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npub1rr65...eeul
Nostr’s pulse is back. When they come for Bitcoin, we don’t flinch—we converge. No suits. No gatekeepers. Just signal. WE THE PLEBS. THE DECENTRALIZED CLASS. WE NOTHIN’ TO FUCK WITH. #bip177 image
They want to turn 21 million scarce Bitcoin into 2.1 quadrillion cheap bitcoin. Let that sink in. More “bitcoin” than Shiba. More than Doge. More than every shitcoin combined. On paper—Bitcoin becomes a meme coin. From $105,000 to $0.00105. “Don’t worry,” they’ll say. “It’s the same.” But the media will run with it. The public will panic. Scarcity dies. Narrative collapses. Whether intentional psyop or blind short-termism, the result is the same: They’re trying to dilute Bitcoin’s meme into dust. This isn’t clarity. It’s memetic sabotage. And we see it. image
What we’re witnessing in Bitcoin right now feels like the beginning of the gold rush. People can sense what’s coming—the rising inavailability, the climb to $1 million and beyond—and with it comes the chaos. Greed is waking up. Influence is being weaponized. And many of Bitcoin’s so-called heroes will betray it. We’re entering a phase where psyops wear orange. Where manipulation masquerades as UX. Where core memes are attacked in subtle, calculated ways to control the narrative—and ultimately, to control more Bitcoin. This is why “Don’t trust, verify” must be more than a slogan. It should be burned into everyone’s mindset right now. We don’t need to waste time debating whether to rename satoshis or censor ordinals. We need to run nodes, protect consensus, and teach self-custody. These are the real front lines—not the drama you’re fed on X or Nostr. The protocol is strong. The memes are stronger. But only if we defend them. image
We’ve reached the “then they fight you” phase. But no one ever said the attack would come from the outside. Sometimes the enemy wears orange, speaks in memes, and claims to “improve” what they’re quietly trying to dismantle. Not all attacks on Bitcoin come from the outside. Some come from within. image
I will say it. Making satoshis “bitcoin” and inflating the perceived supply to 2.1 quadrillion is a form of woke virus—a memetic infection. Under the guise of inclusivity and making Bitcoin feel “affordable for everyone,” it dilutes truth, erases clarity, and replaces hard money principles with fiat-style optics. It’s not about access—it’s about control. And it’s not decentralization—it’s propaganda wrapped in user-friendliness. Bitcoin doesn’t need to be made cheap to be for everyone. It needs to remain true to what it is. image
The author of BIP-177 is John Carvalho. As we can see, the campaign to distort Bitcoin is picking up pace. The dots are connecting. These people want to create a situation where we no longer have 21 million bitcoin—but 2.1 quadrillion. And with that shift, the price of bitcoin doesn’t stay at $105,000—it becomes $0.00105. That’s not a minor adjustment. That’s a complete destruction of Bitcoin’s memetic, economic, and psychological framing. At this point, I consider it an attack on Bitcoin. It’s an attempt to rewrite what makes Bitcoin work—scarcity, clarity, narrative integrity. And it’s happening right as Bitcoin is breaking through the $100K psychological barrier, a moment that should be uniting us, not opening the door to confusion. If you use Bitcoin, believe in Bitcoin, or build on Bitcoin—it’s time to stand up against this. We are not stupid. We are not passive. And we will not let the truth be rewritten to fit someone’s agenda. image