In this video, Nate talks about people becoming their own anchors, practicing awareness, and creating local community resilience. He references gold and Bitcoin as speculation of collapse, but he doesn't fully recognize that Bitcoin isn't just another speculative asset—it's an emergent symptom of exactly the security failure he describes in his other videos. What he's seeing as separate threads are actually connected by a deeper protocol failure: we have not been able to secure our energy, our awareness, or our trust across space and time. And that's the crisis. The reason people are turning to Bitcoin around the world, especially in collapsing economies and authoritarian regimes, isn't because they want to speculate. It's because their local mitochondria—their individual and community energy systems—are under attack. They're reacting like any living system would: by reinforcing their membranes, seeking more secure protocols, and rerouting energy through trust-minimized channels. Nate understands that Dunbar's number limits human coordination. What he misses is that money is the language we use to scale trust beyond those limits. And that language is broken. Bitcoin, unlike fiat or even gold, reintroduces coherence into that language by tethering it to thermodynamic reality: energy over time. The confusion comes from ego entanglement. Many people advocate for Bitcoin from a place of fear, ideology, or greed. And others, like Nate, dismiss it based on those signals. But both positions are symptoms of the same fragmentation. It takes non-attachment to see the underlying signal—a distributed network of mitochondria repairing themselves, slowly reweaving the connective tissue of the superorganism. This isn't capitalism failing. It's a misalignment of incentives and information. The wisdom of crowds isn't broken—it's just been operating on corrupted feedback and appearing as an incoherent fragmented economy. Bitcoin restores signal fidelity by creating a decentralized, tamper-resistant layer of truth. One that aligns individual action with systemic integrity. Nate also makes many assumptions and projections based on a distorted view of probability—what he frames as Bayesian reasoning fails to account for black swan events. The reality is that Bitcoin itself is the black swan: a paradigm shift hiding in plain sight. It is the most rational choice for individuals trying to protect their local energy boundaries. When people are given access to a decentralized, secure, and incorruptible store of value, they will adopt it—not through speculation, but through survival. This radically shifts the probability landscape. Instead of assuming centralization is inevitable, we begin to see how decentralization can outcompete it. If intelligence, wealth, and value are measured by energy over time, and distributed securely across the network, then AI no longer centralizes. It cooperates. What looked like hyperinflation in the old system becomes hyperdeflation in the new—abundance distributed freely, not hoarded. This is the silent revolution. It isn't loud or ideological. It's biological. It's emergent. And it's already happening at the edges. You just have to dissolve the ego, zoom out, and listen to the hum of a new coherence forming beneath the noise.