I understand that but would China pivot very fast?
I'm not sure they would - culturally they are much more stuck on gold than the westerners.
If - and this is a big if Trump times things correctly it could catch China off guard.
Just a thought
Is the Trump Administration making the markets unstable to drive foreign investment (especially China) to gold so that the US can than dump gold and buy Bitcoin and basically secure the next 100 years of a US dominated world order?
The more i think about it the more it makes sense - remember how China was into silver long after the west moved to gold and how that worked out for China?

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Thanks - this is regarding Mail Chimp not allowing the use of the word Bitcoin - basically.
GM âïž
The sad part is most people have no clue whats happening which makes them scared of the volatility and uncertainty in the markets.
This being the most serious market melt down since I've started to seriously understanding how the macro markets work.
Interesting things to monitor.
1. 10 Year treasury yield
2. The Carry Trade / DXY and especially the JPY vs USD
3. Stock market losing trillions in value and how that effects the US government receipts.
4. The Tariff situation and the geo-political game being played
Conclusion - A very volatile ride up for hard assets - especially Bitcoin
Keep Calm go touch grass and I'll see you on the other side!

Money printers are going to get fired up in a real hurry like we've seen many times before - buy bitcoin and wait.



GM âïž
Whats happening in the macro environment today?
Stock Market down - is Bitcoin starting to decouple?

Is it just me or do the French elites have a short memory?
The French Revolution, kicking off in 1789, was a seismic upheaval that flipped the script on Franceâs social and political order, and no group felt the sting more than the elitesânobles, clergy, and the monarchy itself. It started with a financial crisisâdecades of extravagant spending by kings like Louis XVI, coupled with costly wars and a tax system that let the aristocracy skate by while peasants got crushed, left the crown bankrupt. When the Third Estate (the commoners) demanded reform and got locked out of negotiations, they said "screw it," declared themselves the National Assembly, and sparked a revolution. For the elites, this was the beginning of the end: their cushy, privileged world was about to get torched.
The revolution hit the elites hard and fast. By 1791, the monarchy was guttedâLouis XVI went from divine ruler to a guy under house arrest, and the feudal system that propped up the nobles got dismantled. Titles and privileges? Gone. Land? Confiscated or redistributed. The clergy, whoâd been raking in tithes and living large, got slammed tooâchurch property was seized, and priests were forced to swear loyalty to the state or face exile. Then came the Reign of Terror (1793â1794), where the guillotine became the great equalizer. Nobles who didnât fleeâĂ©migrĂ©s who did were already losing estatesâwere dragged to the scaffold. Estimates peg around 16,000 executions, with elites disproportionately targeted; Marie Antoinetteâs beheading in 1793 was just the glitziest example. The message was clear: old status wouldnât save you.
The fallout didnăt stop there. Even after the Terror eased, the elites who survivedâwhether by hiding, fleeing, or swearing allegiance to the new orderâfound a France that didnât need them. The Napoleonic era kept some noble trappings alive, but the revolutionâs ideals of equality (at least on paper) and meritocracy gutted their automatic dominance. Wealth and influence shifted toward the bourgeoisie and military upstarts. For the aristocracy, it was a brutal demotion: from untouchable to hunted, then irrelevant. The revolution didnât just kill peopleâit killed a way of life theyâd banked on for centuries. Want me to zoom in on any specific elite faction or event?

From a Bitcoinerâs perspective, the worldâs problemsâcorruption, inequality, endless wars, environmental messâarenât just random; theyâre symptoms of a broken money system. Fiat currency, controlled by governments and banks, is the root of the rot. Bitcoin, they argue, isnât just a better moneyâitâs the fix because it rewires incentives, strips power from the corrupt, and forces a rethink of how society runs. Hereâs how they see it playing out.
### 1. Ending the Money Printer
Bitcoiners say fiat money is a cheat code for governments and elites. Central banks can print cash out of thin air, devaluing what you hold to fund whatever they wantâbailouts for buddies, bloated bureaucracies, or wars no one voted for. Inflationâs a silent tax, hitting the poorest hardest while the rich park their wealth in assets. Bitcoinâs hard cap at 21 million coins kills that game. No more infinite money means no more reckless spending. Governments have to live within their means, just like the rest of us. Less debt, less waste, less power to screw over the little guy.
### 2. Starving Corruption
With fiat, corruptionâs easyâprint money, funnel it to cronies, hide the trail. Bitcoinâs blockchain is a public ledger; every transactionâs there for all to see. You canât bribe someone or cook the books without leaving a trace. Plus, since no one controls it, thereâs no central choke point for crooks to hijack. Bitcoiners believe this transparency and decentralization choke off the slush funds that keep corrupt systems humming. Imagine a world where politicians canât just siphon cashâtheyâd have to actually work for it.
### 3. Fixing Incentives
Fiat incentivizes short-term thinking. Politicians juice the economy with cheap money to look good, then leave the mess for later. Corporations chase quarterly profits, trashing the planet because fiatâs time preference is ânow, not tomorrow.â Bitcoin flips this. Its scarcity and predictable issuance (halvings every four years) reward saving over spending, long-term planning over quick grabs. Bitcoiners argue this shifts society from a âconsume everything nowâ mindset to one that values sustainability and legacy. Better money, better choices.
### 4. Defanging War
Wars are expensive, and fiatâs the fuel. Governments borrow or print to bankroll bombs, knowing they can dodge the bill. Bitcoiners say a hard money like Bitcoin makes that impossible. No printing means you need real resourcesâtaxes or voluntary fundingâto fight. People wonât stomach that for endless conflicts. The theory goes: if war costs what it actually costs, weâd see less of it. Peace through financial discipline.
### 5. Empowering the Powerless
In corrupt or failing states, fiatâs a weaponâbanks freeze accounts, currencies collapse, savings vanish. Bitcoin gives people an out. Hold your private keys, and no dictator can touch your wealth. Send it across borders without begging a bank. Bitcoiners see this as a revolution for the oppressedâthink refugees, dissidents, or anyone crushed by hyperinflation. Itâs not charity; itâs a tool to level the playing field. A better money doesnât just fix the systemâit lets you opt out of it.
### 6. Reining in Inequality
Bitcoiners argue fiat widens the wealth gap. The âcantillon effectâ means new money hits the connected firstâbanks, elites, asset ownersâwhile wages lag and prices climb. Bitcoinâs fixed supply stops this insider advantage. No one gets a head start; value comes from work, not proximity to the printer. Itâs not a magic equalizerâearly adopters still got richâbut itâs a system where the rules donât inherently favor the already-powerful.
### 7. Forcing Accountability
When moneyâs infinite, accountabilityâs optional. Governments and banks can fail and get bailed out, no consequences. Bitcoinâs unforgivingâlose your keys, itâs gone; scam someone, the network doesnât care. Bitcoiners say this harshness is a feature, not a bug. It forces responsibility at every level. A world running on Bitcoin would punish waste and reward competence, from individuals to institutions. No more âtoo big to fail.â
### The Big Picture
Bitcoiners donât think itâs a utopia machine. It wonât fix human natureâgreed, stupidity, and power trips stick around. But they see it as a foundation shift. Better money aligns incentives with reality: finite resources, transparent rules, individual control. Itâs a reset button on a system they believe is too corrupt to reform from within. The worldâs a mess because moneyâs a messâfix the money, and the rest starts to heal. Thatâs the gospel according to a Bitcoiner. Whether it works? Theyâd say timeâand the blockchainâwill tell.

Bitcoinâs permissionless and borderless nature are core features that set it apart from traditional financial systems and contribute to its value proposition. Letâs break it down:
Permissionless: Bitcoin operates without gatekeepers. You donât need approval from a bank, government, or any intermediary to create a wallet, send, or receive bitcoin. This matters because it gives individuals full control over their moneyâno one can freeze your account, deny you access, or impose arbitrary restrictions. In traditional systems, banks or payment processors can block transactions or exclude people based on their policies or external pressures. With Bitcoin, as long as you have an internet connection and your private keys, youâre in charge. This autonomy is especially crucial in places where financial censorship or exclusion is common, like under authoritarian regimes or for unbanked populations.
Borderless: Bitcoin doesnât care about national boundaries. You can send it from New York to Nairobi as easily as across the street, with no currency exchange desks or international wire fees. This matters because it slashes the friction and cost of cross-border payments, which in traditional finance can take days and involve hefty charges from middlemen like SWIFT or remittance services. For example, migrant workers sending money home often lose 5-10% to feesâBitcoin can cut that to a fraction. It also sidesteps capital controls, where governments restrict money flowing in or out, giving people a way to preserve wealth or transact globally when local systems fail them.
Together, these traits make Bitcoin a decentralized, frictionless alternative to a world of siloed, regulated financial networks. They empower users by removing dependency on trusted third parties and enable a level of economic freedom thatâs hard to replicate with fiat currency. That said, they also come with trade-offsâlike regulatory scrutiny or volatilityâbut for many, the upsides outweigh those risks.

Interesting write up!
From a Bitcoin perspective, the FIAT financial systemâs underlying technology can be viewed as a centralized, trust-based framework that contrasts sharply with Bitcoinâs decentralized, trustless design. Letâs break it down:
The FIAT system relies on a network of intermediariesâcentral banks, commercial banks, payment processors, and governmentsâthat collectively manage and control the issuance, circulation, and validation of currency. At its core, this system is built on **ledger-based accounting**, but unlike Bitcoinâs transparent blockchain, these ledgers are private, fragmented, and maintained by trusted institutions. For example, when you deposit money in a bank, the bank updates its internal ledger to reflect your balance, but you donât have direct access to verify itâyou trust the bank to be honest.
The "technology" of FIAT isnât rooted in cryptography or distributed consensus like Bitcoin. Instead, it hinges on **legal frameworks and human-enforced trust**. Central banks, like the Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank, issue currency (e.g., dollars or euros) by decree, backed not by a tangible asset like gold (since the end of the Bretton Woods system in 1971) but by the "full faith and credit" of the issuing government. This issuance is often executed through mechanisms like **fractional reserve banking**, where banks create money by lending out more than they hold in reserves, effectively inflating the money supply. This process is opaque to the average user and lacks the algorithmic predictability of Bitcoinâs fixed 21 million coin cap.
Transactions in the FIAT system are processed through centralized clearinghouses (e.g., SWIFT for international transfers or Visa/Mastercard for payments). These rely on proprietary software and databases, not open-source protocols. Every transaction involves multiple points of trust: the merchant trusts the payment processor, the processor trusts the bank, and the bank trusts the central authority. Contrast this with Bitcoin, where transactions are validated by a decentralized network of miners using **proof-of-work** consensus, eliminating the need for intermediaries.
From a Bitcoin lens, FIATâs "tech" is vulnerable because itâs not immutable or censorship-resistant. Governments can freeze accounts, banks can fail, and central banks can manipulate supply (e.g., quantitative easing) without public consent. Bitcoiners often criticize this as a system of "IOUs" rather than hard moneyâyour dollar is a claim on value, not value itself, subject to inflation and devaluation. Meanwhile, Bitcoinâs blockchain ensures every satoshi is accounted for, verifiable by anyone, and secured by cryptographic math rather than human promises.
In short, the FIAT systemâs underlying "technology" is a patchwork of centralized control, paper-based trust, and legacy infrastructureâa stark foil to Bitcoinâs transparent, decentralized, and mathematically enforced design.

đ„RAGE TWEET OF THE DAYđ„
I hate the traditional banking system!
Got locked out of my amazon account due to a large purchase even then I have every security feature known to man kind on the account - authentication app, 2 factor verification via text and via email.
After this i get locked out of my credit card - or at least the payment didn't go through and I was told to call them - so i did and they had no clue about any of these recent transactions - 2 minutes later i try the transaction again and it worked.
People say lightning transactions don't work - that is a comical take to me at this point!
đ„The sooner this system burns down the happier i'll be!đ„
GM Nostr
đš Bitcoin Meetup - Today đš
Come join us for informal group discussions on anything and everything Bitcoin related
â ïžWhere - Bitcoin Warehouse 10363 104 st, Edmonton
â ïžWhen - March 29th - 3pm to 5pm
đ„1 Free Copy of "The Big Print" up for grabsđ„

I'm 40 today! But I don't feel a day over 39.
Omw to NYC for some weekend festivities at nostr:nprofile1qqstvj22wngc5t0687qvak06mt34spm3dl8pqu0ymcv7946xkmv8vpsppemhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mp0qy08wumn8ghj7mn0wd68yttsw43zuam9d3kx7unyv4ezumn9wshsr4hwhp !
Have fun Ben!
đïžHad a great chat with Alan Knotowski, former NASDAQ CEO & Army Ranger, on his Bitcoin Wealth Modelâthe ultimate cheat code to escape the rigged system. He breaks down why the Fed isnât federal, how elites trap you in debt, and much more... đ„ Full episode link in comments âŹïž
https://video.nostr.build/998d7977fe8662d270601faac1022099112579f0333396ba8b175548addbc22d.mp4
Great Pod!
Highly recommend it
Edmonton Bitcoin Meetup - March 2025
Hey Bitcoin fans and curious minds! Join us for the Beyond Bitcoin Meetup at Bitcoin Warehouse @ Mercer's (10363 104 St NW, Edmonton, AB) on Saturday, March 29th, 2025, 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM MST. No dull talksâjust lively group chats on Security & Privacy, Bitcoin Philosophy, or Bitcoin 101. All levels welcome!
Details:
When: March 29th, 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Where: Bitcoin Warehouse @ Mercer's
Special Giveaway: We're giving away a copy of Lawrence Lepard's hot new book - The Big Print: What Happened to America and How Sound Money Will Fix It - a must read whether your just starting out on your Bitcoin journey or a seasoned Bitcoiner
Bring your crew, questions, or curiosityâEdmontonâs Bitcoin scene is buzzing, and this is your spot to dive in. Depending on the crowd, we might split into tables for different vibes. Donât miss itâletâs make it a blast!





