Another thought on this point, berries are pretty tasty (admittedly we have bread for that but even wild berries are still nice). Wouldn’t our ancestors have thought the same and sought out food they found appealing?
If I’m a hunter gatherer trying to find some game and I walk past a patch of bilberries I’m going to stop and eat some.
How do we know that they only ate seeds and berries if they couldn’t get meat / were starving? Surely the best we can say is that they did or did not eat them.
1) I thought our ancestors were hunter gatherers, meaning they would supplement their diet with seeds / berries etc
2) Have we just thrown the Mediterranean Diet out of the window now despite it leading to longer expected lifespan?
Hey Iranians, we hate the Arabs living here with us but you’re ok. Listen to my words, forget about what my actions actually say.
Finally finished listening to the interview today and found myself much more aligned with saylors view of the future than safedean’s.
A lot of the people still to come into Bitcoin will not hold the same views as the early adopters and will likely be happy to have someone else custody their Bitcoin for them, especially if the custodian pays them a yield on it.
Also, the scenario where everyone is just using Bitcoin and there is no more fiat traditional finance is more then likely so far off that we can’t predict what will change in the interim.
One think I know for sure is that if there is a demand for something in the market someone will fill that demand. If in the future there is a demand for credit when the world is in a Bitcoin standard someone will find a way to meet that demand.
Is it just me or does the user experience on the #NFL app get more shit every year.
It’s like every offseason they get together in a room and work out ways to make the user experience worse and monetise the app more.
Pretty sure the NFL makes enough money to not need to monetise its app.
Re housing: there are other options to either saving up or getting a loan. In the UK they have building societies that started as just what the name suggests. Everyone payed in some money each month and when there was enough money it would be used to build a house for one of the participants. This continued until everyone had a house. I’m not suggesting this is the solution just using it to highlight that there are other ways.
To your point about prices, I think this is a reasonable assumption that I’ve heard from @michalesaylor and @jeffbooth, they will fall to the cost of their utility value because they will be less desirable as a store of value.
I’m sure a lot of millennials and gen Z would take having to save for 10 years to buy a house over their current situation.
Tl;dr
Fellow Bitcoiners,
After nostr:nprofile1qqs2xs05tluhtr6hpgsmqqxp04898gayjlyrjlexcrndv8j6el784xqpr9mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wdmksetjv5hxxmmd9ugxrggw recent appearance on nostr:nprofile1qqsyx708d0a8d2qt3ku75avjz8vshvlx0v3q97ygpnz0tllzqegxrtgpzpmhxue69uhkummnw3ezumt0d5hsvge3uc podcast, I'd love to see content openly and constructively debating how credit, even if decentralized and peer-to-peer, won't work and isn't a good idea in a hyperbitcoinized world. Leave the higher morale, the ridiculing memes aside and let's constructively onboard more people with uplifting and convincing ideas. Because that question pops up a lot.
I may not like it, but Michael Saylor has a realistic vision for a fiat world based on Bitcoin, one that most of his fellow entrepreneurs will appreciate. What's the vision of a "true, full potential, decentralized, deflationary" Bitcoin world? Can you share some good material? nostr:nprofile1qqsd3086elxcwhgevfgmp60u66fjl9swytj960nvcjxgnzgh42tkgkcppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp07f6lda nostr:nprofile1qqsxu35yyt0mwjjh8pcz4zprhxegz69t4wr9t74vk6zne58wzh0waycpz9mhxue69uhkummnw3ezuamfdejj7qg4waehxw309ahx7um5wghx77r5wghxgetk9uq3samnwvaz7tmxd9k8getj9ehx7um5wgh8w6twv5hsj7hdd2
I appreciate the vision of nostr:nprofile1qqsg86qcm7lve6jkkr64z4mt8lfe57jsu8vpty6r2qpk37sgtnxevjcpp4mhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mqpp3mhxue69uhkyunz9e5k7qgkwaehxw309ahx7um5wghx7mnnv968xtn0wfnsurtqc6 a lot. Very different, but also Edan Yago has interesting thoughts.
Let's make it as imaginable as possible 🙏
Merci!
Example:
In a world denominating everything in Bitcoin. I am 24 years old and like to start with a great business idea, buy land and renovate a house. Where will I get the money from if I don't have it right now? But I am highly confident that with my youth and vigor I will produce value for society with my business. I can't? I have to work 10 years as an employee before, to be able to generate the capital myself before starting a business?
Alright, say somebody is willing to lend me 1 BTC for my business (peer-to-peer, self custodial, on an open decentralized protocol). The lender doesn't even take interest, but just wants the 1 BTC back over 10 years. With the appreciating value of Bitcoin vis-à-vis all goods and service - say still 10% per year - repaying is tricky enough. So, one may argue providing credit will become very unattractive. Still, the need for urgent economic activity will remain for people. How does a purely Bitcoinized world address these needs? Or in a world of abundance these needs won't be prevalent anymore?
I'm really open and think it's fun to go through these scenarios. All will happen for the best 🙏
In Islam interest is not allowed. I’m not an expert but as I understand it if you take a loan from the bank you essentially agree to split the profits of your endeavour that you borrow the money for.
To frame this in a bitcoin world. If I lend someone 1BTC to start a business we might agree to split the profits on a percentage basis until 1.1BTC has been returned to me.
Both parties can agree on a mutually acceptable profit split and total return
I think what he’s saying is those people who choose to not eat meat contribute less animals being killed than those who choose to eat meat. There is therefore a feasible moral high ground for them to take.
Compare this to people promoting eating more meat. I don’t see a reasonable moral argument for this and because of that it ‘feels’ a bit like an F you to those people who are choosing to not eat meat.
I’m not a vegan or vegetarian, I eat meat, but this is how I perceive the current diet landscape in which this ‘carnivore’ diet seems to be trending up.
That would be my thoughts as well.
Questions:
1- Is this ‘carnivore’ diet just a rehashing of the keto diet?
2 - can you really call yourself a carnivore if you are eating things that are not meat? Wouldn’t that make you an omnivore?
3 - is carnivore just a backlash against the veganism movement?
#asknostr
So am I right in thinking that the commonly accepted definition of a carnivore diet is just a rehashing of a keto diet?
Sunset in Sri Lanka from earlier this week.
#nature #photography

GM Nostur
GM. Roll on the September sale
Some kind of bot that just spam replies form loads of different npubs. Got me the other day and had to laboriously mute loads of accounts 😡




