BOOM: Trump just ATTACKED a reporter standing up for Epstein victims, but she REFUSED to back down. Trump: Epstein... it was a conspiracy against me. I think it’s time for the country to get on to something that people care about. Kaitlan Collins: What would you say to the people who say they haven’t gotten justice? Trump: You are the worst reporter. Collins: What do you say to the survivors? Trump: This is a young woman. I've known you for ten years. And you know what? I don’t think I’ve ever seen you smile. Collins: I'm asking about the survivors.
#bitcoin #gold #freedom #freedomtech Trust and Certainty A country holds gold as the ultimate safeguard of trust in its monetary system. And yet, this gold often does not even rest within its own borders, but in the vaults of other nations. As long as trust remains intact, this seems unproblematic. But the moment doubt arises, a process begins that can take years — to retrieve, verify, and secure what is already considered “owned.” That alone reveals how deeply this system depends on trust: trust that another country will preserve and release this wealth when asked, and not make other use of it in the meantime. Bitcoin offers a radically different idea. Whoever holds their own keys, holds their own value. There is no foreign vault, no institution to petition, no multi-year transport of assets across borders. The value exists where the owner holds it. And when it is sent, it moves directly, globally, within minutes. In this sense, gold can appear as a relic of a world built on political and institutional custody, while Bitcoin sketches a world in which trust is replaced by cryptographic certainty.