🇺🇸 The US dollar is one of the strongest currencies of the past 100+ years.
Yet it has lost 97% of its purchasing power since 1913 👀

The Rules of Bitcoin
1. Buy Bitcoin
2. Don't Sell the Bitcoin
The Rules of Bitcoin
1. Buy Bitcoin
2. Don't Sell the Bitcoin
#Bitcoin fixing what the fiat system broke.

Bitcoin is digital gold.
Bitcoin is mathematical.
Bitcoin is a global payments network.
Bitcoin is the best money humanity has ever had. ✨
We only used gold as money in the past because nothing better existed
Now something better exists:
Bitcoin
Gold has always been a placeholder for something like #Bitcoin
Most of your life is spent working so you can enjoy a small fraction of it
You're alive for 80 years
Go to school until your 22
Work for 45 years
Retire for 13 years
This is not the life I want
IMO, saving in #Bitcoin will help you retire within 20 years
Self custody.
Run a node.🏴☠️

#Bitcoin is the only asset you can own without worrying that someone else will dilute your holdings away
Could Satoshi Nakamoto really be Epstein?
Where did this come from? Has everyone gone crazy?
On January 30th, 3.5 million pages of Epstein documents were released. Everyone's talking about it.
Tweets are flying around saying, "Satoshi Nakamoto is in the documents!", "Epstein created Bitcoin!", "The CIA is behind Bitcoin!"
So what's the truth? Let me tell you the truth. Both the fake ones and the real ones.
Let's start with the fake ones.
There are emails that went viral on Twitter. An invitation from Epstein to Satoshi: "Come here, man!" A reply from Satoshi to Epstein: "Get out of my sight!"
FAKE.
Yahoo News investigated this. There is NO such email in the Epstein files. Someone created it with Photoshop and it spread.
I also searched the Epstein library (the site published by the DOJ). I searched for the term "Satoshi Nakamoto."
The results: It only comes up in general Bitcoin discussions, in the context of the phrase "Satoshi Nakamoto created Bitcoin." There's no real connection.
So no, Epstein is not Satoshi. Epstein didn't exchange emails with Satoshi.
So does Epstein have absolutely NO connection to Bitcoin?
Yes, he does. But it's much more mundane than you might think.
Now, let me tell you the facts.
In 2016, Epstein wrote an email to an advisor in Saudi Arabia. The email read:
"I spoke with some of the Bitcoin founders, they're very excited."
This is a real email. It's in the Epstein files.
But note: it says "with some of the founders," not "with Satoshi."
Is it verified? No. Epstein said so, but there's no proof. Maybe he was lying, to influence. Maybe he really did speak with them, we don't know.
But I think it's a lie, of course...
But the important point: Satoshi disappeared in 2011. The email is from 2016. It's impossible anyway.
Second fact: Blockstream.
Blockstream is a company working on Bitcoin. Adam Back and Austin Hill are its founders.
There is evidence in the Epstein files that he invested in Blockstream. It's mentioned in emails coordinating travel with Adam Back and Austin Hill.
So Epstein invested money in Blockstream. He was an investor in a crypto company.
Surprising? No. Epstein was a rich man, he invested in everything. He was interested in technology.
Third fact: MIT donation.
In 2017, Epstein donated $750,000 to MIT's DCI (Digital Currency Initiative) program.
What does DCI do? It funds the Bitcoin Core team. So it supports Bitcoin code developers.
Why did Epstein donate? Maybe he believed in Bitcoin. Perhaps for PR. Perhaps for other reasons.
But the bottom line: Epstein indirectly contributed to Bitcoin's development.
Fourth fact: The 2011 comment.
In 2011, Epstein called Bitcoin "brilliant." But added that it "has serious drawbacks."
A normal investor comment. Nothing special.
Fifth fact: The argument with Peter Thiel.
In 2014, Epstein argued with Peter Thiel (PayPal founder, Bitcoin investor) about the definition of Bitcoin.
The email exists, that's true. But it was an academic discussion. Something like, "What is Bitcoin, how can it be defined?"
Sixth fact: The "Sharia crypto" project.
In 2016, Epstein proposed a project: to create two digital currencies. One "sharia" compliant for Muslim countries.
Did the project materialize? No. Just a proposal.
Now, let me summarize all this:
Was Epstein interested in Bitcoin? YES.
Did Epstein invest in Bitcoin? YES (Blockstream).
Did Epstein fund Bitcoin development? YES (MIT donation).
Was Epstein Satoshi? NO.
Did Epstein speak with Satoshi? UNPROVEN.
So Epstein was a crypto-enthusiast investor. He did the things wealthy people do: Invest, donate, propose projects.
But he didn't create Bitcoin. He wasn't Satoshi.
Now, let's get to the question, "Who is Satoshi?"
Nobody knows. It's been investigated for 15 years, and they haven't found him.
The strongest candidates are:
1. Hal Finney: The person who received the first Bitcoin transaction. Stylometric analysis suggests he most closely resembles Satoshi. But there's no proof. Hal Finney died in 2014, and he himself said, "I'm not him."
2. Nick Szabo: Created the concept of "Bit Gold" in 1998 (a precursor to Bitcoin). His writing style is very similar to Satoshi's. But he denies it. He says, "It's not me."
3. Adam Back: Created Hashcash (the technology Bitcoin uses). Satoshi referenced Adam Back in the white paper. But Adam says, "It's not me."
4. Len Sassaman: Cryptographer. Committed suicide in 2011 (the year Satoshi disappeared). Some say the timing is suspicious. But there's no evidence.
5. Dorian Nakamoto: A Japanese-American whose real name is Satoshi Nakamoto. In 2014, Newsweek said "this guy." But they were wrong. Dorian said, "I don't know what Bitcoin is."
6. Craig Wright: An Australian, said "I am Satoshi" in 2016. He went to court, and the court said "no, you are not" in 2024.
7. CIA/NSA theory: Tucker Carlson said "the CIA created Bitcoin." Evidence? None. The NSA wrote a report in 1996 called "How to Make a Mint," which is similar to Bitcoin. But that was 13 years ago, no connection.
The truth is: Satoshi's identity is unknown. Maybe it's one person. Maybe it's a group. Maybe he's dead. Maybe he's in hiding.
But one thing is certain: it's not Epstein.
Now let me answer the question, "Why do these conspiracy theories arise?"
Because people hate uncertainty.
Diamond hands here. HODL ₿itcoin ⚡️

#Bitcoin always takes the most painful path:
1) It moves sideways when you want it to go up or down
2) It skyrockets or crashes when you least expect it to
3) It underperforms other assets in the short term to test your conviction
4) It makes you feel like the selling will never end JUST BEFORE the selling ends
5) It makes you feel like the bull run is about to end just before a new wave of tourists starts jumping in
6) It makes you feel stupid for 3+ years sometimes
Once you embrace the volatility, enjoying the ride becomes much easier
Bitcoin's time will come
Most people will be sidelined
All the weak hands must sell before that happens
I don't know if that has happened yet, but I think we're close... meaning we're month away 🤣 (refer to points 2 and 4)
Keep stacking
Ignore the noise
Focus on getting your share of 21M BTC while the majority of the world panics or ignores Bitcoin

Bitcoin at $74K
Down 40% from the top.
Not selling.
If #Bitcoin can teach you one thing, it's that conviction pays.

$75 BILLION EU FINTECH GIANT REVOLUT WILL INTEGRATE THE #BITCOIN LIGHTNING NETWORK
OVER 50 MILLION USERS. HUGE 🔥
🚨 BREAKING NEWS 🚨
#Bitcoin CEO announces Bitcoin could go up, down, or sideways from here
BUCKLE UP
#Bitcoin only
You don't need stocks
You don't need precious metals
You don't need real estate
Patience
Consistency
Ignore the noise
You're almost there
Nothing about Bitcoin has fundamentally changed
Hold through the pain, I promise it will be worth it
I've been asked this question a few times:
If there's a limited supply of #Bitcoin, how is everybody going to get access to it?
The total supply of BTC will max out at 21,000,000.
~20,000,000 BTC have already been issued.
1,000,000 BTC are going to be issued over the next 115 years.
Each BTC can be split into multiple units called, like dollars and cents.
1 BTC can be split into 100,000,000 Satoshis, meaning there will only ever be a maximum of 2,100,000,000,000,000 Satoshis (2.1 quadrillion).
1 Bitcoin has a market price of 77,000 US dollars.
1 Satoshi is currently worth a fraction of a penny; you can buy ~1,200 Satoshis with 1 USD.
If you divide the total number of Satoshis by the total population on earth, you would get ~262,500 Satoshis or 0.002625 BTC per person...
Keep in mind that:
- Some people already own a lot more than 0.002625 Bitcoin
- There are others who own a lot less or none at all
- Some coins have been lost
- Some people will never sell their coins, and will instead use their BTC as collateral to borrow
ANYONE can participate with any amount of money, but not everyone will get the same amount of BTC.
You can buy Bitcoin in almost any currency:
- 1 Nigerian Naira = ~0.83 satoshis
- 1 Thai Baht = ~38 Satoshis
- 1 Turkish Lira = ~27 Satoshis
This shows that even some of the weakest currencies can be exchanged for the most powerful form of property ever discovered.
Bitcoin will be distributed based on how early you are to join the economy.
Today, 262,500 Satoshis costs UNDER 220 USD, and it's possible to buy slowly over time if you don't have $220 upfront.
Over time this will get more expensive.
Just to show the numbers with some different currencies, 262,500 Satoshis would cost:
- 307,160 Naira
- 20,326 Indian Rupees
- 6,926 Thai Baht
- 9,605 Turkish Lira
- 298.61 Canadian Dollars
- 160.34 Pound sterling
Keep in mind that this money is almost like insurance on the legacy financial system's future.
If the legacy financial system fails, this could be all the wealth you need to survive for a very long time.