Discovering Bitcoin ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€'s avatar
Discovering Bitcoin ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€
discoveringbitcoin@primal.net
npub1a2sx...fpw3
THE Bitcoin origin stories podcast; how did you discover Bitcoin? - the pleb preferred lowest time preference podcast in the game. proud supplier of x1 #40HPW. writer. spiral enjoyer.โš•๏ธ๐ŸŒ€ ๐ŸŽง discoveringbtc@fountain.fm โšก๏ธ discoveringbitcoin@primal.net ๐ŸŸฃ primal.net/discoveringbitcoin
"which possesses either or both (in actual fact, almost always both) of the following characteristics: (a) it acquires its revenue by physical coercion (taxation); and (b) it achieves a compulsory monopoly of force and of ultimate decision-making power over a given territorial area. Both of these essential activities of the State necessarily constitute criminal aggression and depredation of the just rights of private property of its subjects (including self-ownership)." - The Ethics of Liberty ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€
The truth is that you can either allow a slow devolution, or you can cause your own swift elimination. If you allow the FDE to exist, you are likely to keep your game going through at least your lifetimes. But if you come after our people with force, you will drive them to destroy you quickly. Right now, they arenโ€™t out to hurt you, only to be separate. But it wouldnโ€™t take much for a lot of them to turn against you. You see, once they leave, itโ€™s usually only six or eight months before the fog begins to clear. Then, they begin to comprehend just how perverse state servitude is, and how deeply it affected their lives. If you start hunting and killing them after theyโ€™ve passed that point, they will turn on you with a force that you donโ€™t think possible. โ€œIf you want to remain in power, or maybe even remain alive, I suggest that you leave them alone. You have great armies, but they have the ten million best and brightest on this planet. Donโ€™t piss them off... โ€œIโ€™m done, gentlemenโ€ฆ Shall we?โ€ - A Lodging of Wayfaring Men ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€
The world needs more Howard Hughes energy. Up only. LFG ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€ image
Going to assume most of you Austriches are using a VPN ๐Ÿซก๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€ image
image Discover Episode Ninety-One - Discovering #Bitcoin with @Efrat Fenigson ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€ ๐ŸŽ™tyrannt disrespectoor, podcaster - You're The Voiceโ , freedom maximalist independent journalist. ๐ŸŽง WE discuss: โ€ข Efrat's Bitcoin origin story โ€ข Orange Pilling the Red Pilled โ€ข Family Values โ€ข Activism โ€ข Heaps More YUGE thanks to Efrat for sharing some of her scarceโณ and finiteโšก๏ธ - - SHOW YOUR SUPPORT: Zap Sats! โšก๏ธ via #value4value: discoveringbtc@fountain.fm via @geyserfund: via P2P: djdbtc@zeuspay.com If you dig the show, please zap sats in support! ๐Ÿซก Look out for Episode 92, soon! ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€ - - - ๐ŸŸ  New to Discovering #Bitcoin? Talk to @TheBTCAdviser - to help you discover Bitcoin, take self-custody, become sovereign, and ensure confidence about your Bitcoin position every step of the way. Tell 'em DJ from Discovering Bitcoin sent you:
Reckon Dick Cheney has ever listened to Michael Jackson? ๐ŸŽถ๐Ÿ‘€
Who wants to spend some scare time finite energy telling the tale of how they discovered Bitcoin? Better yet, who do you reckon should? ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€
image Discover Episode Ninety - Discovering #Bitcoin with Cold Hard Sats (no npub, bro?) ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€ ๐ŸŽ™ dude, time minder, running 21M Communications ๐ŸŽง WE discuss: โ€ข CHS's Bitcoin origin story โ€ข Life-changing Lismore โ€ข Reading/Writing โ€ข Surfing/Freedom โ€ข Heaps More YUGE thanks to Cold Hard Sats for sharing some of his scarceโณ and finiteโšก๏ธ๐Ÿ™ - - SHOW YOUR SUPPORT: Zap Sats! โšก๏ธ via #value4value: discoveringbtc@fountain.fm via @geyserfund: via P2P: djdbtc@zeuspay.com If you dig the show, please zap sats in support! ๐Ÿซก Look out for Episode 91, soon! ๐Ÿ”ถ๐Ÿ‘€ - ๐ŸŸ  New to Discovering #Bitcoin? Talk to The Bitcoin Adviser - to help you discover Bitcoin, take self-custody, become sovereign, and ensure confidence about your Bitcoin position every step of the way. Tell 'em DJ from Discovering Bitcoin sent you:
MA: Frances, are you ready? JF: Yes, I am. MA: OK, hang on and Iโ€™ll post some reasons why these ideas bother people. Take a look through the list, and see which ones seem to fit you. The first one probably doesnโ€™t fit you, but Iโ€™m leaving it in because it does fit a lot of people. Remember also that people donโ€™t really think about these things, they just react. MA: 1. Fear of responsibility. Freedom is threatening because it eliminates the possibility of shifting responsibility for your errors onto others. Freedom puts you right out in the open, with no cloak for your mistakes. It also gives you full credit for your successes, but that is seldom considered, as the fear-based impulses are generally stronger. 2. Fear of separation. For a variety of reasons, most people have an instinctual fear of being separate. The feeling is that separation means death. This may be true in some rare situations, and certainly was true more commonly in the distant past, but it is an impulse only, not reason. 3. Rulership as a force of nature. For the last several thousand years, nearly all humans have lived and died under some form of rulership. So many generations have come and gone under this arrangement, that it now seems to most people as a force of nature: That which was, is, and shall be. When you mention something different, it causes them mental stress. 4. No mental image. Because none of us have ever lived in any situation except subjection to state power, we have no mental images of anything different. So, when we start talking about a truly free place with no rulers, the listeners have no images to draw upon. It seems like we are proposing a pointless journey into an unknown and dangerous place. Again, this is a feeling, not reasoned thought. 5. Group conditioning. A central fact of modern social behavior is that almost the entire populace has gone through 11-17 years of social conditioning in the school systems. This conditioning shows up in a variety of ways, especially in dealing with authority figures. The conditioned responses are: Obey authority. Donโ€™t cause a disruption. Accept the place given to you. Conform. The real effect here is the installing of comfortreactions and discomfort-reactions. Our system flies in the face of almost all of this. 6. Lack of critical thinking skills. For a variety of reasons (which I have not spent the time necessary to properly catalog), the 20th Century saw a mass movement away from respect for reason and toward a devotion to emotion. Have you ever tried to reason with someone who lives by emotion? It is essentially impossible. These people can be influenced by getting them to identify with characters from movies and television, or with celebrities, but seldom by reason. Now, most people arenโ€™t fully that way, but modern critical thinking skills are disastrous, and a great many people distrust reason, with full faith in emotion. Many of them are beyond hope of recovery, and could be extremely dangerous in the wrong hands. 7. Cognitive dissonance. This is what happens to people when they have accepted an idea, or series of complimentary ideas; then, an obviously different idea is presented, and it makes some sort of sense to them. It causes a conflict. This is properly called cognitive dissonance, and it is really just a mental conflict. People donโ€™t do well with these conflicts; their general reaction is to eliminate them as quickly as possible. The easiest way to do this is to simply drown them out by reciting their original ideas, and trying to convince themselves that the previous ideas are right, and 148 that they should not think about the new idea. Yes, this is dishonest, and yes, it requires denial, but most people prefer it to critical analysis of their existing ideas, and, potentially, changing their minds. Combine this with all the other items shown here, and the conflicts arising from taking on a difficult new idea are too much for many people to bear. 8. Fear of reprisal. This is the simplest one. Think of an IRS audit, an FBI raid, or of Stalin. Obviously the rulers wonโ€™t like our free markets. It is not unreasonable to expect that they will take reprisals against people who displease them. A very reasonable concern. 9. Fear of the world falling apart. The central myth of the nation-state is that it is necessary to hold civilization together; that without it, we would all degenerate quickly into killers and thieves. This has been repeated so frequently and so consistently, that most people accept it as fact, even though if asked to provide evidence, they have none. Actual analysis of this idea leads to a contrary conclusion, but that does not stop the impulse of fear. Very few people have ever questioned the nation-state myth at all. I suggest that you print this out, take a few minutes, and think about it. Iโ€™ll be in my office for several hours. Just let me know when you are ready. - Paul Rosenberg, A Lodging of Wayfaring Men (p. 147-148) - - -
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