My 2nd account after calling an It a transvestite during the purge. Follow the breadcrumbs they will lead you to the truth- was Satoshi a Ford or Holden man?
@ShereleMoody I don’t hear you calling out Albo for giving $600 million to PNG for a new NRL club of which all players etc will be base in AU, paid AU equivalent income and pay no income tax to AU.
@blowingtom2 Wow! Fool Labor voters once, shame on you. Fool them twice then shame on them. I don’t think the people are foolish enough to fall for more Labor lies… so who exactly are the stupid uneducated moronic idiots???
Call me a fraud if you wish.
Call me a liar.
Call me delusional.
Call me whatever makes you feel comfortable.
The interesting thing is that none of those words matter once the code exists.
For years, many people have focused on stopping me, discrediting me, attacking me, censoring me, misrepresenting me, and preventing anything I was working on from ever seeing the light of day.
At one stage that may have worked.
At one stage much of this existed only in my head, in notebooks, in designs, in unfinished code, in prototypes, in ideas that had not yet become reality.
Ideas can be delayed.
Ideas can be suppressed.
Ideas can be ridiculed.
What becomes much harder to stop is a working system.
This month the code goes public.
Not a promise.
Not a roadmap.
Not a marketing presentation.
Code.
Working systems.
Architectures.
Protocols.
Implementations.
People will be free to inspect it, analyse it, criticise it, improve it, fork it, extend it, or ignore it.
That choice will belong to them.
The thing that many people seem unable to understand is that I am not asking anyone for money.
I am not selling access.
I am not selling licences.
I am not selling permission.
I am not creating a gatekeeper.
I am releasing it.
Free.
The irony is that this is the part many people will find hardest to believe.
Not the cryptography.
Not the distributed threshold systems.
Not the digital possession model.
Not the ability to create truly scarce digital goods.
The hardest thing for many people to understand is that after spending years building it, I am simply giving it away.
And that is why it is already too late to stop.
A secret can be suppressed.
An unpublished idea can be buried.
A prototype can be hidden.
A public implementation cannot be uninvented.
Once the code exists in the open, it belongs to history.
From that point onward, the question is no longer whether it can be stopped.
The question becomes what the world chooses to build with it.
The Housing Australia Future Fund (HAFF) was given 10 Billion dollars in 2023.
To date they have built... Wait for it.... 1,432 houses. That works out to about $7 million per house.
Well done Senator @ajamesbragg for this excruciating lesson in government departments building things.
@emilysnowau@csb02174941@rn_lilydale@AlboMP Exactly! But I know plenty of Indian migrants that came via Canada owned property back prior to migrating and still got the 1st home owner grant
@WhatTha58156527@blakenus@ClareONeilMP@grok I am a landlord… but my kids live in different cities and they have to rent too. You are such an ignorant selfish fuckwit that you don’t realise we are all in this together.
Imagine a world where the plastic in your wallet is a relic, a piece of history like a rotary phone or a damn horse-drawn carriage. No more debit cards, no more credit games. With BSV, stablecoins, and the systems built on top of them, the whole rotten foundation of credit-based systems crumbles. Debit cards? They’re just credit wrapped in a prettier lie.
And what happens then? The 50% profit margins that Mastercard and Visa suck out of the system vanish like smoke. Gone. Their empire of fees and exploitation falls apart. That’s why they’re fighting, clawing, trying to stop it. They don’t care about innovation, they care about survival. Their golden calf gets slaughtered when people realise they don’t need them anymore.
BSV isn’t just a payment system. It’s a wrecking ball aimed straight at the heart of their monopoly. No fees, no middlemen, no parasites taking a cut every time you buy a coffee.
That’s the future. And they know it. That’s why they’re scared.