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Blue Collar Bitcoin
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Firefighters explore economics, finance & #Bitcoin (Josh & Dan shared profile)

Seeing people chain smoke cigarettes makes me genuinely sad.

Money is the preservation of hard work, and #BTC is fundamentally designed to preserve hard work better than any monetary technology in human history.

Replying to nobody

nostr:npub1a3hrd4wfawr578d5y5l0qgmh7lx8q6tumfq0h7eymmttt52veexqkcfg37 Thanks Josh and Dan for your contribution to the Bitcoin space, your amazing guests, entertaining and educational content, and the dick jokes. As a former first responder and long time student of economics and finance, I really appreciate hearing from real guys in the trenches that “get” it. Best of luck with the ‘cast and helping guys protect their pensions.

Thanks for listening! Appreciate the kind words.

Erik Casan @erikcason brings the PASSION this week on Blue Collar Bitcoin.

⇒Journey from Socialism to Anarchy

⇒ #Crypto camouflage for #Bitcoin

⇒Anarchy is NOT what u think

⇒Satoshi’s Legacy

⇒Badass farmers

⇒Erik's Militia

https://fountain.fm/episode/rpqUNoOyMnrKZi8rs71T

Replying to Avatar Reed

Remember that the opposite of overweight isn't just less fat, it's physically fit. Burn fat and build muscle. It's work, but there are ways to make it easier. Make healthy habits.

My healthy habits are easy (h/t nostr:npub1syrk054uwm7jqshnd6vzqsyspk2wn9skralanegpxadhm5mvdedqktjg4v and open source fitness)

• 10k steps - daily (phones tracks it)

• Workout 3x a week (3 hours a week)

• 1-ingredient foods (yes, carbs included - this one is definitely the hardest)

• 8-hour eating window (intermittent fasting fixes everything)

nostr:note1cstpylkwfep32rpggm87a00aj66qjlz0qkt3ft6700k30xgfyexqwvrz3t

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

Losing someone young, or losing an older person while you are young, is always hard.

When my father passed away from cancer while I was in my early twenties, it wasn't surprising at all. This fact had been coming for two years, slowly. But when it came, it hurt just as bad. And till this day it still hurts.

I was at work and got a call; it was a hospital. They said my father had been suddenly transferred to hospice, and it wasn't looking good. He probably had a week at most. He was in another state. The doctor transferred my father to me on the phone and my father was weakly like, "hey...." and I said hello, and I said I'm coming now. He said, "No don't... uhh.... don't worry... you are far and have work... I'm fine...." I asked then why was he transferred to hospice if things were fine. He was like, "uh well... well you know.... uh.... it's fine...." And I was like, "holy shit I'm coming right now."

So I went to my boss and looked at him. I had previously told him that there might be a moment where I would have to just immediately leave without notice, no matter how important the meetings and such, because of my father. So in this moment I literally just looked at him in the middle of a busy day and was like, "I gotta go" and he was like "of course". So I drove there, two hours away and went straight there. My father weakly said on the phone not to go, but he never sounded like that, so I went immediately.

I got there, and my father was in a hospital in the death ward, and the guy who greeted me was a pastor rather than a nurse, which was not a great sign. I asked what was going on and he told me straight up that this was not good, that my father was likely dying within a week. So he brings me to my father. My father is barely awake. His memories and statements are all over the place, but I just hold his hand and tell him that it's fine and I love him. I'm just there. He kept fading out and I was like, "it's okay, just relax". He could see me and talk in a rough sentence or two and thanked me for coming, but started to fade away.

And then after like 30 minutes, he went fully unconscious. He was still roughly gripping and shaking the bed headboard and so forth but wasn't conscious (and I was like, "Are you all giving him the right pain medicines, this doesn't look good", and even the pastor was like, "yes I have seen many and this is not comfortable" and I was like an angry 23-year-old so I went out in the center area like, "what do all of you even fucking do here?! He is shaking the bedframe and looks in pain, and even the pastor agrees. Holy shit." So I went and got medical attention to deal with this, but felt slow and ineffective at this. They gave him more morphine and it calmed him down, but while it relaxed him, he ultimately didn't wake up again.

I spent the next couple hours there, and then left and called various family members for my second round when he was unmoving. I said if they want to see him, come now, in the next day or two.

But a little while later after I left, I got a call and was told he had died. Only I (and the nurses) saw him while he was still briefly conscious.

During that call itself, I was stoic. I was like, "Yes, I understand. Okay." and then hung up. And then I sat there for like five minutes in silence... and then cried. I got over it quickly and we did the funeral in the following days. My father had been struggling with cancer for years, so this wasn't fully surprising.

But what lingered was the memory. It has been 13 years now, and yet whenever I am in my depths I still think of my father. The memory never gets weaker. I think of his love, or I think of how attentive he was, or how accepting he was, or what he would say about my current problems.

People we love, live on through us. We remember them so vividly, and we are inspired by them.

If he was a lame father, he wouldn't have so many direct memories 13 years later. But because he was a good and close father, he does.

All of those memories are gifts. All of them are ways of keeping aspects of that person alive in our world. It's how we remember them in the decades that follow. Their victories, their losses, and everything in between. Virtues they quietly did that you find out later. Virtues you realize only in hindsight how big they were.

Lyn, thanks for sharing.

Love the openness on nostr.❤️

Don't get fat. If ur already fat, get less fat.

We say this because we care about you. Fat people are limited in life, and statistically, they die much earlier.

Reaching ur potential doesn't include being 40 plus lbs overweight.

What still confuses you the most about #Bitcoin?

Five suggestions while explaining #Bitcoin to friends & family this Thanksgiving.🦃👇

1️⃣Chill out. Most people are turned off by overconfidence and hyper-verbal explanations.

2️⃣Stay humble. People been saying stuff like, “I told these idiots to buy last year at 16k.” Ok…yeah…but you were likely barking just as loud the year before at 59k. They are still skeptical; rightfully so.

3️⃣Start small & slow. Give them ONE digestible resource they might actually have a chance of looking at in the future.

4️⃣Consider actually listening. Let others talk. You don’t have everything figured out. #BTC doesn’t solve everything.

5️⃣Stay optimistic & hopeful. The world isn’t “completely f**ked.” That’s not most people’s experience or feeling, and it’s not a tone most respond to.

What’s truly paradigm shifting is a digital form of value with a COMPLETELY and PERPETUALLY reliable number of monetary units.

There is only ONE protocol remotely close to accomplishing this.

#Bitcoin

👊Fresh chum for the bullish water

Advice for those who have yet to experience a bull market. The advice we wish we had in our first bull market.

✅EDUCATION is key

✅Nobody knows the future

✅Lower time preference

✅Trading is masterbating

✅Mexican vacations

✅Shitting in the woods

https://fountain.fm/episode/AN7dxjGjD8eyiAq7M02c

Paul Tudor Jones describing the US fiscal position.👇

“You get in this vicious circle, where higher interest rates cause higher funding costs, cause higher debt issuance, which cause further bond liquidation, which cause higher rates, which put us in an untenable fiscal position.”

h/t nostr:npub1a2cww4kn9wqte4ry70vyfwqyqvpswksna27rtxd8vty6c74era8sdcw83a 👇

https://www.lynalden.com/october-2023-newsletter/

If u don’t understand #Bitcoin UTXOs and how to manage them, get started.

Tom Honzik has excellent articles on this subject.

https://unchained.com/blog/small-utxo-bitcoin-dust/

For 30+ years low interest rates incentivized more & more debt — debt servicing costs were almost an afterthought.

“More debt isn’t a problem” was a common mantra.

Oops…sh*t got really expensive really quick.

Over time, inhibiting deflation is inflationary.

Fiat enabled anti-deflationary monetary policies have compounded over decades and made today’s economy more fragile than it’s been in 100 years.

Hedge the system.

#Bitcoin

If u encounter someone who doesn’t at least acknowledge #Bitcoin is an interesting & potentially significant technological development, 1 of 3 things is true:

1️⃣They don’t yet understand what it is.

2️⃣They don’t understand how money actually works.

3️⃣They’re just plain stupid.🤷‍♂️