Am sure you missed what went down at @AdoptingBitcoin Conference 2025 in El Salvador and one of our first ever book donations at Biblioteca Nacional de El Salvador, @BINAESπ But our Novemberβs newsletter got you covered!π
Initially, when I thought of financial literacy and generational wealth I thought I needed a good accountant to help figure things out. Just imagine generational wealth starts small: a weekly sat, a shared lesson here and there, a family and society that learns together, and planning, might be the simple keys. Thatβs how futures start getting built.
Exactly What Hermann from @BitcoinEkasi Says during @Africa Bitcoin Conference! High Bitcoin adoption, increase in fully functional and stable circular economies and well, high #spedning and transactions in the long run.
The Moms Meet-Up at Tango Gardens was such a delightful gathering! The moms shared their inspiring journeys while engaging in playful, joy-filled activities that, in Kenyan tradition, might be considered childish β undefined but they brought so much happiness and togetherness.
The Moms Meet-Up at Tango Gardens was such a delightful gathering! The moms shared their inspiring journeys while engaging in playful, joy-filled activities that, in Kenyan tradition, might be considered childishβbut they brought so much happiness and togetherness.
π° The new Bitcoin Babies monthly newsletter is out now!
We're recapping the past month with all the latest updates on our program, the circular economy, and our foundation's progress. Your support makes it all happen.
Curious to see what we've been up to? Start reading now! π
This is how delightful merchants that #AcceptBitcoin look like!
While 15 seems a good number of merchants to help build a circular economy, we aim for more in the coming years. Because a fully functional circular economy thrives when #Bitcoin circulates within it.
According to the Oxfam inequality report, this is where we stand as women in Kenya:
-We earn 35% less than men β women earn only 65 cents for every shilling a man earns.
-Only 13% of us legally own agricultural land, and among the poorest families, this drops to just 4%.
-We are 5 times more likely to engage in unpaid care work, limiting our opportunities for paid employment and economic independence.