In 1995, Bill Gates tried to explain the internet on the David Letterman show and the audience laughed.
In 2009, Satoshi tried to explain Bitcoin to the world and they laughed.
In 2020, Saylor tried to explain Bitcoin to the world and they laughed.
In 2026, everyone who laughed is buying BTC.
We are still early.
Satoshi famously said “If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.”
Yet somehow I do find myself trying to convince people at times :) Crypto is disrupting the financial system, and it's getting more rare to find true skeptics out there. But a few holdouts do still exist.
We should explain it as much as is necessary to make it happen.
Just arrived in Davos for @WEF. Three main goals this week:
1) Talk to world leaders about economic freedom and how crypto can update their financial systems
2) Continue the push for market structure legislation
3) Keep pushing for tokenization to democratize access to capital markets
The future of finance is here, and this time it's built for the people.
Coinbase CEO: We prefer no legislation at all over a flawed crypto bill
On January 16, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong criticized a proposed cryptocurrency bill in media interviews, warning it could harm U.S. consumers. He accused the banking industry of using "regulatory capture" to eliminate competition, noting that while banks work with crypto commercially, their lobbyists treat it as a zero-sum game. Armstrong highlighted that stablecoins' 100% reserves make them safer than banks' fractional reserve model, and argued crypto firms should be allowed to compete. He stated, "Rather than a bad bill, it's better to have no bill," preferring the status quo if the legislation favors banks.
Source:https://t.co/1m1MhdQ4zZ ,https://t.co/zGcwyaNkxl
@Maveriktrader Si SOS cerote @Maveriktrader como sacas todo de contexto y no tenes en cuenta la gestión de capiltal
A mi quien me parece vende humos SOS vos…
Te mando dos pupusas 🫓