“They say that it’s not what things are, but what they could be, that matters. But what things are determines what they can be.”
— Ayn Rand
That’s why Bitcoin’s present reality sets the stage for its future possibilities.
Investing in real estate, agricultural land, or residential apartments today is like a naive salaried employee deciding to open a restaurant thinking it’s the easiest way to make money — well-intentioned but often naive about the risks, competition, and changing landscape.
We live in a world where people see no risk in putting money into Apple stock or market indices, yet feel it’s risky to save in Bitcoin—an open, decentralized, global, and permissionless protocol. It’s ironic that people consider risk-on assets as “safe” while treating a risk-off asset like Bitcoin as speculative. It’s an upside-down view of risk. Without a fundamental understanding, it’s hard to break free from this mindset. But the distortion between perception and reality will become more obvious over time.
In a world shaped by capital wars, the key is to own global assets—not local ones. Avoid assets like real estate or domestic equities that are bound by jurisdictions and local market dynamics. Instead, focus on assets that transcend borders and aren’t controlled by nation-states—like gold and, most importantly, Bitcoin. Bitcoin is the clear winner.
If you want to truly understand how the world is changing, talk to Bitcoiners. They have front row seats to the transition and a deeper grasp of the shift than most.
India will eventually embrace crypto—but likely about five years later than the West. That’s because Indians tend to adopt proven models rather than lead with early risk. Once crypto has been thoroughly tested, regulated, and much of the early upside captured elsewhere, India will step in. And in doing so, it will reward the early adopters who took the initial risk.
The story of money is a story about technological progress. There comes a point where people who adopted Bitcoin gains an unequal advantage, which then forces everyone else to adapt or lose.
People often worry that politicians might ban Bitcoin — but that concern is overblown. Politicians can influence things locally and temporarily, but technology can affect things globally and permanently.
Everyone must make an EXPLICIT choice about which network to store their savings on:
— The SWIFT network, built on legacy finance,
or
— The Bitcoin network, secured by proof-of-work consensus.
The choice may seem simple, but the consequences are profound. It’s an opportunity cost that shapes your future.
Think hard. Choose wisely.
Take the call.

Your Entire Life Can Change In One Year.
One year of focused daily effort.
One year of learning about Bitcoin.
One year of asking the right questions. One year of being misunderstood.
One year of thinking differently about money.
You’re one year away from people calling you lucky.
The goal is freedom.

Bitcoin is savings for those who think in decades, not quarters.
I always tell people: study Bitcoin before you buy it.
If you buy it without understanding it, chances are you’ll sell it the moment someone presents a convincing-sounding argument—even if it’s wrong. Without a strong foundation, anyone can take you for a ride.
That’s why I emphasize education first. It’s easy to say “buy Bitcoin” and back it up with flashy arguments—but over the long term, that approach doesn’t hold.
So I always say: study it first.
Every person who dismisses Bitcoin by saying it has “no intrinsic value” usually hasn’t studied it.
What makes platforms like Facebook powerful? A billion people use it. What makes X compelling? 300 million people use it daily. The value isn’t in the code—it’s in the shared agreement to use the protocol.
That’s the essence of intrinsic value: a widespread, voluntary agreement on a common standard. That’s what built the Roman Empire, what drove the railroad boom, and what now underpins Bitcoin.
Protocol adoption is intrinsic value.



