What is property?
What is money?
Money is energy - the apex energy of the human race. It’s monetary energy.
Property, on the other hand, is energy crystallized into solid form. If there’s only energy and mass, and one can be converted into the other, then property is simply the solid-state version of energy.
Without strong money, there’s no economy. And without property rights, there’s no economy either.
That’s why Bitcoin is so revolutionary - it’s digital property. For the first time in human history, we have a technology that makes it possible to grant true property rights to all 8 billion people on the planet.
Sid⚡️
sid@nostrplebs.com
npub1j6ze...0hft
Bitcoin + Lightning⚡️ | Data Analyst
Once you give people power, it’s almost impossible to take it back. It’s kinda like a one-way street. Think about books - you can’t just hand out millions of physical copies to everyone. But once they’re digital, in an app, suddenly anyone with a phone can get them for free. And when people realize that, they don’t need shelves of books anymore. Everything just collapses into a file they can carry around and share. And of course, once they have that kind of access, they’ll fight to keep it.
Same thing’s starting to happen with property. You don’t really need ten plots of land in different places to feel secure. If you can hold property digitally on your phone, transfer it instantly, actually own it yourself… that becomes priceless. And once millions of people “get it,” they’re not gonna let go. It’s basically irreversible.
Bitcoin is like the clearest version of this - property that’s been boiled down into pure digital form. Portable, simple, low-energy. Think of water frozen into ice, all that energy is locked in but easy to carry around.
Once this genie’s out, no one’s putting it back in the bottle.

Llocking your capital into physical assets like houses, or tightly controlled equities in any jurisdiction, doesn’t make much sense.
It’s smarter to hold mobile, flexible capital that isn’t tied down to physical or controlled assets. That’s exactly what Bitcoin offers - and over time, it just makes more and more sense.
The five forces below show that the rise of national interest isn’t just a passing political mood or a temporary cycle - it’s a deep structural shift in the global economy that will last for decades. In short, efficiency is being replaced by resilience and national security.
1. Geopolitical rivalry between China and the US
2. Fragility of global supply chains
3. Energy transition and the race for critical rare earth resources
4. Pressure from domestic politics
5. Weaponization of finance
It’s tough for an asset to go from zero to $100,000, but once it’s there, the jump to a million is way easier. Bitcoin took 15–16 years to climb from nothing to $100K, and I think in the next 3–4 years it’ll hit a million. Simple as that - nothing else out there comes close right now.
Boomers and Gen X got access to cheap property, but back then, information was expensive - especially transferring and organizing it. For Millennials and Gen Z, it’s flipped. Property is insanely expensive, but information is basically free.
With that cheap information, younger generations can organize, collaborate, and build new kinds of property. That’s going to make it harder for Boomers, Gen X & institutions to hold onto their edge - and in 30 years, they’ll be gone anyway.
So this is really the moment for Millennials and Gen Z to seize the opportunity. And whenever someone says they don’t believe in crypto or Bitcoin, I just ask them: what do you believe in?
Best strategy: buy Bitcoin, hold, ignore noise, and wait for long-term gains.
Personalized education and personalized entertainment is the future.
The entire world is constructed to convince you to sell your Bitcoin. Do not sell your Bitcoin! Everything else is inferior. You only sell your Bitcoin when you need it to conserve your life and the lives of those you love.
Every time you sold Bitcoin, you gave up the best-performing asset in the
world. Diversification is selling the winner to buy the losers.
The one thing I’ve realized is you can’t predict who’s going to “get it.” This is a financial revolution, and adoption doesn’t happen all at once - it moves from 1% to 2%, then 4%, 8%, 16%, and keeps compounding. By then, Bitcoin won’t be a $2 trillion asset class anymore, it’ll be $100 trillion.
By the time a financial advisor finally tells you it’s safe to buy, it’ll already be $1 million per Bitcoin. And when they say it’s a great idea, it’ll be $10 million. In the end, everyone gets Bitcoin at the price they deserve.
Apple was successful with the iPhone, and every other company in that space lost money trying to compete. One winner, 20,000 losers. Same with Amazon wiping out retailers, Facebook killing off newspapers and journalists, Google taking over ads, Microsoft in enterprise software. It teaches you that the world is brutally competitive - 99.9% of the time, you lose unless you find the right thing.
When you do find the right thing, it’s like discovering a safe place to live. If you grew up in safety, you don’t appreciate it. But if you grew up somewhere unsafe, you’ll risk everything to get to that safe place. That’s what builds conviction. People without conviction usually either lack experience or haven’t faced desperation.
The world is hyper-competitive, with countless wrong paths and usually only one right path. And once you find the right path, double down on it because it’s exponentially more efficient than all the alternatives.
Study Bitcoin. Build Conviction. Double down.
I think the big challenge for people with Bitcoin is that most people don’t even realize they have a problem, so they don’t see it as the solution. They’re comfortable, maybe a bit ignorant of the problems, and just drifting along quietly. The ones who really get it are usually people who’ve been jolted out of that comfort zone - and what causes that jolt is different for everyone, depending on where they are and what they’re facing.
The reason Bitcoin works is because it’s this massive, parallel, shared-nothing network. You’ve got hundreds of millions of people, all thinking for themselves in their own local circumstances, without needing permission from anyone.
Another reason Bitcoin works is because people you don’t know, solving problems you don’t have, in places you’ve never been to settles upon Bitcoin as a solution. And that choice, multiplied across the world, ends up raising the value of the Bitcoin you already hold.
The people who embrace Bitcoin first are often those who felt blocked by the conventional system, felt hopeless, or were staring at some kind of crisis. That’s why twenty-somethings and thirty-somethings tend to get it first.
Bitcoin’s volatility often comes from upside, unlike equities where volatility is tied to downside.
In other words, Bitcoin could fall if markets drop, but because there will only ever be 21 million coins, it is likely to bounce back even harder over time.
Bitcoin’s scarcity, difficulty adjustment, and proof-of-work are key strengths.
Bitcoin forces people to confront their own ego.
Bitcoin is the best frictionless way to express how you feel about debased currency.
Permissionless tech empowers people by removing needs to ask companies for access to money or speech.