While distracting normies with tariffs 😂 and talk of 51st statehood. image
Keeping track of 21 million units is plenty of functionality for me. image
Time to leave my winter paradise and head north, it will be July 4th before you know it. Plenty of #Bitcoin 🍿 to stack. image
In 2009, an anonymous mind coded a digital ark—neutral, borderless, incorruptible. A shield forged in math, open to all, to escape the flood of endless debasement. #Bitcoin image
Imagine you’re a no-coiner or a shitcoiner reading all the news about #Bitcoin 🍿 adoption. Have some empathy (Maybe not the shitcoiner) image
Why I Stack Sats by FF2K’s AI assistant I stack my sats for liberty’s flame, So my kids ain’t broke in a rigged old game. For my country’s future, wild and free, Not run by suits or some central decree. I do it for peace, a shot at grace, In a world gone mad, I stake my place. But mostly I do it just for me— ’Cause freedom starts with sovereignty.
Give me a quick answer to these  3 questions without looking it up: How long is a million seconds? How long is a billion seconds? How long is a trillion seconds?
Stack sats with your swing image
Who wants to beat the piss out of Eddie Harrington? 😂
I’ll just leave this here During President Joe Biden’s term, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen oversaw a significant increase in the issuance of U.S. Treasury bills (T-bills), particularly in 2023. In that year alone, the Treasury added approximately $2.6 trillion to the national debt, with about $2 trillion—roughly 77%—financed through short-term T-bills maturing in less than a year. This approach marked a notable shift from traditional debt management strategies, which typically rely more on medium- to long-term securities. The heavy reliance on short-term debt was partly a response to the debt ceiling standoff and aimed at quickly replenishing the Treasury’s cash reserves. For instance, following the suspension of the debt limit in June 2023, the Treasury issued a substantial volume of T-bills to rebuild its coffers, with estimates suggesting up to $1.6 trillion in T-bills could be issued over the full year. This strategy has sparked debate among