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Toby McMann
cfc09e2c78fe9d5566c6c0f85cfd433dde0c95ec40b44e12a1ecf900fc373afd
Bitcoin enthusiast | Nostr only Nosce te ipsum

You are crushing it. A rare combination of truth, technical prowess, courage, integrity, and ability to self assess, innovate, and correct. You are impressive, and strong, and have earned trust. You are building legend. People are listening. I just wanted to say thanks on this fine day.

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

So nostr:npub1qny3tkh0acurzla8x3zy4nhrjz5zd8l9sy9jys09umwng00manysew95gx gave an absolute masterclass on the problems with Musk's current Twitter approach on WBD, starting at the 17m mark. It's a great advertisement for Nostr and I recommend everyone watch it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ms-dE6aasA

I've been retweeting or reposting Odell's various observations on this topic for a while and so I'm happy to share this too, including on Twitter today, even as a filthy blue-check myself.

Where I disagree with Odell (slightly) is on tactics. He thinks people should give up blue checks in protest. And that's a very fair position. I don't disagree, especially for someone like Odell with a purist position and a generally cypherpunk audience.

But I think there are multiple successful paths on this. I have always been a Twitter fan, and my normie audience is there. I wanted to be able to pay for better UX and anti-impersonation defenses for years before they became available. Just because Musk is running it doesn't mean I won't pay for helpful services, especially if they protect my audience. Real people lose money to Lyn Alden impersonation scams if they can't tell my account from others, and I directly hear from them when it happens. It's always heartbreaking.

So, I'm on the offensive, not the defensive. The way I view it, unless or until someone censors me on Twitter, they're locked in there with me, rather than me being locked in there with them. If having a blue check reduces the success rate of impersonation scams and amplifies my reach at calling out Twitter's problems, I'll have the blue check. What I absolutely *won't* do is change what I say based on a blue check. If anything, I purposely overdo it to the opposite and exaggerate my criticisms on purpose to push back against platform incentives.

Two simultaneous approaches:

1) Call out the problem on Twitter. Don't give Musk a pass. Point out that a pro-freedom, pro-anonymity view doesn't match with what is going on there. Don't let his rhetoric disguise his inaction. If Twitter cares about freedom and anonymity then they will offer a paid option that doesn't require identity (e.g. the "orange check" bitcoin payment.) Until something like that, they are LARPing and are fair to criticize as such.

2) Have your foot here on Nostr and on decentralization technologies generally. In the long run, I think this is the future. And more importantly, I hope it is.

You and all the others who use the "my normies are on Twitter" defense are a) underestimating your value proposition, and b) underestimating your audience. Lead, and don't compromise. You will be stronger and happier and more successful in the end. And ODell isn't going solely nostr because his audience is cypherpunks, and he can therefore get away with it. He's doing it because it is right. His base is growing stronger and larger, and is more diverse than you think. He is winning.

The supply of base (fiat) money for the Top 50 countries is roughly $27Tn.

Gold reserves held by the Top 50 countries is $1.8Tn.

The ratio of base fiat to gold is 15:1.

The BRICS and US have roughly the same base money supply, around 5.5-6Tn. What happens if the BRICS adopt a gold standard?

Replying to Avatar Dylan LeClair

Disinflation is Here, What Could It Mean?

Long form post:

1) Disinflation is in motion. Sufficiently tight Fed policy is doing it's job, as evidenced by 1m & 3m annualized sticky CPI decelerating meaningfully. Focus from market participants should be shifted from inflation to the reality of the tightest monetary policy in fifteen years. (see chat #1)

2) High inflation, particularly in the core basket (ex. food & energy) masked the effects of the fastest tightening cycle in history - a tight labor market fueled the flames for higher wages, second half of the inflationary impulse wasn't energy driven, it was instead fueled by wages in a tight labor market.

3) Real yields (using both trailing 12m inflation and forward expectations) are the highest they have been in decades. This isn't the 1980s, debt levels don't allow for sufficiently positive real yields for long before things start to deteriorate. (chart #1)

4) Take a look at previous Fed tightening & cutting cycles. There is a reason that much of the pain in equity markets is felt after the Fed starts cutting. Is the Fed causing distress by lowering interest rates? Obviously not, they are merely attempting to ease the pain from the second and third order effects of sufficiently tight monetary policy.

Look at when 2y yields topped in previous cycles (2y yields are essentially a proxy for the blended average of the next two years of Fed Funds) - look at what follows for equity markets/the real economy historically (chart #2)

5) Disconnect between bond markets and equity markets is large and growing by the day. It's understandable that equity earnings would be in favor relative to bonds during an inflationary regime due to pricing power advantage of equities, but with disinflation now underway, the growing divergence between equity multiples & real yields can no longer be ignored. This can also be seen through the equity risk premium (equities yields - bond yields, chart #3).

6) In equity markets in particular, the FOMO is real, with the latest round of buyers being lots of long only funds caught offside sitting in cash and plenty of retail from what I can see. 2021 bubble favorites are so back.

7) Looking at what's fueling strong earnings surprises and a resilient U.S. consumer, look partially to excess savings. COVID-era fiscal stimulus remains in the coffers of U.S. consumers, but the distribution of those excess saving is key to monitor. (chart #4)

“We estimate that the top income quintile currently holds just over 80% of excess savings. The 0-20% and 20-40% quintiles have already depleted their excess savings balances, while the 40-60% quintile will likely follow in the next month or so.” - BNP Paribas

With consumer savings running dry for all but the upper class, expect the resilient consumer of late to begin to feel some stress, with student debt obligations restarting at the same time as excess savings running dry, with possible/expected labor market weakness on the horizon as well.

8) Final Point:

I've admittedly been pleasantly surprised by the strength of the U.S. economy and the equity markets in particular so far in 2023.

The recent bull parade, especially following the cool CPI print this week, has been especially interesting to see. Meme stonks are back, Nvidia is the new Tesla, and shorting vol is once again a path to infinite riches, all is right in the world...

In the midst of it all however, I cannot escape the thought that some of the recent celebrations and fist pumping may be a bit premature.

If history is to serve as any sort of precedent, the cycle is far from over, as the fun doesn't even begin until the Fed starts to cut rates...

BBBRRRrrrrrr, until it breaks.

Heads up, might be time for you and Marty to update TFTC show notes? No mention of following you on Nostr, with Twitter still featured.

Replying to Avatar BTC Sessions

Boomers don't understand why Millenials often value their quality of life over job/salary. Boomers could raise a family on one middle income salary. Millenials struggle with two incomes. #bitcoin fixes this.

Another opportunity to be on the right side of history and humanity.

https://podcastindex.org/podcast/6455325

Dorsey captures the essence of Bitcoin: The power and fulfillment from dedicating your time and energy to something pure and good, and bigger than yourself. I tear up just thinking about it. #PV. #bitcoin