If you think there will be LESS entrepreneurship/risk-taking and LESS investment in massive profitable long-term society-improving projects in a hard-money-enabled world where we don’t have a big group of child raping retards stealing and debasing everyone’s savings and thereby jacking up their time preference then idk what to tell you.
Ask the engineers and the planners of high speed rail systems and nuclear power plants how difficult their jobs would be without government intervention and let me know what they say.
Government has and always will be a wrench in the engine of society.
Is this nostr:npub14mcddvsjsflnhgw7vxykz0ndfqj0rq04v7cjq5nnc95ftld0pv3shcfrlx ‘s alt account?
Fire, dogs, guillotines… just send the message.
I figured it was unlikely you didn’t already have it on the list 🤙🤙🤙
I only want to see a post once regardless of how many of my followers have reposted it. Or at the max three times.
Especially if it’s a 30-page novella that takes 10 swipes to get passed, which in my mind is a separate issue that should also be addressed.
I appreciate you nostr:npub1xtscya34g58tk0z605fvr788k263gsu6cy9x0mhnm87echrgufzsevkk5s and I could never do what you do. Not trying to be a dick. Just some user feedback. I think cleaning up these two things would do wonders for the timeline experience.
What about a desire for justice?

Wazzup my fellow guillotine advocates?
I mean if you’re being honest though, did it kinda feel good a little bit?
Another soft spot in the network was publicly poked yesterday (Chun returning the fee).
Bitcoin will adjust, adapt, and come out the other end stronger and more resilient, as is tradition.
American history in the twentieth century has recorded the amazing achievements of the Federal Reserve bankers. First, the outbreak of World War I, which was made possible by the funds available from the new central bank of the United States. Second, the Agricultural Depression of 1920. Third, the Black Friday Crash on Wall Street of October, 1929 and the ensuing Great Depression. Fourth, World War I. Fifth, the conversion of the assets of the United States and its citizens from real property to paper assets from 1945 to the present, transforming a victorious America and foremost world power in 1945 to the world's largest debtor nation in 1990. Today, this nation lies in economic ruins, devastated and destitute, in much the same dire straits in which Germany and Japan found themselves in 1945. Will Americans act to rebuild our nation, as Germany and Japan have done when they faced the identical conditions which we now face - or will we continue to be enslaved by the Babylonian debt money system which was set up by the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 to complete our total destruction? This is the only question which we have to answer, and we do not have much time left to answer it.
Eustace Mullins, 1991






