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Trey
tshodl@nostrplebs.com
npub1m6y9...e2p9
Bitcoin + FIRE | Newsletter: firebtc.io | VP Sales @unchained
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Trey 1 year ago
Saving feels like a scam. You did everything right. Worked hard. Spent less. Saved more. And you’re still falling behind. It’s not your fault. The system is rigged. The dollar is built to lose value. That’s why saving doesn’t work. Wages lag. Costs rise. And the “safe” path just delays your collapse. You’re not undisciplined. You’re saving in a broken system. New FIRE BTC just dropped: 💸 Why saving feels like a scam 🧱 Why bitcoin fixes the foundation 🔥 How to opt out before it’s too late
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Trey 1 year ago
Even if you take an initial 1% allocation to bitcoin, here's what most likely will happen: Your 1% grows to 3% AND You start to understand bitcoin better THEN Your 3% grows to 5% AND You add an add'l 5% bc you understand bitcoin better Allocate ➡️ Understand ➡️ Growth 🔁
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Trey 1 year ago
My buddy has $270,000 sitting in a bank account earning 0.00%. 😱 He thinks he's being safe. I told him he’s guaranteed to lose. FIRE BTC Issue 23: "Cash is Trash" is live. 👇 Here's what I'd do instead: firebtc.substack.com/p/cash-is-trash
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Trey 1 year ago
My dad just reminded me of this card I gave him as a kid. Classic!
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Trey 1 year ago
An AI bot that automatically extracts a readable and usable recipe from the SEO-optimized hellscape of a normal recipe webpage.
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Trey 1 year ago
A buddy of mine showed me yesterday that he has $270,000 sitting in cash in an account that pays 0% interest. I told him that's crazy. He asked what I would do with it. I told him by the end of Monday, I would have $270k less cash and $270k more bitcoin. We are not the same.
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Trey 1 year ago
🌯 Financing a $12 burrito 🌯 Pay $1 per month for a year and save the unpaid dollars at @River earning 3.8% paid in BTC over the course of the year. You earn ~$0.25 of BTC which then grows at 20%+ annually. In 21 years, your burrito is free. You're welcome.
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Trey 1 year ago
The market doesn't yet understand the significance of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. The SBR signals that the U.S. views bitcoin not just as a financial asset but as a geopolitical tool to defend its hegemony. Nation-states watching the U.S. accumulate bitcoin will likely feel pressure to secure their own reserves, especially resource-rich or politically isolated countries that need alternatives to the U.S. dollar system. Some have already started. This will accelerate a global bitcoin accumulation race, and the market is not even close to bullish enough.
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Trey 1 year ago
888,888 blocks and no signs of stopping. There is no top.
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Trey 1 year ago
Lips are inflating faster than the money supply. image
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Trey 1 year ago
Buying $12,000 per year ($1k per month) at a modest 14% annual CAGR for bitcoin is $276,000 after 10 years. Do this for another 10 years, your stack is worth $1.25m. Do it for another 10 years, your stack is worth $4.9m. Anyone can do this. The lesson? START TODAY.
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Trey 1 year ago
Contrary to conventional monetary theory, bitcoin may need to be adopted as a unit of account before it can fully function as a medium of exchange. The key driver behind this shift is the opportunity cost of not holding bitcoin, which incentivizes individuals and businesses to seek payment in bitcoin and price goods in bitcoin terms. As this shift occurs, bitcoin’s circulation naturally increases, reinforcing its role as a true global currency. In this way, unit of account adoption acts as a catalyst rather than a final step, unlocking bitcoin’s potential as a widely used medium of exchange. The conventional progression of monetary adoption follows a three-step sequence: store of value → medium of exchange → unit of account. However, in the case of bitcoin, this order may be reversed in key respects. Specifically, bitcoin’s adoption as a unit of account can act as a forcing function for its adoption as a medium of exchange, driven by the opportunity cost of not holding bitcoin in an environment of increasing monetary debasement. Historically, new forms of money first emerge as a store of value, later transition into a medium of exchange, and only after widespread acceptance do they become a unit of account. This is because: - A money must first be trusted to hold its value before it is widely accepted in trade. - Only after mass adoption as a means of payment do people start thinking in terms of that currency, allowing it to function as a pricing standard. Bitcoin has so far followed the first step—acting as a store of value—but has struggled to gain traction as a medium of exchange. The key reason for this is its high volatility and the strong incentives to hold rather than spend. However, a shift in how bitcoin is perceived—toward viewing it as a unit of account—could serve as a necessary precursor for its medium-of-exchange adoption. Economic actors (individuals, businesses, and institutions) make financial decisions based on opportunity cost—what they forgo by choosing one option over another. As bitcoin’s price appreciates over time relative to fiat currencies: - Individuals and businesses increasingly recognize the cost of holding and transacting in depreciating fiat currencies. - They begin to demand bitcoin as payment rather than accepting fiat, since bitcoin is expected to preserve and potentially increase in value. - Workers, contractors, and service providers start asking for bitcoin-denominated payments to retain their purchasing power. This shift in incentives begins to change how people think about money. Instead of measuring prices in fiat and converting to bitcoin, they start thinking directly in bitcoin terms—a hallmark of unit of account adoption. Once a critical mass of people starts pricing and negotiating in bitcoin terms, medium-of-exchange adoption follows naturally: - If businesses begin denominating goods and services in bitcoin, the need to convert back to fiat decreases. - As more people receive wages, contracts, and invoices in bitcoin, it becomes easier to spend directly in bitcoin. - Bitcoin transactions increase, improving liquidity, reducing volatility, and reinforcing its utility as a means of exchange. In this sense, unit of account adoption serves as a forcing function: - By thinking in bitcoin terms, individuals and businesses normalize Bitcoin transactions. - This reduces friction in using bitcoin for daily transactions, accelerating its adoption as a medium of exchange. Discuss 👇
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Trey 1 year ago
We did it, fam! We survived the great bear market of the last week of February, 2025. Well, we thought we did, but even a well-timed tweet from Trump couldn’t saved the price in the near term. In the depths of this pullback, bitcoin fell almost 30% from the all-time high of $109k, hitting as low as $78k. So far. Many people have been freaking out, calling this the end of the post-halving cycle and the start of the next prolonged bear market. While disconcerting, these types of swings are very common. Bitcoin is notorious for its price volatility, and then when it happens, people act like it’s the end of the world. A more constructive reaction is to take a step back, remind yourself of the bigger picture, and recognize the opportunity being presented.
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Trey 1 year ago
The recent volatility in bitcoin is a reminder not to get too overconfident when thing's are going your way. Trying to outperform bitcoin will likely give you financial diarrhea. View quoted note →
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Trey 1 year ago
🤢 Montezuma's Revenge FIRE BTC Issue #19 - Greed comes back to bite ----------------------------- I just got back from a resort in Mexico. Beautiful weather, great food, all-inclusive — my kind of vacation. I even got to play a round of golf down there. All the while, it was cold and dreary at home. Perfect timing to get away. We had smooth travel home. No issues getting to the airport, no flight delays. All good. Then it hit me. “Montezuma’s Revenge”, a.k.a. “traveler’s diarrhea”, is commonly experienced by Americans traveling to Mexico and is caused by exposure to unfamiliar bacteria in the local food and water. Needless to say, this type of sickness is not fun — I’ll spare you the details of what I experienced. Montezuma’s Revenge is symbolic for retribution after overindulgence. When you’re living it up in a beautiful place like Mexico, and the margaritas are flowing like the salmon of Capistrano (lol Dumb and Dumber reference), it’s easy to get a little careless. Sometimes things seem like they’re on easy mode — everything’s going your way. Like when bitcoin goes from $20k to $60k to $100k within the course of two years and you’ve been stacking hard to reach your FIRE goal. It’s working, and you’re feeling good. You’re pretty freaking smart, eh? So you think, “I’m good at this, and I bet I can outperform bitcoin.” I’m here to tell you: That’s the margaritas talking… Here are a few things that are sure to give you financial diarrhea and slow down your path to FIRE. ----------------------------- 🔧 Buying bitcoin on leverage Leverage can be a great thing for your finances if done correctly. In fact, I always look for ways to use the debt-based fiat system we live in to my benefit. What I mean by “buying bitcoin on leverage” is using margin-style, callable debt at high levels. Some exchanges offer 5:1, 10:1, 20:1, or even 100:1 leverage on bitcoin. Any of these options are hugely risky, and you are virtually guaranteed to lose your money. Avoid at all costs. A safer way to buy bitcoin on leverage might be to borrow against your home or against your bitcoin stack. Just be very careful. When the market is ripping, this can feel very easy. But if your timing is off, you’ll be feeling a lot of stress. I’ve touched this stove before… 🕰️ Timing the market I’m not a good trader. My timing is pretty terrible. I know this because I’ve spent way too much time, energy, and money trying to be good at trading. I don’t think I’m alone. You’re probably not a good trader either. Thinking you can time the market by selling at the top and only buying at the bottom will most likely lead to you owning less bitcoin than you otherwise would. Missing the best 10 days of bitcoin price movement each year puts you in a losing position. You can’t afford to do this. The old adage, “Time in the market beats timing the market”, is true for 99% of us. This is core to the FIRE approach. 📉 Trading other assets to get more bitcoin There’s always another sexy trade out there trying to grab your attention and your capital. Here are a few recent examples: The Magnificent Seven Memecoins XRP (talk about diarrhea…….) MSTR (Strategy, formerly known as MicroStrategy) Of course, some of these have more merit than others. The Mag Seven has been a powerhouse in the traditional finance world, driving most of the gains in the stock market. However, all of these have underperformed bitcoin over the long term. I’m a MSTR believer and I own some. But trying to trade MSTR, especially with options, in an effort to end up with more bitcoin, will like lead to less, not more. There was recently a LOT of hype around this trade. I’m not immune to it… Memecoins and XRP should be considered outright scams and should be avoided at all costs. Good luck trying to get the timing right or have the inside knowledge needed to dump on the pump. Just stay humble and stack sats. ----------------------------- Montezuma’s Revenge is inspired by the historical episode of the Spanish Conquistador, Hernán Cortés. When he met the Aztec Empire in the 1500’s, its ruler, Montezuma II, thought Cortés might be a god and showered him with gifts, including gold. But instead of satisfying the Spaniards, this only fueled their greed for more. Montezuma’s attempts to appease them backfired, and his empire was eventually conquered. Centuries later, though, foreigners continue to receive the payback for Cortés overstepping his bounds in the form of Montezuma’s Revenge. It’s easy to be tempted to overindulge when things are good. We are all susceptible to it. This is where having a clearly laid plan to achieve your financial goals comes into play. I’m feeling better now, but this recent sickness, and the recent volatility in the bitcoin market, gave me a firm reminder to resist the temptation to overindulge. ----------------------------- That’s it for this week. Thanks for reading! If you enjoyed this content, make sure to subscribe to the FIRE BTC newsletter so you'll get each new issue delivered to your inbox.