brands of hardware wallets, the hats, the stickers, the shirts, the webinars and so forth.
As soon as you are an ad-free and sponsor free podcast, they don't see the "use" for you, or at least you're marginalized because you're "a real bitcoiner" and not someone who will speak fondly of whatever project is launched or book that's written.
So... maybe I need to double down on this, and go even harder and more radical in this approach I did on a local level, ... and be critical and calling **** out on a more broad level.
Because there's a lot to talk about, and up to now, I only did so in Dutch. I can't hurt my sponsors, because I have none, I can't hurt my advertisers, because I have none.
Aaron Swartz would have loved nostr.
Effectively the culmination of his life’s work.
1999: At the age of 12, he co-authored the RSS 1.0 specification, which is a format for syndicating web content.
2000: Swartz became a member of the Creative Commons organization, which aims to expand the range of creative works available for others to build upon legally.
2002: He founded the Infogami platform, which later merged with Reddit.
2005: Swartz joined Reddit as a co-founder after a merger with Infogami.
2006: He left Reddit and began working on various projects, including the development of the web application framework, "Open Library," which aimed to create a web page for every book ever published.
2008: Swartz was involved in the development of the "Demand Progress" organization, which focused on issues related to internet freedom and government transparency.
2010: He played a significant role in the campaign against the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA), advocating for internet freedom. He also developed a tool that allowed users to download large amounts of data from PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records), which was typically behind a paywall.
2011: Swartz was arrested for downloading a large number of academic journal articles from JSTOR with the intent to distribute them freely. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Massachusetts pursued the case against Swartz, and he faced the possibility of severe penalties, including up to 35 years in prison.
2012: On January 11, Aaron Swartz tragically passed away at the age of 26. He allegedly took his own life due to the pressure of government prosecution.
https://cdn.satellite.earth/43780cc29e73f0ac8a226aba6e3ca93422a9022c4b27422995e5b99127d8d900.mp4
another victim of fiat society
Criminalisation brrr
Fiat world is slowly but surely becoming unbearable.
WHOIS vulnerability exposed
I am Jack's wasted fiat.
Zouden die dat nu zelf geloven bij De Standaard?

#staatsbon wisdom 
GM from a fiat mine.
Yes... My sanity needs it.
Europe is going to print itself to oblivion.


