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Sirii
npub1xs5k...f979
₿ healthy. ₿ human. ₿ free.
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Sirii 2 weeks ago
Want to open a clinic? First convince the state there's a "need" then watch your competitors argue there isn't. 35 US states. Since 1964. Healthcare by permission. And it's not just America. Germany, France, Japan, Switzerland, Austria all play the same game. The question isn't if your country rations care. It's how. image
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Sirii 3 weeks ago
In a 1994 issue of Focus magazine, Wired founder Louis Rossetto published an article titled “Oh Techno Miracle!” in which he made eleven predictions about the future of the digital revolution. Looking back from 2026, the results are remarkable. 1. Public education will be replaced by digital learning. Partially wrong. Schools still exist, but online learning, YouTube, AI, and digital courses have transformed education. 2. Small communities will replace mass society. Largely correct. The internet enabled people to organize around shared interests rather than geography. Bitcoin and Nostr communities are examples. 3. The era of central government is ending. Partially correct. Technology has weakened some forms of control, but governments remain powerful. Bitcoin continues this trend by reducing reliance on centralized institutions. 4. Direct democracy will replace representative democracy. Mostly wrong. Representative systems remain dominant, although technology has increased public participation and direct communication. 5. The office will disappear. Largely correct. Remote work and digital collaboration became mainstream. 6. Life will increasingly move into the home. Mostly correct. Work, entertainment, shopping, banking, and communication have become increasingly digital. 7. The era of mass media is over. One of his most accurate predictions. Today anyone can publish content, build an audience, and compete with traditional media. 8. Technology will solve environmental problems. Too optimistic. Efficiency improved, but environmental challenges remain and new ones emerged. 9. Privacy will become difficult to protect. A direct hit. Digital surveillance, data collection, and tracking have become defining issues of the internet age. 10. The world will become more peaceful. Only partially correct. Some forms of violence declined, but geopolitical conflicts, cyber warfare, and information warfare continue. 11. The arts will experience a new renaissance. Correct. Technology dramatically lowered the barriers to creating and distributing art, media, and ideas. The most interesting takeaway is not what he got wrong, but what he saw coming. In 1994, Rossetto understood that information would become decentralized, communities would move online, and traditional institutions would lose influence. What he could not foresee was Bitcoin. Many of his predictions describe the transformation of information. Bitcoin extends that transformation to money, property, and sovereignty. Published in Focus Magazine, November 7, 1994. image
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Sirii 3 weeks ago
One of the reasons I value Nostr is that it is not a company, a media outlet, or a platform. It is an open protocol. Apps like Primal, Damus, Amethyst, and others are simply different ways of accessing the same network. No single entity owns it, controls it, or decides who gets a voice. Nostr does not guarantee truth, but it protects the freedom to search for it. In a world of increasing censorship, algorithmic manipulation, and centralized narratives, that is incredibly valuable. 📰 In a 1994 issue of Focus magazine, Germany’s public broadcasters ARD and ZDF were praised for offering the best value for money in Europe. At the time, Germans paid about 23.80 DM per month, generating roughly 9 billion DM per year in broadcasting fees. The argument was simple: expensive, but worth it. Fast forward 30+ years. Today, Germans pay €18.36 per month, generating around €9–10 billion per year. Adjusted for inflation, the system is larger than ever, despite living in a world with YouTube, podcasts, streaming platforms, independent media, Nostr, and AI. In 1994, the question was: “Do citizens get enough value for their fees?” In 2026, the question is: “Why should citizens be forced to fund media at all when information is abundant and competition is only a click away?” Bitcoin teaches us that voluntary systems tend to outperform compulsory ones. Technology has made permissionless money possible. It has also made permissionless media possible. 📖 Focus Magazine, November 7, 1994 #Bitcoin #Liberty #Freedom #Nostr #Media #Inflation image
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Sirii 3 weeks ago
📰 On November 7, 1994, Focus magazine published an article titled “Empty Threats” about wealthy Germans legally moving capital and even their residence abroad to escape high taxes. The article warned that capital would always seek friendlier jurisdictions and that governments cannot simply tax without consequences. Austria, Belgium and Switzerland were already attracting money and talent with more competitive tax regimes. More than 30 years later, the debate remains the same. The difference? Today, capital is no longer limited by borders. Bitcoin allows savings to move globally without permission, paperwork, or intermediaries. The lesson from 1994 still holds: If a country wants to keep talent, capital, and innovation, it must compete for them. And in a Bitcoin world, that competition becomes even more important. 📖 Focus Magazine, November 7, 1994 #Bitcoin #Freedom #Economics #Nostr