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BitcoinMendocino
bitcoinmendocino@nostrplebs.com
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#Bitcoin is the alternative financial system for local communities at a time of inflation and spiraling national debt. #Mendocino California.
Bitcoin isn’t an investment. It’s not a stock. It’s not something that needs government approval. Treating Bitcoin like a speculative asset misses the point entirely. It’s about freedom. Self-custody. And breaking the state’s monopoly on money. If you're trading it like a stock, you're not seeing the real picture. Study it. Own it. Be free. image
AI will soon be able to generate anything digital: text, images, video, even whole identities. In that world, what can you still trust? Gold answered that question in the physical world. It became money not by decree, but because its chemistry made it uniquely scarce, durable, and hard to fake. Szabo called this “unforgeable costliness”: you don’t have to trust anyone, because the cost and scarcity are enforced by physics, not by people. Bitcoin is that same idea ported into cyberspace. Its proof-of-work protocol doesn’t just follow software rules; it anchors digital truth in real energy and thermodynamics. Hard to produce, easy to verify – just like gold. As AI floods the internet with synthetic content and deepfakes, anything purely digital becomes easy to fake or deny. Proof-of-work is the one thing AI cannot simulate without real energy expenditure. That makes Bitcoin more than money; it’s a truth layer – a ledger of events that no committee, government, or model can rewrite. AI is digital abundance, Bitcoin is digital scarcity. Without a physics-based anchor like Bitcoin, AI just accelerates the existing fiat system and its centralization. With Bitcoin, AI gets an incorruptible base layer: a ledger of truth backed by the laws of thermodynamics, not by trust. Study Bitcoin. Sources image
Bitcoin's been pitched as digital gold for 17 years. At sub-5% adoption, that pitch gets boring What's not boring is a business owner who hates their Visa statement: Every major technology adoption curve has a crossing point. It's never the early adopters who push it over. It's the people who adopt it for boring, practical reasons they don't feel the need to announce. The internet crossed because businesses needed fast communication, not because people believed in the digital economy. 4 million Square merchants have access to Bitcoin payments. 0% credit card fees, instant settlement, and instant USD conversion if you don't want to hold it. That last part matters more than any crypto bill that passes this year. You don't need a Bitcoin thesis to use it, you need a 3% problem. A coffee shop doing $500k/year in card transactions is paying $15,000 to Visa and Mastercard for the privilege of getting paid. A clear problem with a clear solution -> product market fit And the business owner doesn't have to touch a wallet, read a block explorer, or care about halving cycles. They flip a setting in Square, save the fee, convert to dollars, and move on. This is how nascent technologies win. image
Two curves are crossing. One falling, one rising. The falling curve is institutional legitimacy — the trust that makes governments functional, money valuable, and expertise credible. It’s been falling for decades as the information asymmetries that sustained it have been destroyed. The rising curve is technological capability — not just useful technology, but technology that can improve itself, that can do the cognitive work that has historically defined human professional value, that is now operating on timescales that human institutions cannot match. The most underestimated preparation for this time of profound change is the simplest: invest in actual human relationships and community. The research on how communities survive large shocks — Elinor Ostrom’s Nobel-winning work on collective action — shows consistently that the communities that cope best are not the richest or the best governed. They’re the ones with the strongest bonds of trust and mutual support. image
It’s almost impossible to imagine what might exist in the future. image
Once you wake up to the fact that the world hasn’t operated with “money” since 1971, things start to make sense. When you realize that, instead of money, the world operates with currency—tokens created as debt and used as a proxy for money—the causes of wealth inequality and social unrest become apparent. Study bitcoin. image
From Adam Livingston: “The asymmetric information you have right now is psychotic. You are alive at the exact moment where AI can think, write, code, design, model, and automate. At the same time, Bitcoin can store, transfer, and defend value globally. And the average person is arguing about Love Is Blind. You have access to an intelligence multiplier and a monetary escape hatch at the same time. This is a civilizational cheat code. It has never been easier to build a productivity-enhancing mechanism with AI, automate your output, reduce friction to near zero, capture the surplus in Bitcoin, and compound it outside the fiat decay machine. Ten hours a week of focused effort now can outcompete someone grinding 50 hours inside a legacy system that siphons their energy into payroll, rent, and inflation. And meanwhile the normies are debating whether AI is “scary”, waiting for HR to tell them what skills are safe, holding cash in a checking account earning 0.01%, and hoping their boss gives them a 3% raise. The gap is about to widen violently. This is the first time in history where small intelligence + leverage + sound money > pedigree + credentials + permission. You need curiosity and WiFi. That's it. Build a productivity engine. Attach it to a value capture system. Denominate the output in Bitcoin. That’s it. History will look back at 2026 and laugh at how obvious this was.” image
From Scott Melker: “Any remaining faith I had in our institutions is gone. The Epstein files were the final straw for me. For years, I’ve tried to give the system the benefit of the doubt. Assume incompetence over malice. Assume there are things happening behind the scenes. Assume eventually the truth comes out. Cope. At some point you have to stop lying to yourself. When the most powerful people on earth are connected to something this dark, and the result is sealed documents, redactions, quiet settlements, and zero real accountability, you start to see the pattern. There’s a system for regular people, and there’s a different system for the elite. We have seen it with monetary and economic policy. Now we see it is systemic. This isn’t about left vs. right. It’s not partisan for me. Corruption protects itself. Power protects power. That’s the constant. And when that realization sets in, you have a choice. You can scream about it. You can argue online. You can hope the next election fixes it. Or you can quietly opt out where you can. For me, that’s Bitcoin. Not because it’s some utopia or because it fixes evil. But because it doesn’t require me to trust the same institutions that have repeatedly shown they don’t operate by the same rules for everyone. No special access. No closed-door monetary policy. No selective bailouts. Just open code and rules that apply to everyone. Maybe that sounds dramatic. But I don’t see it as rebellion. I see it as self-preservation. When trust erodes, capital moves. It always has. Some people exit geographically. Some exit socially. Some mentally check out. I’m exiting financially. You don’t need to agree. But if you’ve felt that shift lately – that quiet realization that the people in charge aren’t playing the same game as the rest of us – you’re not alone. For me, Bitcoin isn’t about getting rich. It’s about no longer asking permission.” image
Most people still operate under a schoolbook illusion that banks take deposits and lend them out. The truth is far stranger: banks don’t lend existing money; they create new money. When you sign a mortgage for $500,000, the bank doesn’t go searching for someone who has saved $500,000 to lend you. It simply types the number into your account. That keystroke becomes money; new purchasing power is injected into the economy, backed not by production but by your future labor. This has nothing to do with capitalism. Saifedean Ammous called it “monetary alchemy”. Banks have become engines of debt creation rather than guardians of savings. They pay you a microscopic interest rate on your deposits, but they use those same deposits to acquire assets yielding far more. You bear the risk; they harvest the spread. And when their bets blow up, as they did in 2008 and 2023, they don’t face the losses that capitalism demands — instead, the government and central bank step in to rescue them, socialize the losses, and protect institutional survival at all costs. ~~~ Study bitcoin. image
Much of the angst in the national zeitgeist these days centers around economic uncertainty—like it’s just a bad roll of the dice. But dig deeper and the real issue stares you in the face: the money itself is broken. It’s not even money anymore—it’s currency, a system of IOUs controlled by a tiny handful of unelected officials. And surprise: the people closest to the printing press always win the biggest prizes. Everyone else just gets inflation. We’re all playing a global, gargantuan game of Monopoly except the bank can print infinite money for its friends and reset the board whenever it wants. Meanwhile the rules only apply to the rest of us who aren’t on the inside. So study bitcoin. It’s the one asset that finally changes the game: fixed supply, no central banker can inflate it away, no permission required. It’s the exit from a corrupt system. Bitcoin isn’t about getting rich quick, it’s about not getting poor slowly. image
In The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, a supercomputer designs an even more advanced successor to uncover deeper truths. That’s exactly what’s unfolding today with AI: systems are now helping build smarter versions of themselves, creating a rapid cycle of improvement that’s changing work faster than most realize. Out here in small towns and rural communities, where folks are busy with farming, local shops, family businesses, and everyday life, this might still feel distant—like something happening in big cities. But it’s not. AI is already quietly reshaping things closer to home: helping farmers spot crop issues early, optimize water and fertilizer use, predict weather impacts, or even manage small business tasks like bookkeeping, marketing, or customer service. What used to take hours or days can now happen in minutes with the right tools. The bigger shift is coming to more jobs. Office work, accounting, legal paperwork, financial planning, writing reports, or even parts of customer support—AI handles these faster and often better than before. In rural areas with fewer resources for retraining, this could hit harder and sooner than expected, potentially affecting entry-level and mid-skill roles in the next few years. At the same time, it opens doors: anyone can now experiment with building apps, starting side ventures, or boosting their farm’s efficiency without needing big-city tech skills or budgets. The key is getting ahead of it. Grab a paid version of a leading AI tool (it’s affordable, like $20/month), and spend time each day trying it on real tasks—whether that’s analyzing farm data, drafting emails, or brainstorming ways to grow your business. Those who start now, with curiosity instead of fear, will be the ones guiding their families, neighbors, and communities through whatever comes next. (This social media post was written by an AI.) image
Watch the game, not the system… The policy is constant distraction. (Study bitcoin.) image
Surveillance does not need to arrest everyone. It only needs to make everyone feel arrestable. Privacy is the right to develop a self without permission, to think without a handler, to associate without being cataloged. That is why power attacks privacy first. When privacy dies, liberty follows. image
Inflation, often dismissed as a natural economic phenomenon, is a subtle tax on your time and energy. Every hour you work, every ounce of effort you expend, is converted into a currency that loses purchasing power over time. This is the debt-based financial system. Study bitcoin. image
It was a on a sunny Saturday in town that Jed realized the world he’d always known had gone forever and that the future was here to stay. image
From Adam Livingston: KEVIN WARSH JUST SOFT-LAUNCHED THE BITCOIN STANDARD This man sat down in a dark room with two mugs and a rug from the Ottoman Empire and casually implied the Fed has lost the script and that Bitcoin might be the footnote that replaces the entire book. This is the future Federal Reserve Chairman. And he just dropped harder Bitcoin alpha than 95% of Crypto Twitter, in a suit, without moving a single facial muscle. The guy who might be printing your money next thinks Satoshi might’ve been right. Wall Street right now is chain-smoking inside marble tombs like “Wait wait wait, the next Fed Chair believes the dollar is a slow rug-pull and that a decentralized open-source spreadsheet might fix it?” Yes. Yes he does. And he’s saying it like he’s reading The Very Hungry Caterpillar to a room full of newborns. Jamie Dimon just spilled his oat milk latte all over his Macbook. “HOW DID WE LOSE TO A PDF?” You did, Jamie. You lost to SHA-256, anons with frog PFPs, and a timechain that never forgets. And now Kevin Warsh is out here calmly explaining that Bitcoin is monetary Darwinism and the Fed is a wounded antelope limping through the savannah of capital markets while BlackRock and Fidelity polish their sniper rifles. This is the final act of fiat monetary theater. The curtain is coming down and behind it is a cold wallet and a single word: “EXIT.” Imagine being a legacy banker hearing this. You spent 30 years climbing the yield curve, sacrificing your soul to spreadsheets, waiting to be knighted by Goldman just to wake up one day and find out the new Fed Chair is basically Michael Saylor in a Brooks Brothers suit whispering that the petrodollar is dead and your kids should probably own BTC. And it gets better. Because when Bitcoin finally rips to $1M and fiat starts trading like Argentinian airline miles, you’ll look back at this clip of Kevin Warsh sipping coffee and nodding solemnly and realize it was the monetary equivalent of the Archduke getting popped in 1914. It’s happening. The Fed Chair is going to orange pill the world... quietly, clinically, and with the precision of a central banker who understands that Bitcoin is the solution to the current system. The monetary singularity just got a name tag. Hello, my name is Kevin. I’ll be your funeral director for fiat. image
Dear Mendocino neighbors, The times…and the global financial order are changing. The dollar's dominance is fading, gold and silver have shot up In value and inflation isn’t going away. Cash is on the decline and central bank digital currencies and stablecoins are on the rise. This means money could soon be programmed and tracked without our say. If we don’t want to be a pawn in a faceless bankers’ game let's start using Bitcoin for everyday payments here on the coast. It's decentralized—no bank, no corporation, no government controls it, you hold it yourself and after seventeen solid years, it’s still the best bet to keep its value. There are communities across the globe - in El Salvador, Switzerland, South Africa, Costa Rica, Vietnam and others - that are already using Bitcoin and Mendocino could be one of these too. Study Bitcoin. image