I remain persistently skeptical of centralized power, especially when it values order over reason. History shows that forced stability often comes at the expense of truth, innovation, and individual freedom. Systems built on control eventually collapse under the weight of their own contradictions.
In contrast, I remain cautiously optimistic about the chaos of current events, not because I trust the system, but because each disruption is another opportunity for Bitcoin to prove its value. Every crisis reveals the cracks in legacy structures, and every overreach highlights the need for a neutral, incorruptible alternative.
I stay unfazed by FUD. Bitcoin endured its darkest days long before I even discovered it, and the fact that it survived without me is part of what gives me confidence in it now. That kind of antifragility isn’t just rare; it’s almost mythical.
And when it comes to diversification, I remain uninterested. Diversifying into weaker assets isn’t diversification; it’s dilution. If it’s not more Bitcoin, I probably don’t want it. My conviction isn’t rooted in hype; it’s grounded in understanding, history, and hard incentives.
In a world where trust is continuously betrayed, where noise drowns out signal, and where power seeks to preserve itself at all costs, I choose to align with something that doesn’t ask for trust; it earns it. Bitcoin isn’t just a hedge against uncertainty; it’s a quiet rebellion against a system that never deserved our confidence to begin with.
That’s why I remain focused. Not because I know what’s coming next, but because I know where I stand when it does.
