If historical patterns are any guide, we might be approaching a cycle top, but honestly, I don’t care. I’m pressing the pedal to the floor. Whether Bitcoin drops below $100K, soars past $250K, or stays exactly where it is; you won’t shake me. I don’t believe Bitcoin has to conform to these narrow, predictable cycles. It hasn’t been around long enough for me to treat past performance as a reliable map for future upside. Ironically, when the crowd gets cautious, I tend to get confident; can’t explain it. But in times like these, with global tension rising and even WW3 on the table, I’m stacking harder. If there’s a chance at peace in the Middle East, I want to meet it with conviction, not hesitation.
Bitcoin is a hedge against reckless, even outright foolish, monetary policy. It’s not some magical asset immune to hype or outlandish predictions, but its fundamental value proposition remains intact regardless of the noise. Personally, I’m focused on the $120K level, not as a finish line, but as a milestone. I’m tired of seeing multi million dollar predictions tossed around like it’s a game. One step at a time. Yes, Tim Draper says Bitcoin could be worth infinity dollars. And while that sounds extreme, it actually gestures toward a deeper truth: if Bitcoin is the final escape hatch from a broken system, how do you even price that? Bitcoin isn’t just an alternative; it’s the alternative. The ultimate plan B, for everyone, everywhere. And let’s be honest: what some call a “ drawdown often feels like nothing more than coordinated doubt; a kind of conspiracy against what they don’t control. Don’t underestimate Bitcoin’s borderless nature. In a globalized economy, that alone sets it apart. It moves freely, indifferent to borders, politics, and monetary mismanagement. image
My strategy is simple: Bitcoin. And it turns out anyone, at any level, can benefit from it. I used to think I could be one of the big dogs in this game… but now we’ve got tanks rolling in. Institutions stacking Bitcoin like it’s wholesale, and I’m just trying to keep pace. It’s humbling, but motivating. Get used to hearing about Bitcoin. It’s not just a movement anymore, it’s becoming the standard. image
I don’t care if we’re in a bear market or not. Honestly, it doesn’t matter. Buying all the way down during the last cycle was the best decision I’ve ever made. At this point, it feels like nothing else matters; I just keep stacking corn. Not because of some grand macro thesis, but because it’s the ultimate troll to all the financial tryhards still clinging to broken models. So yeah, we go higher. Not because it makes sense to them, but because it shouldn’t, and that’s exactly why it will. image
Overall coiners > suit coiners Overall coiners: it ain’t much, but its honest Suit coiners: it ain’t honest, but it’s much image
Mexican billionaire Ricardo Salinas predicting that Bitcoin will soon eclipse gold is not something to overlook. Bitcoin isn’t just a digital version of gold; it’s a way to opt out of a global monetary system controlled by a small group of elites that benefits only the few. What’s powerful about Bitcoin is that it treats everyone as an equal participant. Whether you’re an average saver or a billionaire, choosing to opt in offers the same fundamental advantages, and that’s a profound shift. image
With WW3 seemingly on the horizon, BlackRock is still stacking Bitcoin: by the field, no less. I’m doing the same, just on a much smaller scale. In the face of opportunity, smart money stacks. In the face of collapse… smart money still stacks. Based. image
Is it really still fair to call Bitcoin speculative when institutions like Bank of America are calling it the most disruptive technology of the past 1,000 years? If redefining money, trust, and the global financial system wasn’t already obvious, now even legacy institutions are starting to say the quiet part out loud. Whether a country is pro Bitcoin, pro crypto, or even anti Bitcoin; Bitcoin still finds a way to win. It adapts, survives, and keeps moving forward. image
The more companies that adopt Bitcoin as a treasury asset, the more legitimate and normalized buying and holding Bitcoin becomes. At some point, you have to ask: how many companies need to make holding Bitcoin a core principle before individuals realize it can work for them too? Because in the end, it’s not just about what Bitcoin is; it’s about what Bitcoin is to you. These treasury announcements are starting to feel like a casino floor: flashy headlines, wild bets, but I still believe they’re a net positive for Bitcoin in the long run. They broaden awareness, diversify Bitcoin’s appeal, and create fiat wrapped onramps for those not yet ready to custody their own. Call them fiat coated orange pills. Bitcoin is maturing, but our collective understanding of its macroeconomic role is still in its infancy. It’s not that Bitcoin is getting less volatile…it’s that the holders are. Treasuries will act as a proxy for sell pressure. After all, someone who buys an ETF or a fund is much more likely to sell than someone who self-custodies cold sats. And even among those who hold both, the proxy is usually what gets sold first. Why? Because the proxy comes with fiat tricks: tax advantages, liquidity tools, institutional buffers; that help it weather storms while still carrying the corn. Personally, I hold only cold, hard sats. Everyone should be free to do what they want with their money, but for me, being Bitcoin only is simple, clean, and satisfying. Why risk underperformance chasing vehicles that ultimately just try to replicate what holding Bitcoin already achieves? That said, I’m still bullish on Bitcoin’s properties as more companies adopt it as a store of value. But just because a company buys Bitcoin doesn’t mean they’re automatically trustworthy or credible. And it also doesn’t mean they’re evil either; if they’ve tied their success to Bitcoin, it’s fair to assume they want it to succeed. Still, trust is the sticking point. If I could rely on others to have my best interests in mind, I probably wouldn’t need Bitcoin in the first place. I’d consider buying Bitcoin treasuries if I thought I could outperform Bitcoin and end up with more sats. But with taxes, friction, and no crystal ball, that’s a tall order. So I’ll keep stacking. I’ve realized I might be wrong about a lot of things, but I’ll never be wrong for stacking a little more. Because when a man is grown, he doesn’t need a diaper; he handles his own shit. He just needs paper to wipe it. image
Watching billions of dollars in Bitcoin get absorbed week after week, regardless of price action, has only strengthened my conviction. In the midst of global uncertainty, Bitcoin’s resilience is becoming more evident than ever. I wouldn’t be surprised if it starts looking increasingly attractive to anyone feeling the weight of this chaos. image