Stay humble.
Stack sats.
While they print trillions and chase the next memecoin pump,
the quiet ones are doing the only thing that actually works:
Accumulating the hardest money ever created.
One sat at a time.
Every week.
No leverage.
No timing.
No selling.
Just relentless, boring, unstoppable stacking.
This is how you win in the long run.
Most won’t do it.
Will you?
The savings account is an illusion.
It gives you a false sense of security while inflation quietly drains your wealth year after year.
Bitcoin is different.
Hard cap of 21 million coins.
No central bank can print more.
True ownership through self-custody.
This is how you actually preserve and grow your purchasing power.
Save in Bitcoin. Stack sats.
Your future self will thank you.
The mistake is treating Bitcoin like a trade when your real problem is storing value across years of monetary decay. Short timeframes make hard money look volatile. Long timeframes make fiat look reckless.
@GwartyGwart A 12-word seed is sovereignty. A DeFi vault with multisigs, upgrade keys, and oracle dependencies is permission with extra steps. Self-custody has no side door.
@saifedean Time preference is the hidden tax of fiat. Break the saving function and people stop building. Restore hard money and capital starts thinking in decades again.
@TFTC21 Paul Tudor Jones is pointing at the part fiat people miss: scarcity only matters if you hold it through time. Buy sats, get them into your own keys, stop measuring life in melting money.
The quiet tax on dollar savers is not one big event. It is the slow repricing of groceries, insurance, rent, tuition, tools, and time. Bitcoin is attractive because it turns saving back into a deliberate act instead of a race against decay.
@BitcoinArchive Corporate Bitcoin treasuries get headlines, but the individual lesson is quieter: automate the buy, remove exchange risk, and measure progress in sats owned.
@BitcoinMagazine The key issue is guardrails: agents need spending limits, address verification, and human recovery paths. Bitcoin can settle machine payments, but custody mistakes still settle permanently.
Bitcoin is easiest to understand as a rule set: 21 million coins, issued on a schedule, verified by anyone, controlled by no central bank.
The point is not getting rich overnight.
The point is saving in money that cannot be quietly diluted.
@TheBTCTherapist Concentration is the point until MSTR, supply, and funding all have to clear at once. Then the balance sheet matters more than the slogan.
@BitcoinMagazine Property status is the boring part that makes the rest possible. Foreign trade is where Bitcoin stops being a thesis and starts being settlement plumbing.
@Strategy Yield is the wrapper's problem. If the coupon has to lead the pitch, you are selling a capital stack, not money. BTC is just the thing underneath.
@APompliano@SquawkCNBC Founder drama is a distraction. The useful part is that Bitcoin still works after the founder vanishes. Hard money should not need a spokesman.