Bitcoin is the supreme value asset of the world. All fiat money economies have culminated in the development of Bitcoin.
Better than gold. Better than real estate. Better than 99.99% of stocks (you feeling lucky?).
All that remains is the curve of adoption.
Consciousness Incarnate
npub19nnw...7mg4
Science bitch
United States is profoundly delusional in thinking it will match or, as a matter of perfect delusion, "outpace", China in any capacity except for crime rate. China is the most advanced and developed country in the world.
Holding, stacking, and circulating #bitcoin is the ultimate, perfected, revolution.
Fiat money is the ultimate serpent. It holds in it the assumption of the hoax of government authority. And it decays human civilization.
Bitcoin is the only path forward.
Satanic Jews
Never thought I'd say this, but when the US is the ONLY country in the UN Security Council vetoing a immediate ceasefire in Gaza and release of all aid to Gaza, USA establishes itself as an enemy and criminal of humanity, in the face of worldwide condemnation of verified genocide in Palestine.
USA and ISRAEL are democratic countries perpetrating international crime on a grand scale, confirmed by experts and professionals on genocide, and the ICJ itself. That means ALL citizens and residents of USA and ISRAEL are responsible, and complicit, for their government's actions.
So the boycott begins. BIG changes coming.
Let's fucking go.
And open the Rafah border. Ffs. View quoted note →
Looking forward to using Wallet of Satoshi again as soon as I leave USA.
Won't be complicit in "democratic" genocide anymore.
We AMERICANS ARE COMPLICIT
In GENOCIDE
That’s the core moral tension in living in a democracy. The short answer is: yes, there is some level of complicity — but it’s not absolute, and it depends on what you do once you’re aware.
Let me break it down:
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1. Why Complicity Exists in a Democracy
Government = citizens’ consent (theoretically): In a democracy, leaders claim their legitimacy from the people. When the state acts, it does so in your name, and with your taxes, votes, and silence as implicit backing.
Taxes and participation: Even if unwillingly, your taxes fund military actions, and your existence in the system gives it stability.
Silence as consent: If atrocities happen and citizens do nothing, governments often cite that as tacit approval.
So morally, there is a baseline complicity simply by being part of the system.
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2. Why It’s Not Absolute
Lack of control: Democracies are not perfectly representative—many citizens oppose wars or atrocities, but their governments still proceed. One person’s power is limited.
Resistance matters: If you protest, campaign, speak out, or help victims, you reduce your moral complicity. You can’t stop all harm, but you’re actively refusing to endorse it.
Intent matters: Being unaware or misled (e.g., government propaganda) reduces responsibility compared to knowingly approving of atrocities.
So complicity is proportional: the more you support, enable, or ignore atrocities, the more complicit you are. The more you resist or withdraw support, the less complicit you are.
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3. The Ethical Responsibility of Citizens in a Democracy
In an authoritarian state, ordinary people often have little responsibility because dissent is nearly impossible.
In a democracy, citizens bear more responsibility because they do have mechanisms (elections, protests, civil society) to influence government action, even if imperfect.
Ethically, that means inaction = a kind of passive complicity, while resistance = an effort to separate yourself from the wrongdoing.
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4. Levels of Complicity (Practical Framework)
High complicity: Supporting the government’s actions, voting for leaders who order them, ignoring atrocities.
Medium complicity: Knowing but doing nothing — paying taxes, staying silent, avoiding responsibility.
Low complicity: Actively resisting — protesting, voting against, exposing, helping victims.
Minimal complicity: Removing yourself from the system (e.g., relocation, refusal to pay taxes, international activism).
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✅ So yes — in a democracy, civilians are morally implicated to some extent when their government commits atrocities. But you can lower or reject complicity by how you act.
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Would you like me to compare this moral responsibility of civilians in a democracy vs. authoritarian system? That might give clearer perspective on how much responsibility really falls on the citizen.
Unbelievable. Fuck this country. Insane, evil government. What a shame to its great founders. I don't know what happened but I'm out.
I don't know what to do but just leave this place. Let it crumble View quoted note →
#Bitcoiners are up 86% from this date one year ago. Not a bad asset to be all in on and require almost zero maintenance besides key management.
Thank you #Satoshi
God wants us to fuck.
Sex and pleasure is a part of our divine purpose.
In fact, it's the source of our very existence.
Fuck with that.
Precisely View quoted note →
The genocidal mind in full display. View quoted note →
Mein Kampf contains an astonishingly brilliant assessment of political democracy and parliamentarism. What an exceptional mind Hitler had.
The orange pill is most difficult to swallow. View quoted note →
My future kids are gonna be unvaxxed and plant-based from birth.
Probably homeschooled too.
Probably born at home too. No birth certificates.
Sovereign, multilingual Bitcoiners.