Avatar
Valjean
b6b8b419e12a2d2b326c5013b8b0c371cb38a68615ff5eb7f81a10b7361cdab1
Replying to Avatar 21 Futures

FICTION PERSPECTIVE: A Lodging of Wayfaring Men by Paul Rosenberg

Though the book was written several years before the world knew of Satoshi Nakamoto, ‘Wayfaring Men’ has since become a legendary text for libertarians, freedom lovers, and bitcoin enthusiasts.

Paul Rosenberg has contributed to dozens of books and hundreds of blogs and articles in the freedom space. However, it doesn’t seem like Rosenberg has published many other fiction titles. Therein lies both the strength and weakness of the book: it is a powerful message delivered in the form of fiction, rather than rhetoric.

‘Wayfaring Men’ is a tale of two brilliant men and their quest to open free markets via the Internet in the early 2000s. James Farber, economist, and Philipp Donson, deep thinker and philosopher, battle the FBI and NSA to bring freedom to the world via the ‘New World’ of the Internet.

The two men aim to spread a completely private and encrypted online free market contained within a computer game. This will result in a global network of markets able to operate in a system outside of government regulation and forced taxation.

This story was produced during the era of digi-cash, e-gold and Liberty Reserve, currencies and Internet markets that failed or were shut down. What makes it resonate so much with bitcoiners is that the success of Project Gamma (the free market in the book) rests upon unbreakable encryption and decentralization.

The most exciting portions of the book document the heroes’ intelligent maneuvers and high-risk plots to throw the FBI off the scent. As the markets spread, the US and world governments employ more and more desperate means to stop the outflow of tax dollars and control of productivity. For example, Farber, Donson, and their teams of engineers have broken no laws, which leads the FBI to seek treason charges (in addition to spying on a host of law-abiding citizens).

It’s difficult to put this book into a genre. It’s part thriller, part life story of the main characters, and part Utopian manifesto. The elements of the story include romance, religion, loss, and geopolitical change. Yet most of these are not fully developed or explored, rendering the story itself ‘wayfaring’.

The villains of the piece are not entirely clear either. Two young FBI agents begin the hunt for those behind Gamma, dealing with the moral dilemmas of legality in different ways. The array of characters involved in the project seem crafted solely to deliver the project to its conclusion rather than giving the reader the ability to connect with their struggles and flaws. Perhaps the real hero is the concept of free trade.

The structure of the novel wanders too. The story sprawls across character backstories, years of progress on the project, truncated scenes, and unclear jumps in the time and location. Essays and opinion pieces which did not fit into the story are adjoined in a pair of appendices.

If you are a fan of flowing descriptions, deep character explorations, and literary craft, this is not the novel for you. Wayfaring Men delivers clear and functional prose to meet its lofty ambition — outlining our path to freedom.

But for all its faults, you keep reading. You root for the protagonists to succeed because you want the same thing as they do. Essentially, packaging this idea as fiction opens up a whole new audience — those who neglect reading heavy non-fiction manifestos.

Overall, I would describe this as a poor novel, but a powerful book. I found myself recommending it to a fellow freedom enthusiast straight after reading it. Those who are wired to more functional and utilitarian thinking will appreciate the story of how we wrestled freedom from the jaws of enslavement.

Philip Charter, Editor.

p.s. Thanks to nostr:npub1klkk3vrzme455yh9rl2jshq7rc8dpegj3ndf82c3ks2sk40dxt7qulx3vt for the recommendation.

check out his recent audiobook recording of Wayfaring Men if you please.

I am currently reading it, also thanks to nostr:npub1klkk3vrzme455yh9rl2jshq7rc8dpegj3ndf82c3ks2sk40dxt7qulx3vt recommendation. Honestly, I'm enjoying it so far.

Creo que el siguiente paso que necesitamos nosotros, los cripto anarquistas paranoides, es crear una economía circular en Bitcoin. ¿De qué nos sirve evitar que devaluen nuestra riqueza, la custodien, y nos controlen a través de ella, si luego no podemos gastarla?

Y aún teniendo una economía circular, siempre habrá cosas que será muy difícil comprar, como una casa o un coche.

Tengo claro que la autocustodia, la privacidad, etc, es el camino correcto, pero esos son temas que me preocupan y en los que creo que todavía nos queda un largo camino por recorrer.

Yo dejé de trabajar por cuenta ajena hará unos 15 años para dedicarme a hacer lo que me gustaba y, aunque he tenido muchísimas dificultades por el camino, nunca me he arrepentido de tomar aquella decisión. Al contrario.

En su momento me dió un poco de vértigo decidirme a dar el paso, pero sólo me duró media hora. 😊

Estuve como dos años levantándome a las 4:30. Quería probar las supuestas ventajas de productividad y mi conclusión es que eso no me hizo ser más productivo.

Ahora lo que hago es acostarme a la hora que me apetece, y dormir lo que me pide el cuerpo (no uso despertador), y me siento mucho más a gusto. También creo que ahora soy más productivo.

Lo que hace falta es que se extienda el pago de bienes y servicios en bitcoin. Entonces, en la mayoría de casos, no hará falta utilizar ningún exchange.

Creo que el problema principal siempre está al pasar a Euros. Por muy bien que hagas las cosas con BTC, si quieres comprar algo que tenga un importe un poco elevado, y tienes que pagar en euros, ahí es donde se pone difícil la cosa. Esto se solucionará, en parte, el día en que podamos comprar bienes y servicios con BTC.