A buddy of mine showed me yesterday that he has $270,000 sitting in cash in an account that pays 0% interest. I told him that's crazy. He asked what I would do with it. I told him by the end of Monday, I would have $270k less cash and $270k more bitcoin. We are not the same.
🌯 Financing a $12 burrito 🌯 Pay $1 per month for a year and save the unpaid dollars at @River earning 3.8% paid in BTC over the course of the year. You earn ~$0.25 of BTC which then grows at 20%+ annually. In 21 years, your burrito is free. You're welcome.
The market doesn't yet understand the significance of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. The SBR signals that the U.S. views bitcoin not just as a financial asset but as a geopolitical tool to defend its hegemony. Nation-states watching the U.S. accumulate bitcoin will likely feel pressure to secure their own reserves, especially resource-rich or politically isolated countries that need alternatives to the U.S. dollar system. Some have already started. This will accelerate a global bitcoin accumulation race, and the market is not even close to bullish enough.
888,888 blocks and no signs of stopping. There is no top.
Lips are inflating faster than the money supply. image
Buying $12,000 per year ($1k per month) at a modest 14% annual CAGR for bitcoin is $276,000 after 10 years. Do this for another 10 years, your stack is worth $1.25m. Do it for another 10 years, your stack is worth $4.9m. Anyone can do this. The lesson? START TODAY.
🙃 The Intrinsic Value Myth Some bitcoin skeptics confidently claim it has no intrinsic value, as if that alone makes it worthless and ends the debate. I refute this common critique in the latest issue of FIREBTC. Check it out and subscribe!
Contrary to conventional monetary theory, bitcoin may need to be adopted as a unit of account before it can fully function as a medium of exchange. The key driver behind this shift is the opportunity cost of not holding bitcoin, which incentivizes individuals and businesses to seek payment in bitcoin and price goods in bitcoin terms. As this shift occurs, bitcoin’s circulation naturally increases, reinforcing its role as a true global currency. In this way, unit of account adoption acts as a catalyst rather than a final step, unlocking bitcoin’s potential as a widely used medium of exchange. The conventional progression of monetary adoption follows a three-step sequence: store of value → medium of exchange → unit of account. However, in the case of bitcoin, this order may be reversed in key respects. Specifically, bitcoin’s adoption as a unit of account can act as a forcing function for its adoption as a medium of exchange, driven by the opportunity cost of not holding bitcoin in an environment of increasing monetary debasement. Historically, new forms of money first emerge as a store of value, later transition into a medium of exchange, and only after widespread acceptance do they become a unit of account. This is because: - A money must first be trusted to hold its value before it is widely accepted in trade. - Only after mass adoption as a means of payment do people start thinking in terms of that currency, allowing it to function as a pricing standard. Bitcoin has so far followed the first step—acting as a store of value—but has struggled to gain traction as a medium of exchange. The key reason for this is its high volatility and the strong incentives to hold rather than spend. However, a shift in how bitcoin is perceived—toward viewing it as a unit of account—could serve as a necessary precursor for its medium-of-exchange adoption. Economic actors (individuals, businesses, and institutions) make financial decisions based on opportunity cost—what they forgo by choosing one option over another. As bitcoin’s price appreciates over time relative to fiat currencies: - Individuals and businesses increasingly recognize the cost of holding and transacting in depreciating fiat currencies. - They begin to demand bitcoin as payment rather than accepting fiat, since bitcoin is expected to preserve and potentially increase in value. - Workers, contractors, and service providers start asking for bitcoin-denominated payments to retain their purchasing power. This shift in incentives begins to change how people think about money. Instead of measuring prices in fiat and converting to bitcoin, they start thinking directly in bitcoin terms—a hallmark of unit of account adoption. Once a critical mass of people starts pricing and negotiating in bitcoin terms, medium-of-exchange adoption follows naturally: - If businesses begin denominating goods and services in bitcoin, the need to convert back to fiat decreases. - As more people receive wages, contracts, and invoices in bitcoin, it becomes easier to spend directly in bitcoin. - Bitcoin transactions increase, improving liquidity, reducing volatility, and reinforcing its utility as a means of exchange. In this sense, unit of account adoption serves as a forcing function: - By thinking in bitcoin terms, individuals and businesses normalize Bitcoin transactions. - This reduces friction in using bitcoin for daily transactions, accelerating its adoption as a medium of exchange. Discuss 👇
Property taxes are so insidious. Other people print money, causing the nominal value of your house to increase. Property taxes are assessed on the current value of your home, so as the property value rises, so does your tax bill. But that extra home value is not liquid and therefore not accessible to pay the increased tax burden. If the property tax rises too much, some people may need to take on debt or even sell the property to pay it. This should not stand in any civilized society. image