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lasereyemillennial
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Amazing interview here. We are training our kids for an authoritarian state. As you think about the experience that you are curating for your kids, ask the question: how are you going to provide a free range childhood? What does this look like in the digital realm as well? Thinking about kids and how to give them the best childhood to prepare them for life.
There is no small government party in the USA 🇺🇸 and there is no such thing as the “best of two bad options”. Stop defending the problem
So… news breaks in Chinese markets, and only American investment firms with bitcoin positions can react. They sell Bitcoin to raise capital to put into the Chinese market, bitcoin goes down. Then when the US market opens, they sell Nvidia etc. and buy back bitcoin (at a new lower price). Meanwhile investment firms that don’t own (actual) bitcoin are stuck until American markets open, missing the Chinese gains, eating the BTC losses if they own etf’s, and trying their best to escape the Nvidia tumble… Does everyone buy bitcoin now?
The #nostr diet is boring. It doesn’t generate clicks like the #plantbased diet. It doesn’t stir controversy like the #carnivore diet… Unless, of course, you’re 10 and your mom tells you to eat your veggies. Tired of the bitcoin carnivore narrative. Eat real food. Not too much. Mostly plants. #FoodRules (Michael Pollan)
Don’t mistake the relentless pursuit of truth for the mindless acceptance of counter culture… both require you to be open to the cynics and skeptics, but only one is proof of work. Several bitcoin “influencers” who have done the work to become experts on money make this mistake when they mention fad diets on their podcasts. @Peter McCormack can we get Rich Roll on the McCormack podcast to have a discussion with a carnivore bitcoiner?
God this guy is awful. Anybody who says he’s not a typical politician full of empty promises with no specifics… we don’t care about a bunch of empty rhetoric. Make us some Specific promises about #bitcoin
I don’t watch Netflix anymore because the news is so damn entertaining…
“I wanted to produce a document that could explain to friends and family why I’m so passionate about something that many of them consider to be conspiracy-theory-level musings. As I proof read the document before sharing with a handful of friends, the final paragraph stuck in my mind: Digital Rights are Human Rights. As millennials who grew up in a reality where the digital realm is intertwined with every part of daily life, there is an imperative for us to fight on this new frontier. I urge you to fight for human rights. Fight for freedom to transact. Fight for #Bitcoin . The statements here are simple, but the ideas are profound, and without more explanation, I think that a lot of important nuance could be easily missed.” #nostr
Ode to Punk6529 in my most recent Substack essay, “Digital Rights are Human Rights”: As 6529 tells the story, the metaverse is not so much a destination, but a journey that we are already on. It’s not a future dystopian Wall-e World, where we float around in chairs plugged into virtual reality headsets. There won’t be a date on the calendar that we can point to, to say, “This was the day the metaverse came to be.” Instead the best way to think about the “metaverse” is that it encompasses the idea of technology becoming intertwined with our daily lives and inextricably linked to our decision making and our realities both in the digital and physical worlds. Increasingly we live in a world where peoples’ identities online and their identities IRL are equally valid parts of who they are, impacting their communities, their thoughts, and who they see themselves as. The metaverse is social media. It is the digital tools that we carry around with us in our pockets at every moment of the day. It is our personal assistants who wake us up in the morning and remind us of our schedules throughout the day, or help us make the most mundane decisions of every day life. It is the communities of people that we connect with over shared interests (Reddit), restaurant recommendations (Yelp), or to vent (X)… In a short period of time, almost every aspect of real life has been digitized in some form, and the cumulative result is the present day version of the metaverse.
My first substack post was more of a brainstorm than anything else. It isn’t polished, it isn’t an immutable manifesto, and it will probably never be complete. Instead, it has been an outlet for me to articulate, explore and clarify my own perspectives, and how they came to be rooted in my experiences as a millennial growing into an adult in the 2000s.
I live in California where there is an enthusiastic bitcoin community, but the only real use case right now is store of value, as there are almost no vendors accepting BTC in the area. I get sad every time I check @BTCMap.org and see how few places there are within 500 miles of me where I can spend my #bitcoin. I think a major deterrent right now, is that for businesses who are incorporated in the state, there are a ton of questions about how it would work to accept btc, what the tax implications are, etc, and for most people running small businesses like a coffee shop, or restaurant, there are just psychological hurdles that require exactly the right conditions for someone to accept #btc, AND market the fact that they are accepting it in such a way that I can find it. I think that #Nostr is the answer, and I want to start a discussion about how existing pieces of technology could implement a few small improvements to shift the paradigm in three meaningful ways: 1. Create more geographic search tools to connect with other #plebs IRL. Apps like Shopstr @calvadev and Plebeian Market @chiefmonkey have started working towards “eBay” replacements, but a simple geographic query tool could begin to replace marketplaces like Craigslist or OLX, which have large peer-to-peer sales volumes for small amounts. The small amounts and peer to peer nature of the transactions would be perfect for Nostr and would suddenly allow smaller players to populate services like @BTCMap.org with more data, thus increasing the value, driving more traffic, and increasing the usage of all vendors. Imagine “Satoshi’s Garden” where people could sell fruit and veggies from their gardens IRL. 2. More integration between existing Nostr Apps. This is similar to the final part of point 1, but services like BTCMap, Flockstr, the marketplace apps, etc. need more integration both in terms of technical development and in terms of business development/marketing. Imagine “Coffee Chain” - a peer-to-peer alternative to coffee shops, where I can offer to make you a cup of coffee in the morning. A bigger example would be something like Airbnb on Nostr, but again, the #cofffeechain idea plays to the strengths of nostr by focusing on micropayments that bring start at the grass roots level, and increase the offerings, driving more traffic. Personally, I travel all over the world for work, and I would use this when I traveled to connect with plebs ahead of time and figure out where I could get a cup of coffee in the morning before work. I would also be pumped to make a cup of coffee for someone in #SantaBarbara. 
All of this could be integrated into existing market places mentioned in point 1, BTC Map, and meetup services like Flockstr. 3. Integrate @BTCMap.org Data into existing navigation apps to create a more seamless way of navigating the world and utilizing Nostr micropayments #IRL. I don’t think it makes more sense for BTCMap to integrate better mapping services, because they need to be able to serve more detailed data for a wide range of use cases, so it seems like they should be the guardians of super high quality, open source data, while other more navigation specific apps like BitLocal need to be created to serve the need of the end users. Nostr and bitcoin are built for a digital world, but the disconnect for a lot of us plebs is that the small payments that we make each day that Nostr is optimized for, are things that require geographic proximity. BTCMap is always my go-to service when I’m visiting a new city, but to be honest, it is too diverse of a Swiss Army knife right now to be the ideal tool for what I want to use it for. I want a slick interface. I want to know when the last time a spot was verified - ideally by knowing when the last time a zap was made to a vendor. I want a map where I can search by corporate vendors vs. peer to peer services. I want a map where I can explore bitcoin vendors and generic vendors alike in the same map. I want a map where I can just navigate from my house to a park. Right now I just use Apple Maps or google maps for 99% of this, It just doesn’t include the bitcoin data that I would like to prioritize. If there was a product built on OSM that incorporated the BTCMap data, I would make the switch tomorrow. 4. Finally, we need more social integration on Nostr. A bunch of the services above don’t even have customer facing npubs… the marketing game is weak, and the more collaboration there is between these services in development, the more exciting news there will be to share.