@Bitbello@sunny051488 I'm with you, fellow Bitcoiner BTCbello! It's good sometimes to take breaks from all of our obsessions. It clears thoughts. I'm confident that BIP-110 will succeed :) It's definitely going to be a "hot" summer, let's all stay tuned...
@mattkratter That's why I tell fellow Bitcoiners to not block people - even when some behave like total scumbags. There can be no communication and sharing of ideas when people block people. I get it, the block button is tempting, but it's basically our ego overarching on our rationality.
@Bitbello@sunny051488 Hello, BTCbello, it's been six months! Do you still feel like on November 30, 2025? I think we ran a few strides with BIP-110, and slowly people are realizing that Bitcoin is money - not data. I think we're heading in the right direction for September.
@BitcoinMotorist@michael4nh My condolences. Not sure who he was, and I don’t think I ever interacted with him, but I see I am blocked by him, so I guess he was a Core guy?
@AdamSimecka It’s not red vs blue, it’s orange vs green. The sooner everyone realizes this, the sooner we get rid of the worldwide fiat monetary system.
@glxyresearch@TheBlueMatt@galaxy__brains BIP-110 rejects the large file storage use case.
for context, in the last 90 days:
- 45% of the blockspace filled with arbitrary data.
- 82 blocks full of inscriptions
- 53 transactions with large OP_RETURN payload
At the moment, the "joke" is more on the blockchain it seems...
Digital ID + CBDC infrastructure = the ability to turn your money on and off based on behavior.
What you’re seeing in the UK is the political layer being used to install the financial control grid. No one voted for it because if they explained what it actually does, it wouldn’t pass.
The playbook is simple:
1. Introduce Digital ID as ‘security’ or ‘efficiency’
2. Link it to payments and benefits
3. Use AI and data to enforce compliance
If you want to stop it, the fight isn’t just political. It’s financial. Keep your assets outside the system, use cash, and build local economies that don’t require permission to transact.
Otherwise, you’re not a citizen anymore. You’re an account.
@CaminaDrummer4@hodlonaut@knutsvanholm Bingo. Same with all the big mainstream influencers: they know about the issue and know it’s a big deal. But none of them ever discuss it. It’s “trust Core” and they don’t even reply to the Bitcoiners who do bring it up - like Knut and Hodlonaut.
@BitcoinMotorist Didn’t we go through the “miniscript” FUD last December already? IIRC, it was found by @dathon_ohm that it was one super extreme, intentionally “designed to prove me wrong” case by 1 guy (maybe 2, I don’t remember exactly).
I remember when I was in Italy in the ‘70s/’80s/‘90s, everybody was “gradually then suddenly” a multi-millionaire. I remember my father purchasing a “Giulietta” car in the early-mid ‘80s for 11 million lire. Massimo Boldi (a famous comedy actor of the era) earned 500 million lire per movie. An average apartment in Rome cost 100 million lire. Everyone was a millionaire, and it was all fake, fughezi, fugazi fairy dust. Well, at least the central bank was sovereign. Now it’s even worse - with the parasites in Bruxelles controlling the money of many euro countries.
Yup, I did the same for years on other platforms and blocked many people. I changed my mind after becoming a Bitcoiner. The block button, if we think about it, is just another tool for our deep ego to take over our rational mind. Freedom / being a Bitcoiner means letting go of the ego (even though some people can be really unbearable and the temptation to block is strong).