Day 101 📖 #ALLINBITCOINBookClub
Reading The Bitcoin Standard — 2.5 pages/day until Dec 21 🎄
A blockchain is only useful when it replaces trust. Otherwise it’s just a slow, costly database.
(Today: pages 258.5–260)
IT’S LIVE.
My conversation w/npub1797h37mc98f6363m5nysxd0t2swuz7nxq4z83saw77em3czld6xqvuar68 —10 years of chaos, conviction, and Bitcoin history.
From Soviet Latvia to Bitcoin Legend.
If you care about #Bitcoin’s roots, you’ll want to watch this one to the end.
#Debifi @Hodl Hodl #Honeybadger
🔁 Repost
Full episode below 👇
Day 100 📖 #ALLINBITCOINBookClub
Reading The Bitcoin Standard — 2.5 pages/day until Dec 21 🎄
Decentralization is expensive and only justified when it removes trust.
(Today: pages 256–258.5)
24 HOURS UNTIL IT DROPS.
Tomorrow we drop another great episode. Guest: npub1797h37mc98f6363m5nysxd0t2swuz7nxq4z83saw77em3czld6xqvuar68
One of our most revealing conversations to date.
Follow and turn notifications on so you don’t miss it. 👇
Day 99 📖 #ALLINBITCOINBookClub
Reading The Bitcoin Standard — 2.5 pages/day until Dec 21 🎄
Human-led currencies can’t be neutral. #Bitcoin’s decentralization is its entire edge.
(Today: pages 253.5–255)
Day 98 📖 #ALLINBITCOINBookClub
Reading The Bitcoin Standard — 2.5 pages/day until Dec 21 🎄
Shitcoins can copy #Bitcoin’s code, but not its decentralization. Without true independence, they can’t compete as sound money.
(Today: pages 251–253.5)
Sunday is perfect for catching up 🟧
“You don’t understand censorship… until it happens to you.
That’s when you realise why #Nostr matters.
On Nostr, that’s impossible.”
Full convo w/ @Derek Ross below 👇
🔁 Repost to push this further.
This should terrify anyone on Facebook, Twitter, IG, or TikTok.
For 20 years we’ve signed away our identity with a password, your photos, your posts, your name… not actually yours.
#Nostr changes that.
@Derek Ross explains👇
Full convo below👇
🔁 Repost—people need to hear this.
Day 97 📖 #ALLINBITCOINBookClub
Reading The Bitcoin Standard — 2.5 pages/day until Dec 21 🎄
Bitcoin survives every attack because demand for freedom keeps rising. Only better money could replace it.
(Today: pages 248.5–250)