In retrospect l’m starting to think that the Spam war may turn out to be good for Bitcoin, because without it we would’ve never realised how many people in the community have been compromised. It’s honestly unbelievable. The final verdict is still TBD tho.
Tauri
tauri@mynostr.com
npub1x9q8...csg7
Not a Founder or a CEO of anything.
Bitcoiners spent years preparing for surface-level attacks: bans, arrests, coercion, brute force ops, but completely missed the hidden agendas. They simply assumed everyone building or mining Bitcoin was honest because of “incentives.” But destroying or domesticating Bitcoin is incentive enough for its enemies.
Zionists practically wrote the manual on how to infiltrate, influence, and subvert a system from within. They managed to bend one of the most robust governance structures in the world (the US) without firing a single bullet. The method was simple but devastatingly effective: get your people inside, bribe or blackmail the ones who keep the machine running (politicians, bankers), and slowly rewrite the narrative from within. No open attacks on borders, no military conquest, just quiet, systemic capture at a fraction of the cost. Any sane person who’s not lived under a rock over the past couple of years should know this playbook by heart.
What’s fascinating (and depressing) is that we seem too one-dimensional to notice the same strategy being applied to Bitcoin. Developers are being bought, blackmailed, or subtly influenced to steer the project away from its original principles. The system was built with strong governance, resilient guardrails, and near-impenetrable external defence, yet internal compromise is proving just as effective here as it was in Washington. And still, too many supposedly not stupid Bitcoiners keep falling for the same old tactics, distracted by technobabble and concern trolling. Time to wake the hell up, guys.