Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark
ChrisStark@primal.net
npub1ve4w...t5pt
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 6 months ago
GM all, when the glass is half empty, sometimes there's a good surprise waiting for you at the bottom. image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 6 months ago
GM all, Granola has been made. 12C rolled oats 1/2C syrup 4-5T cinnamon 2t vanilla 2T brown sugar 4-5c chopped nuts (pecans, walnuts, almond) 1C coconut Oven 275° stir every 5 for 20 minutes image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 6 months ago
They don't make glass block like they used to. GM all! image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 6 months ago
As someone who used to be responsible for trying to improve public infrastructure and has seen just how expensive and long it can take to just do a full concrete curb bumpout and pedestrian island project even at a high need location like by a park or elementary school, I love seeing these examples of doing the quickest, most cost-effective solutions like in this short. As local communities are increasingly forced to find new solutions to solving public infrastructure issues, projects that are a. quick to build, b. cost-effective to implement to solve one small local problem and c. are financially within local reach without incurring significant debt should be the default before the big project that seeks State or Federal funds and a large capital bond, should be prioritized because if you can't afford to build it as a community, how can you expect your future neighbors to maintain and rebuild it later.
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 6 months ago
Headphones on, give yourself the full 12 minutes to just breath and absorb the sounds and images.
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 6 months ago
image After years of growing the pear trees are finally going to produce fruit for us. Plant something in your garden for the future you to enjoy.
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 7 months ago
Sometimes the scale of what our ancestors built for us to remember are hard for us to comprehend. Not only should we strive to be the next generation of caretakers but also remember that this is what we are building for a generation far beyond our own children. image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 8 months ago
Sometimes you just want to stand on the table. image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 8 months ago
My fiat life revolves around real estate consulting and working with developer's looking to build things (apartments, industrial buildings, shopping centers, etc.). Even when they get returns that are great by conventional measures, I'm constantly thinking "Why don't they just buy 600BTC, stick it in cold storage for the same 10yr hold and get like 9x the return with no risk or effort instead of a dramatically lower return from this highly speculative over-leveraged financialized real estate product that only works because I can get them a financial incentive." I really don't think people are ready for how BTC is going to break real estate.
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 9 months ago
Strong towns are resilient. They don’t bet everything on federal money and fragile systems. They grow from the bottom up, incrementally, with a feedback loop between public investment and community value. They don’t build for prestige. They build for people. ~Chuck Marohn
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 9 months ago
"When cities build their future around the hopes of distant aid, they make decisions that prioritize outside approval over local needs. That’s not strength. That’s dependency." "A strong city doesn’t mean a wealthy city, or a growing city, or even a city with all the answers. It’s a place with options." While the focus of the article is on cities, the same could be applied to individuals. "A strong individual doesn't mean wealthy or ripped, or brilliant. It's a person with options." Stack sats to have options.
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 10 months ago
I specialize in Municipal Finance and something that has forever infuriated me is that folks are more than happy to spend the debt to build a bridge or other piece of infrastructure but then never bother to set aside the money to maintain or replace it in the future, expecting future generations to not only choke on their long-term bond debt load from folks not wanting to pay the price now but also for fixing their expensive overbuilt decisions down the road. The idea of time-locking a reserve of BTC on a release schedule over the life of a piece of infrastructure would flip this paradigm on its head by committing to not burdening future generations but instead throwing our present energy far into the future to fix it when the need eventually arises. By incorporating a time-locked 5% reserve with a clear release schedule, you could plan for the periodic maintenance and the eventual full replacement. If it was in a multi-sig setup of multiple local officials (DOT commissioner, budget director, CFO, Mayor and head of council for example in a 3/5) so that funds were responsibly allocated to the project on release you also help future capital planning for the City and make things easier rather than harder. Below is a sample disbursement table with simple math to illustrate the concept. I would love some thoughts from folks as Bitcoiners are one of the few groups with actual low-time preference decision making mindsets. @preston @Danny Knowles image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 10 months ago
@Danny Knowles ever since you guys first talked to Michael Dunworth about the idea of time locking Bitcoins in the future for people to find I've been thinking about how Cities could use it to responsibly maintain long term infrastructure projects. Build a new bridge for $100M with a 100BTC reserve that is time locked on a 10 year release cycle for repairs with a replacement kicker arriving in year 70 as the final unlock. Actually throw our current energy forward into the future instead of just stealing from our children with costly long-term bonds just to build it and never setting money aside to fix the things we build.
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 11 months ago
@SoapMiner is a man of his word. These just arrived in the mail and I'm looking forward to trying them out tomorrow. Thanks again! image
Chris Stark's avatar
Chris Stark 11 months ago
Note to self, next time you want to buy some soap from @SoapMiner , remember to check your spending lightning wallet's balance first.... got there eventually.