Bitcoin isn't real! It's not physical!
Yeah? Neither is the number seven, but I bet you'd notice if your bank balance dropped by seven figures.
Let me break the spell for you: money has never been "real."
Money is a collective hallucination—a social construct we all agree to pretend exists so we don't have to barter chickens for dental work.
Gold wasn't money because it fell from heaven with "LEGAL TENDER" stamped on it.
We picked gold because it was the least-bad physical object that checked the boxes:
- Scarce
- Durable
- Divisible
- Portable
- Verifiable
It was the analog solution to our shared idea.
But here's the thing about analog: it's slow, heavy, and requires armed guards.
And here's the thing about humans: we engineer better tools.
We went from abacus to iPhone. From carrier pigeons to satellites.
From gold bars locked in vaults to Bitcoin—verified by thermodynamics, secured by energy, and transmitted at the speed of light.
Bitcoin is the digital versioin of money. Just like X is the digital version of town hall.
Gold was the best we could do for many centuries.
Bitcoin is what we can do now that we have cryptography, distributed consensus, and proof-of-work anchored in physics.
Your grandpa trusted gold because he could hold it.
You trust Bitcoin because you can verify it.
One required faith in a metal. The other requires faith in math.
Guess which one has never been debased, diluted, or confiscated by executive order?
The concept of money is a human mental construct.
Always has been. Always will be.
The only question is: do you want your construct built on scarcity enforced by governments—or scarcity enforced by code?
Gold was monetary technology for the industrial age. Bitcoin is monetary technology for the information age.
Welcome to the upgrade.
I never intended to become a Bitcoiner.
I heard someone mention, “Bitcoin is digital gold.”
I read one article.
I bought $50 worth, then sold it at a profit five months later.
Then I read the whitepaper.
Then I started going deeper:
• Inflation
• The supply cap
• The issuance schedule
• The thermodynamic security model
• The game theory
• Monetary history
• The Cantillon effect
• The fiat endgame
• Deflation as the natural state of a free economy
And somewhere between "interesting technology" and "holy shit, every dollar I hold is melting," you cross a threshold.
Then I found myself pouring my savings into Bitcoin because I understood the math.
Once you see that 21 million is the only hard monetary ceiling humanity has ever coded into existence, you can’t unsee it.
Once you understand that Bitcoin is an escape from a debt-soaked empire printing itself into irrelevance, you stop asking whether you should buy it. You start asking why the hell you waited this long.
Bitcoin is a journey.
Get started in 2026.
When I first drove Cybertruck..
1. If felt heavy and big
2. Didn’t like finger prints on stainless body
3. Big pillar created blind spot
4. Not used to digital rear view
5. Everyone looking at my truck
Now, after 6 months
1. I wish it’s bigger
2. No wrapping, raw body is great
3. FSD drives me anyway
4. I don’t need rear view because of FSD
5. Everyone is still looking at my truck
Peter is not the Rock, Jesus is.
Mary is not the mediator, Jesus is.
The Pope is not the head of the church, Jesus is.
The Catholic Church is not the way to heaven, Jesus is.
They're going after Satoshi's coins and I can’t believe people support this…
500,000 BTC
Dormant for over a decade
Worth roughly $40 billion
Paul Sztorc is planning a Bitcoin fork called "eCash" for August 2026
They would redistribute those coins to early investors and a treasury fund
Seriously messed up because if you can vote to take Satoshi's coins, nobody's coins are safe
"Not your keys, not your coins" but only if a committee doesn’t decide otherwise 🤦♂️
Continuing to destroy Web3 day after day and you should immediately block anyone who supports it
@AB84 Absolutely, and even if it didn’t.. they aren’t all suppose to work but talking with Jesus is very important. You don’t always get what you want but sometimes you never know unless you ask
@BTCBreadMan@chipperv006@Justinf_DeFi Same way you get faith in Bitcoin. More research in how and why it works the way it does. Little knowledge is little to no faith. More knowledge is mass amounts of faith