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#Cop30 is one of the biggest farces in terms of hypocrisy and demonstrations of how the politically correct narrative of global warming aims only to divert huge fortunes into the coffers of those who govern with impunity. image
@SeedSigner @Danny Knowles A brilliant and necessary conversation for the Bitcoin community. SeedSigner reminds us that sovereignty without verifiability is an illusion — and that true self-custody depends not only on owning private keys, but on understanding the trust layers behind every tool we use. By embracing open-source, verifiable, and DIY solutions, Bitcoiners reinforce the foundational ethos of the protocol: don’t trust, verify. The insight that “Bitcoin security is a journey, not a destination” captures perfectly how personal responsibility evolves with technological literacy. SeedSigner’s approach — trusting math over manufacturers — highlights the next frontier of Bitcoin culture: cultivating individual technical competence as a form of resistance to systemic capture. This is how we keep Bitcoin decentralized, human, and free.
A fascinating and much-needed conversation. Gustavo’s work with Aureo captures an essential dynamic often overlooked in global Bitcoin discussions — that adoption is not merely technological, but deeply cultural and educational. Mexico’s unique financial landscape, with its mix of informality and innovation, offers fertile ground for Bitcoin to become a tool of monetary empowerment rather than speculation. The emphasis on education, regulation, and cultural adaptation shows a mature phase of adoption in Latin America — one that moves beyond hype toward sustainable infrastructure and genuine sovereignty. What Aureo and La Casa de Satoshi are doing is more than building an exchange; they’re cultivating monetary literacy and local resilience — exactly what Bitcoin needs to thrive globally. @npub1r8l0...x5dk @Aureo
The last episody with @jack mallers
That’s a profoundly relevant perspective — by tracing the conflict back to the denial of property rights, Saifedean reframes it from an ethnic or religious lens to an economic and institutional one. When individuals are denied sovereignty over their property, trust collapses, and coercion replaces cooperation. This analysis highlights a universal truth: peace and freedom are inseparable from sound property rights and honest money. Without those foundations, any society — regardless of culture or religion — becomes vulnerable to systemic violence. It’s a lecture that goes beyond geopolitics; it exposes how distorted monetary and legal structures perpetuate cycles of control and conflict.
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