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markonyte
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Salaam namaste Brotha Numsie

Take a one way ticket to Israel, hyper capitalist commie marxist degenerate

Replying to Avatar HoloKat

They fkd up on that 13th and 14th gen cpus trying to keep up with amd now there cpus are crashing left right and center

So you single out white people for no reason i guess. Most bitcoiners didnt want to get involved with ukraine nor do i think they want to give money to israel. Whites are too busy trying not to get replaced in there own lands but i feel for your gentrification problems though must be so hard on you

He's not going to deport you..... we'll vouch for you.

I thought i saw this function months ago

Say what you want about Kamala Harris..... she got that stingray coochie

Many people don't think its a big deal to divulge this, so they ask. They just need some educating

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

You tolerate other people ten times more if you know ahead of time that you have a shared principal with them. You'll disagree around the margins but realize you're basically on the same page.

Back in like the 1950s USA, people felt that sense with their neighbors, church, and even government. They might disagree on things, and there were some shitty downsides to that (anyone not in the majority) but they were like, flag-waiving Americans. So a question is how to recreate that, and more broadly than it once was.

And ironically, as shitty as the authoritarian economic and legal situation is in many ways, people in Egypt today feel that way today. There's a substantial sense of unity or shared ideals, aside from a small percent of extremist outliers. That's true for many developing places.

One of the major strengths of the "bitcoin community" is this set of shared identity. Bitcoiners will loudly argue with each other, but they know they have at least one foundational shared agreement. That's healthy.

There were times, at like conference side-parties, where I noticed I was standing in a friendly discussion circle with like an anarcho-capialist to the literal right of me, a progressive to the literal left of me, a human rights advocate from an authoritarian state in front of me, a billionaire capitalist with pragmatic politics also in front of me, and us standing in a circle happily talking and basically friends. It's because we have at least one shared major principle that brings us there. A unifying factor for which, as we enter discussions for which we might disagree, we know we can build common ground upon.

As certain countries get hollowed out, and as neighborhoods become more remote and distinct, I continue to believe that local in-person bitcoin communities are absolutely profound. Regular meetups help exchange local fiat with bitcoin P2P, help educate people on the latest tech, help bring people from different viewpoints together, etc. Absolutely essential.

Maybe because in Egypt they are all ethnically Egyptian or if not something close like Arab or Black African? If USA was still the same demographics like it was in the 70s it would still have unity even with all the pressure from media to divide

Im not too bothered either. Depends who is saying it and how valid it is