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Scott Wolfe
scottwolfe@primal.net
npub15m9y...q643
Coordinator @FBCE / Board Member @TPBInc / Operations Lead @BitcoinCoalitionCA / I work at the intersection of political-economic analysis, disruptive technology, community development and social impact with emphasis on upstream action.
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Scott Wolfe 1 year ago
THE OTHER 4-YEAR BITCOIN CYCLES? There is already a significant amount of analysis and discussion of the 4-year cycle associated with the supply schedule of #BTC baked into the #Bitcoin software code. This is the reduction in new supply of BTC (the block subsidy) by 50% every 210,000 mined blocks (Fig. 1), what is referred to as the Bitcoin "halving". A new halving occurs roughly every 4 years (ie, 210,000 new BTC blocks are mined roughly every four years) and these will continue until the final halving at some point in the year 2140. This diminishing supply of new BTC into the market, coupled with Bitcoin's fixed total supply (only 21 million BTC will ever exist) produce a supply/demand phenomenon which drives the price of BTC up over time relative to all other currencies. This is why the price of BTC compared to the CAD, USD, Euro and other currencies is always "up and to the right" over longer time frames (Fig. 2). With the next Bitcoin halving just around the corner (est. April 19, 2024) there is a fresh wave of focus on the halving phenomenon and what the next reduction of BTC supply per block (from 6.25 BTC per block to 3.125 BTC per block) will bring. The other side to this supply/demand equation is, of course, demand. The "up and to the right" dynamic requires demand to remain constant or increase relative to supply. The extent to which demand remains equal or grows over time, the price of BTC relative to other currencies will increase. That is a very simple description, of course, and there is further nuance. Nevertheless, this is the basic interplay between supply and demand. So what about demand? Well, it's pretty clear from a scan of the global environment and the recent upward tick of BTC relative to all currencies around the world that demand continues to increase. Key features of this include the growing adoption of BTC in countries around the world where local currencies are experiencing rapid devaluation, as well as the ongoing introduction of new BTC purchasing mechanisms such as spot BTC Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), most recently in the United States. It dawned on me recently that the demand side of the equation may, in fact, have its own 4-year cycles, one "sociological" and another "individual/psychological". The first has to do with the increased visibility and perceived credibility of Bitcoin as its price relative to other currencies continues to increase over time, and the second refers to the time it takes for individuals to undertake education about Bitcoin. These warrant further consideration. As anyone who has become convinced of Bitcoin's value and importance will tell you, the educational journey is multi-faceted and ongoing. It's why we colloquially refer to it as going down the Bitcoin "rabbit hole". The more you learn, the more you realize there is yet to learn. Each step down the rabbit hole reveals new steps to be taken...from learning about how the Bitcoin protocol functions, to learning about what money actually is, to learning about how global debt and financial markets operate, to learning about how energy markets operate, and so on. The seemingly never-ending Bitcoin rabbit hole is why individuals and groups from such a vast diversity of backgrounds have been drawn to Bitcoin and why it is gradually (though not quickly enough) working its way into academic circles where, ostensibly, people have the time and mandate to study, study, study. A great example of this is reflected in the forthcoming "Resistance Money: A Philosophical Case for Bitcoin" by philosophy professors @resistancemoney @rettlerb @craigwarmke. It's also why @SatoshiEducate was established and why student groups like @BTCStudents @CornellBitcoin are sprouting up in the same way that local Bitcoin circular economies have in recent years. We're just at the outset of this new wave of academic interest and adoption. We've also seen new stakeholders and market mechanisms come into play over the past couple of years -- institutional adopters of BTC and tools like the Bitcoin ETFs. All of the above could be considered part of a sociological 4-year demand cycle for Bitcoin. As the number continue to go up, as this thing simply refuses to die, and friends tell friends (so to speak), Bitcoin evolves sociologically. Add to this the phenomenon of individual learning about Bitcoin, a journey from initiate to adept. Put otherwise, the time it takes to earn one's belts (white belt, green belt, and so on). That analogy may sound odd or even corny to people who still haven't even peered into the Bitcoin rabbit hole, but anyone who has spent time down the rabbit hole will tell you that it's quite apt. The learning journey requires curiosity, humility and, along the way, a willingness to challenge conventional wisdom on many fronts. It almost always includes mistakes and course correction. All of this takes time, and it may be useful to consider this in terms of cycles as well. Perhaps another 4-year demand cycle, the individual/psychological cycle. Now, a 4-year learning cycle may sound daunting to someone who is just beginning to learn about Bitcoin. It could be off-putting. I would say the following in response. Most of us who have been on the journey (me since 2019) fumbled into it. We didn't know we were on a journey until we were far enough down the rabbit hole to look up and appreciate it for what it is. We were simply following our noses and that little part of us that says "hmm, that's interesting" or "no, that can't be true, let me take a closer look", fearing not to place one foot after the other, and to continually submit ideas to interrogation. Four years into the educational journey myself, I can honestly say that while it has been dis-orienting at moments, it has also been renewing and richly rewarding. The latter far outweighs the former. These themes are reflected in a couple of other pieces I've written recently, if you're interested: Going Further Upstream on SDoH. A Call to Action. x.com/ScottAWolfe/st… Sojourns in the digital future twitter.com/ScottAWolfe/st… If you're just beginning to learn about Bitcoin, I would recommend just keeping your eyes on the next step, all the while recognizing that this time next year you will look back and be positively amazed. The beautiful thing is that there are now so many resources available (books, podcasts, conference, meetups and more). I marvel at what it must have been like 6, 10, 14 years ago to peer into the Bitcoin rabbit hole and follow one's nose forward. If you have read this far, what do you think about the idea of there being these other 4-year Bitcoin cycles, on the demand side? Does that resonate? Does a 4-year timeframe just seem arbitrary? These sociological and individual/psychological timeframes wouldn't pair exactly with each other nor the 4-year supply cycle. However, they might provide valuable conceptual and analytical frameworks. What do ya think? Thanks for reading! ———————————- Figures 1 and 2
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Scott Wolfe 1 year ago
I bought the #Bitcoin dip. I also bought the dippity dip. I wasn’t able to buy the dippity dippity dip though. However, since the fiat price of #BTC is back up above the dippity dip level, I don’t feel quite as sad. IYKYK
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Scott Wolfe 1 year ago
Another half-baked reflection from time spent down the #Bitcoin rabbit hole. I have been preoccupied lately with the question of how we rescue and renew institutions and other social intermediaries from debasement, tribalization and capture. We are in an epoch of social and political tribalization predicated on distorted signals and coding (in language), Big letter ideology/affiliation has replaced the actual political-philosophical underpinnings that gave rise to people grouping and organizing around them. “Conservative/Liberal” have replaced “conservative/liberal”. “Progressive/progressive” has followed suit, although (ironically) progressivism was a reaction to the distortion and capture of liberalism manifest in the US Democratic Party. These distortions have become entrenched via political parties which a similar role as sports franchises. They centralize, encapsulate and re-present to the public a wide range of values, beliefs and emotions with the goal of attracting and maintaining congregants. The frenzy of tribal affiliation, channeled through political parties, is amplified by mass media which prey upon this theatre of competition. We are provided a steady diet of coded language & signals that perpetuate the sport. We then recycle these in civic engagements. How do we retrieve ourselves from the gravitational pull of this destructive state of affairs. What in the prescription for action? I have a couple of thoughts, both imperfectly fashioned. The first is for us to recognize the theatre for what it is and ourselves as unwitting actors. This means becoming conscious of our tribalization and the factors at play. It also means interrogating our tendency to falsely attribute intent to individuals on the “other team”. 8/ As I’ve said before, I believe that 80% of people can generally agree on 80% of issues. We are in an epoch where we are conditioning ourselves (perhaps conditioned) to believe that only 20% of people can agree on 80% of things. The act of seeing across perceived difference and political affiliation, of exercising a spirit of generosity and willingness to dialogue, is one that can be undertaken personally. It doesn’t require a political or social movement. This is empowering. Secondly, however, another potential remedy for the ills of our epoch is to remove political parties from our liberal democracies. Let us return to an era of elected political representation WITHOUT the affiliation of our elected representatives to a centralized/ing party. This could (would?) incite greater discourse at a local level and place increased weight on civic education and engagement to achieve value, rather than our default to the centralized political packaging of party institutions. A re-de-centralization of democracy. I welcome thoughts on the above. If you made it this far, thank you for considering my reflections.
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Scott Wolfe 1 year ago
TORONTO | Pay in #BTC  ☕️ Capulus Coffee House 📍881 St Clair Ave West Delicious food and beverages. Support businesses that accept #Bitcoin. @BTC Map @Bitcoin Coalition of Canada While you’re at it, please follow @BTCToronto_ and @BTCcoalition_ca. 🇨🇦
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
I woke up this morning feeling this immense sense of urgency that we need to onboard another 10 million people globally to self-custodied #Bitcoin by January 3, 2024. A combination of new Bitcoiners and Bitcoiners getting their #BTC  off exchanges. Are forthcoming spot #Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. positive or negative in the long run? I dunno. BUT, I don’t want for us to risk the transformational potential of Bitcoin globally. So, let’s front run the hell out of large institutions b/n now and Bitcoin’s 15th birthday (Jan 3). LFG!
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Please help! I’m trying to use Nostr more routinely (via @Damus) and am running into this problem. I have no idea what wallet is currently attached to my profile. It seems I can zap and be zapped, but I have no idea where it’s going to or coming from. Have tested via a couple small zaps and it’s not connecting to any of my current wallets. I also go to the “Settings” page and try to “Attach a Wallet” but either get an error message when I click “Attach Wallet” or get a scan option with a “Paste” option but when I try to paste in a wallet address nothing happens. Can someone help? @jb55 anyone else? 🙏
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Let’s make war unaffordable. #Bitcoin fixes incentives, which can help heal the world. image
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Hello all! I’ve been away from Nostr for a bit. I’ll try to get back here more regularly. Shout out to all who are building the decentralized, free, open-source future for humanity!
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
One of the dopest music icons pics of all time! image
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Could someone help me please. I’m trying to change my wallet on #Nostr via @Damus and when I click on Attach Wallet, I get this error message. How do I fix this? image
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Latest from #Niger, as I understand it. Apparently Wagner contingency has arrived on the ground (with support from Russia?) AND ECOWAS Security Council has coincidentally backed down from its threat of sending forces in to restore the puppet leader of France/U.S. Could it be that Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso are successfully forming a beachhead of resistance to neo-colonialism, backed with Wagner muscle? I pray this is the case and these are the early weeks and months of a new African sovereignty movement. I also hate the thought of the Wagner Group acting as the front for a Russian colonial grab at African resources. Please stand with Africa and add your voice to those calling for the full sovereignty of African nations and peoples from colonial control via debt and force!
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Great new enhancements to the @Damus app on #Nostr. Looks great. I just smash followed another 50 or so Nostriches thanks to Damus suggestions. You should too!
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Power to the people of #Niger. Down with France. End the CFA Franc and French neo-colonialism.
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Scott Wolfe 2 years ago
Go morning fellow Nostriches!!! Let’s get a couple dozen thousand new folks onto #Nostr today! Post to your other social media apps (FB, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc) and encourage people to sign up. Please follow/connect with me too! Let’s do this!!! 🔥🔥🔥