We own a building in the mountains of southern New Mexico that has been used as a general store for many years. We are thinking about selling it, but I'm wondering if there is anything Bitcoin related I can do with it.
I don't care what the "majority of Americans believe". We have been lied to for so long it's impossible for most people to know what is true and they are too busy trying to survive the collapse of the dollar to learn to think for themselves.
I went to Benmark yesterday, it's our local plumbing supply store, and I was there to pick up a rainbird sprinkler head. I had a Bitcoin shirt on, and the guy behind the counter asked me about it. He was interested enough that we had a pretty in depth conversation about Bitcoin and the dollar. The customer next to me at the counter told me he has some Bitcoin but he didn't know what to do with it. He was getting calls about moving it to a wallet and people offering to "help" him do it. Thankfully he had not let anyone on his computer. I invited both of them to our next meetup. It was great to have an unsolicited conversation about Bitcoin at the plumbing store.
There are days I ask myself, what if I'm wrong about Bitcoin. The most common answer I come up with is then I just end up working until I die. Just like the rest of the world.
Just us (Gadsden Buildings) and the Escort service in all of West Texas on btcmap.org image
I don't know what a Buzzbot is.
When we were in New Zealand and Samoa everytime we used our credit card to pay we had to pay like a 1.9% fee. Which makes total sense, why should the business pay for that for your convenience? Why is it the other way around in the US where businesses just eat the credit card processing fees? image
"Touch grass? In West Texas, that’s a trap! Our ‘grass’ is a minefield of Bur Clover, Field Sandbur, Lawn Burweed, Khaki Weed, and the evil Goat Head. One step on those spiky terrors—especially the Goat Head—and your sole (yep, foot pun) will regret it." image