free Keonne Rodriguez,
programmer of samurai wallet
who got kidnapped by criminal central banksters for trying to make btc private
dr.fred
fredglobal@getalby.com
npub1heys...mce6
privacy
monero
bitcoin

Peter McCormack 🏴☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪
@PeterMcCormack
·
11h
The thing that I despise most about Schiff is that he is a nasty human. So many people have worked so hard to save money and invest in their future and the future of their family.
He could ignore Bitcoin, instead he campaigns for and takes glee at any price drop. He literally wants people to lose money.
He is a fake, nasty person.
The Kobeissi Letter
@KobeissiLetter
BREAKING: Nvidia, $NVDA, founder Jensen Huang says “the whole world would've fallen apart” if Nvidia missed earnings expectations.
your owners
Simon Dixon
@SimonDixonTwitt
·
Nov 4
14 years ago this month, I spoke at the first Bitcoin conference in Prague.
Bitcoin had just crashed from $30 to $3.
None of us cared.
It was us vs. the banks.
My talk?
Disrupting banking—NOT helping banks own Bitcoin for you.
Who’s still with me?
jpm bitcoin selloff
german lawyer correctly declares 3 kilos of gold in germany worth 150.000 eur (today 300k), travels to costa rica, declares the gold to customs, gets arrested.
the corrupt narco criminals (costa rica government) rob his gold.
watch using subs in your language:

foreign invasion of
criminals:


of course


Connor
@connorxmr
The Parallel Economy Is Already Here… and It Runs on Monero
Monero is often discussed in terms of privacy, censorship resistance, or cypherpunk ideals, but one framing I rarely see is the idea of a parallel economy; a fully independent, private, and resilient economic system running alongside (and outside) the traditional financial world.
I think this “parallel economy” label is actually one of Monero’s strongest selling points, especially for reaching people who aren’t hardcore dissidents. It’s less confrontational than “fuck the banks” rhetoric, yet it still conveys real, tangible utility. Most normies can intuitively grasp why someone might want an economic layer that governments, corporations, and payment processors can’t easily monitor, freeze, or shut down.
When you look at what’s already live or in development, the parallel-economy angle feels undeniable:
@xmrbazaar – a decentralized marketplace that works entirely in Monero
Monero.eco – directory of real-world businesses and services that accept XMR
@MonericaProject – directory for a real Monero circular economy
Upcoming game changers
@XMRmap - interactive mapping of XMR accepting businesses
@MoneroHub - interface for guiding new users on using Monero
All of these are pieces of an actual alternative economy that already functions today; not in ten years, not in theory, but right now. You can buy VPNs, domain names, hosting, physical goods, and even services from freelancers without ever touching a bank or KYC exchange.
Calling it a “parallel economy” makes the use-case immediately obvious to regular people: it’s not just magic internet money for nerds; it’s a parallel financial rail you can opt into when the mainstream one becomes hostile, unreliable, or overly surveilled.
Yet for some reason the Monero community almost never uses this framing. We lean hard into the technical privacy arguments (which are valid and important) but miss the chance to speak in broader, more relatable terms. “Parallel economy” feels like low-hanging rhetorical fruit that could bring in a much wider audience without diluting the project’s core principles.
snow peso
measured in another fake money:


btc bros thanksgiving
this year



Tom Crown
@TomCrown
·
20h
when trump said no tax on crypto he meant thered be no profits to tax
CoinMamba
@coinmamba
·
6h
Just looked at BTC chart and next support is homeless shelter.

the purchasing power of btc
is already much lower than 4 years ago
and regardless btc is selling off violently
what does that mean?
why is btc selling off every day?