Bitcoin’s short-term dips don’t shake my belief; they sharpen my conviction. Every downturn is an opportunity, a moment of mispricing before Bitcoin corrects and reclaims its place as the best-performing asset over the long run. It remains the undisputed king of crypto, but its true ambition reaches beyond digital assets…it’s poised to claim the world. Gold was forged in the chaos of the cosmos, a celestial relic of scarcity. Bitcoin, by contrast, was forged in the fire of financial corruption, a human engineered antidote to centralized failure. Its volatility isn’t weakness, it’s a test, a relentless rhythm that filters out the fainthearted and rewards the steadfast. But Bitcoin is more than a commodity: it’s a cause, a rebellion against the broken systems it seeks to replace. The real question isn’t whether it will be adopted but what happens when the very empires it was built to undermine start adopting it. Does Bitcoin change them, or do they change Bitcoin? The battle isn’t just for price appreciation; it’s for the soul of the future. image
David Sacks dumped $200M in bitcoin and crypto before becoming Trump’s AI and Crypto Czar, dodging insider-trading claims, a shame for the Bitcoin and good riddance to the crypto. He still has stakes in BitGo and Lightning Labs, cleared by government waivers, showing how the system flexes for insiders. As part of the PayPal Mafia, he’s shaping Trump’s 2025 agenda: less regulation, more tech dominance, and U.S. control via coin and code. It’s libertarian on paper, but in practice, just a sleeker form of power. They’re not breaking the rules; just mastering them. And me? I’m indifferent, stacking, and trying to make sense of it all. When you can’t make it make sense, make it make sats. image
Bitcoin is down, but not out, and if you can’t take the dump (lol💩), you don’t deserve the pump. The bears are feasting. Markets are shaky. Sentiment is weak. Yet, beneath the surface, something bigger is unfolding. Global liquidity is rising; a historically bullish signal for Bitcoin. Every fundamental indicator is screaming opportunity. Adoption is growing. Hash rate is climbing. Supply is tightening. The only thing lagging? Price. This disconnect won’t last forever. The impatient will panic. The weak will fold. But those who understand Bitcoin’s game theory know: true wealth is built in times of fear, not euphoria. So whether we see a recovery or another reckoning, I’ll be stacking: grateful, patient, and unwavering. Because when Bitcoin moves, it moves fast. And by then, it’ll be too late to catch up. image
The BITCOIN Act is still being framed as budget neutral, but don’t let that fool you; its implications are anything but. The plan is to accumulate 1 million BTC in five years, supposedly funded through Federal Reserve remittances and gold revaluations. What does that mean? Fed remittances: When the Federal Reserve earns income, primarily from interest on government bonds, it typically remits excess profits to the U.S. Treasury. If this revenue stream is directed toward Bitcoin purchases, it could act as a stealthy accumulation mechanism without requiring new taxes or explicit spending bills. Gold revaluation: If the U.S. government officially raises the price of gold on its balance sheet (effectively devaluing the dollar relative to gold), it creates an accounting gain. That gain could then be used to “fund” Bitcoin acquisitions without directly printing more dollars… In essence, these methods allow for a massive Bitcoin accumulation without overt deficit spending, making it more politically palatable while still reshaping the country’s monetary strategy. Why is this important? If the BITCOIN Act becomes law, it would make the Bitcoin Strategic Reserve (BSR) far harder to dismantle than if it were established through an executive order alone. Why? Laws outlast administrations: An executive order can be reversed with the stroke of a pen. A law requires Congressional repeal, which is much more difficult. Institutional entrenchment: Once the BSR is codified into law, government agencies, financial institutions, and national security interests will integrate it into their frameworks. This creates momentum that makes reversal politically and economically costly. Legal and financial precedent: If Bitcoin becomes a formalized part of U.S. reserves, future governments will find it far harder to justify unwinding it without triggering market instability… This isn’t just about whether the U.S. stacks 1 million BTC. It’s about Bitcoin becoming an irreversible pillar of national monetary strategy. A budget-neutral Trojan Horse that, once inside the gates, cements Bitcoin at the heart of the financial system…forever. The question is: is this act the beginning of a U.S. Bitcoin standard, hidden in plain sight? image