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Daniel Batten
8fec426247845bdd26f36ae4f737508c15dbec07d43ce18f8c136ab9e35ac212
Focusing 2026 on coaching Bitcoin builders and leaders newsletter: danielbatten.substack.com

Did you ask via GreenpeaceUSA or ask him directly?

Might get a different answer if you asked now. He was very cautious about being not wanting to be “used” by either side of the debate at the time.

Now that things have settled down, a retrospective look at the event may be something he’s open to if you give an assurance about your intentions.

Troy and I had some good chats with him. He’s a smart guy with a big heart and a lot of talent clearly.

Replying to Avatar Frodo Jansen

Hi nostr:npub13lkyycj8s3da6fhndtj0wd6s3s2ahmq86s7wrruvzd4tnc66cgfqn4lpsy I believe you mentioned in the podcast that your data is publicly available. If that’s true, where can I find it?

If you go to www.batcoinz.com/BEEST you’ll see the methodology.

There is a link to raw data at the bottom of the page

“What does not kill me makes me stronger” — Friedrick Nietzsche about Bitcoin.

Landfills give you orange PPE gear

It’s as if they are just waiting for Bitcoin

It’ll cost more than loadbanks. But u like load banks it’ll earn bitcoin.

1.3kW per S9. 13 Th/s. So work out how many bitcoin that would mind for 500kW of S9s to get a sense for the time to get ROI based on different network hashrate and bitcoin price.

Replying to Avatar Zach⚡️

Listened to the What Bitcoin Did episode with @petermccormack and @dsbatten today. Very interest points were made, and I have a great deal of respect for the work both of them do.

The one red flag that went off in my mind was when Daniel mentioned that he had been interested in climate activism from as early as age 4, and had been a participant as early as age 10 or 11.

All children should care about the world they live in, but it undermines some of the credibility of the viewpoint of climate catastrophe when public schools are teaching it to children at such a young age. I know this because I experienced it. As a third grader, I was ahead of my classmates, and I was instructed to do side projects like create climate change PowerPoints and write a global warming book. I had barely figured out the tooth fairy wasn’t real and I was already being told that:

1. The Earth is being destroyed

2. We are causing it

3. We need to reduce our energy consumption to save it

Not only did this change my perception of reality and cause me a lot of anxiety and depression, but it also led to me forming a bias towards “doom science” where I believed a lot of negative predictions about the future which were not based on data or evidence, but instead based on what my teachers and community leaders would tell me.

Every winter, I would be upset and concerned if it didn’t snow enough, and every summer, I would worry about how hot it was. Not based on any logic, but instead based on the feeling that I still had from my childhood where I had been taught that “the world as we know it is going to end.” This continued up until age 20.

Discovering Bitcoin and the work of @saifedean allowed me to revisit the issue, and approach it again from both a scientific perspective, and a philosophical perspective. The mantra “Don’t Trust, Verify” empowered me to look further into claims of doom and see what was the perspective behind them.

I have since concluded that, no, in fact the world is not going to end. Yes, there are things we need to do to protect the planet we live on, and yes, taking care of the environment and the elements we emit into the atmosphere is a part of that.

But in terms of the problems that an everyday individual faces in our lives, the climate has never been empirical LESS of a problem than it is today. And to reallocate trillions of dollars, the labor of millions, and the focus of the world to climate alarmism has done real harm.

I don’t think it would have happened if it wasn’t for people like myself, Daniel, and many other children in my generation being fed prophecies of doom at a young age. Most people in my peer group simply accept that the world is being destroy and that it’s our fault as a fact of life, and I don’t think that’s right.

It’s incredibly hard to change a perspective one has held for their whole lives. Religions survive by getting children to believe their myths at a young age. Cults survive by getting members to believe their doctrines at young age. Horrible government regimes have historically all functioned by capturing the hearts and minds of the youth and convincing a generation of people to believe something which goes against their best interest, or against a just moral code in order to serve the interests of the state.

There are real problems which need to be studied and solved through the scientific process. I’m not claiming it is all a cult, but I am asking for two things:

1. Do not teach doom prophecies to young children. Even if they are 100% true, these problems need to be addressed by adults. It is horrible for the mind of a child to believe the world is doomed. It reminds me a lot of how certain religions use the concept of hell as a way to scare children into believing their teachings.

2. If you grew up believing a doom prophecy as a child, take some time and seriously examine it. At worst, you will validate the beliefs you’ve already had and waste a bit of time verifying.

Here is an interview I conducted in the Spring of 2009, at age 8, discussing global warming.

Happily my experience in the environmental movement has been one of hope and joy. These were and are the values of my peers also. Ever since I was a child and I saw how a small group of people could change the world for the better.

It’s that experience that made being part of the Bitcoin ecosystem a natural evolution

At long last I did my What Bitcoin Did interview with nostr:npub14mcddvsjsflnhgw7vxykz0ndfqj0rq04v7cjq5nnc95ftld0pv3shcfrlx

Was a great conversation. Peter’s a sharp guy. He somehow asks all the right questions, which even led to us starting the interview with footage on an NZ TV commercial.

Enjoy.

→ Patreon: http://bit.ly/3knnbHS

→ iTunes: http://apple.co/33lfVOC

→ Spotify: http://spoti.fi/2VsOnnG

→ Stitcher: http://bit.ly/2IQO8fX

→ SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/2CGSVQR

→ Fountain: http://tinyurl.com/43rdtnyd

→ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIE2mXme0gE

“The bitcoin mining industry is emerging as a player in the drive towards decarbonization”

— Bloomberg Intelligence

Complete the set. There’s one for every family member.

Load Bank be like Silicon Valley Bank

You put something in. You get nothing back.

Replying to Avatar Capt Stab

nostr:npub13lkyycj8s3da6fhndtj0wd6s3s2ahmq86s7wrruvzd4tnc66cgfqn4lpsy - get the load bank post on nostr….. that is crazy.

Good idea. Done

People who don't know grids or Bitcoin say:

"Bitcoin is waste by design"

Renewable operators say:

"Bitcoin prevents waste by design"

Here's how: ever heard of a Load Bank?

It's probably the only piece of hardware in the world that was designed to waste electricity.

Why?

Sometimes, renewable generators get asked to curtail energy suddenly.

Powering down can create a lot of wear and tear however, so many renewable operators prefer to send some of that power to a load bank, which does nothing other than chew up surplus electricity.

A 500kW Loadbank will set you back $28,490 and is a far more challenging e-waste conundrum than any Bitcoin miner.

https://genelite.com.au/cart/?add-to-cart=4289…

When renewable operators replace their loadbanks with even some old Bitcoin miners, they not only help secure a sound-money network, they earn Bitcoin.

Bitcoin Mining is the cure for waste-by-design, by obsoleting the need for Load Banks, and helping renewable operators become more profitable, so they can expand their operations.

“Bitcoin, once criticized for its environmental impact, is undergoing a significant transformation”

https://crypto.news/exploring-bitcoins-path-to-a-renewable-mining-future/