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Bitcoinize All The Thingz

GM! Rare Truths in Leadership: A Parting Gift from Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy

It’s not often that a senior civil servant delivers a message so profound it resonates beyond their tenure. Dr. Vivek Murthy’s parting letter as Surgeon General does exactly that—offering wisdom and truth that we desperately need in today’s fragmented world.

One line stood out to me:

"If we are to fulfill our potential as a nation, we must prioritize strengthening our connections with one another. The foundation of our individual and collective well-being rests on a foundation of community."

In a society often fixated on individual achievement and efficiency, these words are a poignant reminder that true progress depends on the health of our relationships. Policies, technologies, and innovations may improve lives, but without genuine human connection, the foundation remains fragile.

Dr. Murthy’s letter challenges us to:

1. Prioritize community-building – Whether in public service, business, or personal life, we thrive when we work together.

2. Address systemic loneliness – This silent epidemic weakens the social fabric and must be acknowledged as a public health crisis.

3. Lead with humanity – Leadership is not just about results; it’s about the impact we have on those we serve.

Reading this, I couldn’t help but reflect: How often do we think about community as the cornerstone of our success? Are we doing enough to foster it in our workplaces, neighborhoods, and industries?

Dr. Murthy’s insights transcend his role as Surgeon General. They serve as a call to all of us—leaders, innovators, and citizens—to refocus on what truly matters: our relationships.

What steps can we take to strengthen the communities we are part of? How can we lead with connection and care?

Let’s carry this wisdom forward.

https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/my-parting-prescription-for-america.pdf

GM! HFSP...

Happy New Year and GM!

There will be 58 sats = 1 USD, if we convert the entire US national debt into Bitcoin.

There will be 6 sats = 1 USD. if we convert the entire world public debt into Bitcoin

One thing is for sure, there will be 1 sat = 1 dollar future at some point.

The US military made the internet you're used to.

On the Government Internet,

A domain name that they own and rent to you, is pointed to a Single IP address.

This means:

Any random f*ck can see what website you're visiting based on what IP address you're connecting to.

You can try to hide this with a VPN. But then the VPN can see, and the packets can be traced by on-lookers. And Tor slows you down.

Instead,

With Arweave, you post directly to the blockchain, and get a transaction hash.

Then your Arweave domain name is pointed to this hash.

Once this is done, your content is served from ALL gateways around the world.

This means,

If manually (or automatically with tools I can build) a blockchain DNS look-up is done,

Then your VPN can NOT tell what content you're seeing, because ANY content is available on that gateway IP.

Here's my point:

Arweave is the PRIVACY of a 2-hop Tor, with the SPEED of Cloudflare, and the SELF-CUSTODY of Nostr.

Add any of these RSS links to your existing podcast app. For example on AntennaPod: Go to "Add Podcast by RSS feed". Take my hand, let's walk through the gateway together.

New York: https://simplifiedprivacy.exodusdiablo.xyz

St Louis: https://simplifiedprivacy.ibrahimdirik.xyz

Germany: https://simplifiedprivacy.arweaveblock.com

Germany: https://simplifiedprivacy.kyotoorbust.site

Germany: https://simplifiedprivacy.oshvank.site

France: https://simplifiedprivacy.arnode.xyz

Singapore: https://simplifiedprivacy.araoai.com

India: https://simplifiedprivacy.arns-gateway.com

China: https://simplifiedprivacy.ar.owlstake.com

And hanshake.org give you a government free, uncensorable, unconfiscatable, decentralized Top Level Domain.

Replying to Avatar L0la L33tz

This is a community note proposed to Anita's post, and I think we need to talk about it.

The past years have brought a swarm of new people into Bitcoin, and these posts and comments show how hard we failed them.

First off, to address the majority of commenters in Anita's post that also like to spam my posts with the same nonsense (and then tell me that I'm stupid because I have a vagina (?)), in the Bitcoin network, you do not get to vote for anything. Your node allows you to control the rules that your node runs by. That's it. That's all it does.

There is no voting in Bitcoin.

Second, miners run profit oriented businesses. This means that miners follow the rules adapted by the nodes with the majority of economic activity.

In the event of a hard fork, it does not matter how many nodes you run – if the majority of nodes generating profit for miners apply new rules, those are the rules the miners will follow.

Bitcoin positions do matter to the extent that they generate economic activity.

I understand that the voting analogy can be helpful, so here's one that you can make: in Bitcoin, you vote with your feet.

If a large exchange was to signal for, say, a Bitcoin compliance fork, you can threaten to pull your money out – to the extent that the exchange still allows you to.

Lastly, what Anita is referring to in her post is Bitcoin's social layer.

Bitcoin is run by humans, and humans can be influenced.

Humans can be influenced by setting positive incentives, such as gov subsidies or developer grants, or by applying violence, such as threatening to throw the people running and building Bitcoin in jail.

This is a reality of human nature and should not be controversial - How to prevent such actors from influencing open source development is often discussed in the open source community.

If this topic interests you, look up Operation Orchestra at FOSDEM.

Let's remember that the memes are not always your friends.

Influencers spent the past few years so focused on "hyperbitcoinization" that half-truths about how Bitcoin works are now taken at face value.

Because so many "Bitcoiners" now genuinely believe things like "Bitcoin can't be censored," "one node equals one vote", "Bitcoin is for enemies," or "everything is good for Bitcoin," we have created a culture that believes paying attention to the creation of an adversarial environment is unnecessary.

These memes are mental shortcuts. They are true to some extent, but do not reflect reality.

In the case of my posts, next to the obviously snarky comments here and there, the majority of commenters are not posting these things with bad intentions - they genuinely think that this is how Bitcoin works.

If you are an educator, influencer, or in any other way have the capacity to better explain these things to people, _please_ take the time to do so.

The memes are fine to get people interested, but we all need to do a better job at combating these misconceptions. The future of BTC could depend on it.

We need to monitor and protect the human layer. We need to know and fund reliable core devs. We need to protect them from lawfare. We need to ensure that trustworthy people review code changes. We need to make sure that the best a state actor couldvdo is cause a fork in which we could ignore the statecoin and carry on with Bitcoin.

XRP is a scam.

GM! #Normies suffer from the "#fiat Stockholm syndrome." They love their debt prisons. #HFSP Normies! #Bitcoin can set you free. #DYOR! #OrangePill