Most people still think the game is about income.
- Wrong asset.
- Wrong ruler.
- Wrong clock.
- Wrong enemy.
- Wrong math.
There are 8 billion people and only 21 million of the hardest units ever found.
That is 0.0026 per human before funds, states, whales bid...
Printed money will always chase money that cannot be made.
This is scarce property swallowing every fake safe haven across the planet.
people still think bitcoin is competing with payment apps, banks, or gold ETFs. that's baby-brain analysis.
bitcoin is competing with every store of value, every sovereign bond, every cash balance, every pension promise, every treasury reserve, every asset whose main job is "please still be worth something later"
the game is not "can i get rich?"
the game is "how many sats can i trap before the doors close?"
the reason people call it volatile is because they are measuring the future of money in units of a melting ice cube.
of course it looks wild if your ruler is fake.
bitcoin is not fluctuating nearly as much as fiat is failing in slow motion
and this is only going to get more violent, because every cycle removes more supply from the market and moves it into stronger hands. every new buyer thinks they are early, then spends four years realizing they were absurdly early.
every seller thinks they are taking profits, then wakes up later understanding they sold a piece of financial territory that can never be reissued
the truly bullish part is that bitcoin does not need mass genius.
it does not need everyone to understand Austrian economics, energy markets, monetary history, or game theory.
it only needs enough people to realize that working for money that can be created infinitely while ignoring money that cannot is a catastrophic life strategy
this is why the move gets so stupid over time.
once the asset with fixed supply gets absorbed by entities with infinite currency issuance, the price discovery process becomes pure insanity.
they print. you hold. they bid higher. you hold again. eventually entire nations will be priced out of one coin and forced to fight over fractions
the purpose of bitcoin is what it does. and what it does is expose every weak form of money as a temporary policy tool
if you own none, you are short the hardest asset ever discovered
if you own some, you are front-running the largest repricing of property in human history
if you are still waiting for permission, you are the exit liquidity for people who already understood the game
MDB
mdbitcoin@primal.net
npub1ddxx...frmf
Notes about Money (₿), Medicine and AI.
Let's do some facts
Bitcoin is?
I. a savings account that can't be printed, diluted, frozen by committee, or debased by some guy in a suit moving numbers around on a screen
II. portable property rights. memorize 12 words, cross a border, and your net worth crosses with you. no trucks, no vaults, no customs officer with a clipboard, no permission
III. there are 8 billion people on earth and only 21 million bitcoin. and even that number is fake in practice because a huge chunk is lost, dormant, or locked away by people who will never sell except at absurd prices
IV. every institution on earth is eventually forced into the same asset. individuals buy it to save. corporations buy it to defend the balance sheet. funds buy it because number go up. governments buy it because they cannot allow rivals to corner the hardest collateral on earth. latecomers will have to buy from early believers at prices that sound mentally ill today
and just like that, people stopped asking questions about epstein
The mask of society is slipping
be careful
save in bitcoin
I have no proof, but I have no doubt that the collapse of the West started because of Canada.
hard truths
1. nobody will come to save you.
2. the constitution is being bypassed to infringe on your rights.
examples?
• the executive branch acts without real friction.
• congress has been corrupted by foreign influence.
• tech oligarchs and corporate interests are above your rights: property rights, privacy, and constitutional protections.
• democracy is dead. i think it was never alive.
3. your money is broken. you need to find your own solution. mine is bitcoin.
4. addictions are the best psyop to control you. they have worked over the past few decades. you are being controlled.
5. most people trade freedom for comfort and don’t even realize it.
6. the media does not exist to inform you. it exists to shape what you believe is real.
7. convenience is being used as the gateway to surveillance.
8. debt is one of the cleanest ways to keep people obedient.
9. if you cannot think clearly for yourself, someone else will do your thinking for you.
10. the system does not need you to love it. it only needs you distracted, dependent, and compliant.
Do you honestly believe bitcoin will reach $1M within your lifetime?
This genuinely disturbs me.
The more I think from first principles, the more obvious it becomes
an energy crisis is never just an energy crisis.
It is a pressure system placed on civilization itself.
I study Bitcoin because energy is the base layer of everything. No energy, no transport. No food distribution. No manufacturing. No heat. No mobility. No industrial output. And if you can disrupt that base layer, you do not need to control people directly. Their behavior changes for you.
High energy costs make everything downstream more expensive.
Food rises.
Rent rises.
Transport rises.
Production falls.
Debt dependence rises.
Freedom shrinks.
That is the part most people miss.
If energy is the ability to do work, then money is supposed to be stored work across time. But in the legacy system, they can debase the money and manipulate the energy inputs at the same time. That means they can attack both your present survival and your future savings in one move.
That is why Bitcoin matters so much to me.
Bitcoin is the first system I found that reconnects money to real-world cost. It cannot be printed for free. It has to be earned through energy, computation, and market competition. In a world where access to energy can be politicized, Bitcoin gives me a way to preserve the value of my labor in something harder to corrupt.
The lesson is simple:
Whoever controls energy can pressure society.
Whoever controls money can rewrite society.
Bitcoin is my response to both.
The strongest first-principles argument against large-scale nuclear expansion is not “because bombs exist,” but because nuclear power concentrates extraordinary energy density, capital, expertise, regulation, liability, waste stewardship, and security risk into a small number of highly centralized systems, which makes it politically brittle, financially slow, and institutionally fragile: if a technology requires decades of planning, massive upfront capital, near-zero tolerance for failure, permanent waste management, public trust across generations, and a state-capable bureaucracy that can remain competent for 60–100 years, then even if the physics are excellent, the social operating system may reject it; from that lens, much of the slowdown since the mid-20th century can be understood not as a proof that nuclear “doesn’t work,” but as a collision between theoretically abundant energy and human institutions that are bad at managing low-probability/high-consequence risk, long time horizons, cost overruns, and centralized dependence, so the real anti-nuclear argument is that civilization may be more likely to mismanage nuclear abundance than to govern it cleanly, cheaply, and continuously at scale.

It genuinely unsettles me when someone studies Bitcoin deeply… and still turns on it.
I can understand not getting it yet.
I can even understand fear.
What I don’t trust is full understanding followed by rejection.
Because once you see the math, the incentives, and the history,
the picture gets very simple
So if someone understands Bitcoin and still attacks it, they usually aren’t rejecting bad logic.
They’re rejecting what Bitcoin takes away
their leverage, their gatekeeping, their ability to benefit from a system built on opacity.
I say that as someone who has spent years studying this space carefully.
A person who misunderstands Bitcoin can be taught.
A person who understands it and opposes it is usually telling you exactly who they are.
Clarity comes with a price
once you see too deeply, you lose access to the illusions that help other people move through life with less friction.
How did humanity move on from Epstein so fast?
How did one of the clearest elite abuse scandals in modern history get reduced to a meme, a conspiracy bucket, or background noise in just a few months?
How did the world hear about trafficking, blackmail, underage girls, powerful connections, intelligence ties, suspicious deaths, and possible kompromat networks…
…and then just go back to scrolling?
How did names, flights, meetings, properties, victims, and patterns come out…
yet collective outrage expired almost instantly?
How did people accept that a case this big could produce so little real clarity?
How did the public not demand a full map of the network?
How did the media cycle move on so easily from something so monstrous?
How did society become so numb that industrial-scale depravity barely held attention?
What does it say about our civilization that people can brush off evil this organized this quickly?
Bitcoin converts energy into cryptographic evidence, and cryptographic evidence into monetary truth.
That is why stranded power, curtailed electricity, flared gas, hydro overflow, and remote energy pockets matter so much.
Before Bitcoin, a lot of that energy was geographically trapped.
Now it can be monetized through computation and settled into a global ledger.
That is an extraordinary idea.
A remote unit of energy can now be transformed into an internationally recognized monetary asset without needing permission from a state, a bank, or a clearing network.
Once I saw that clearly, I stopped viewing Bitcoin as just an investment.
I started viewing it as a physics-based monetary instrument:
a system that uses thermodynamic cost to defend digital scarcity.
And to me, that is one of the most important discoveries of our era.
Because money has always depended on trust.
Bitcoin is what happens when trust gets pushed downstream
and physical proof moves upstream.
It’s honestly wild how badly most people misunderstand Bitcoin.
They look at it and think the opportunity is gone because they’re still trapped in “one trade” thinking.
That was never my framework.
I was never looking for one lucky entry that magically changes my life.
I was looking for a long-term savings machine in a world where the money keeps getting weaker.
Say Bitcoin is around $80k today.
If someone buys $5,000 once and Bitcoin eventually goes to $400k, that turns into $25,000.
Good return.
But still not the kind of outcome most people dream about.
That’s where people get confused and say
“See? It’s too late.”
But now change the frame.
$500 every month.
10 years.
That’s $60,000 contributed.
If Bitcoin reaches $400k over that period, and you spent years accumulating before the repricing fully happened, your stack can end up being several multiples of what you put in.
That is where the asymmetry is.
The lesson I understood early is that Bitcoin is about building a position in the hardest asset in the world before global demand fully collides with fixed supply.
That is why I think differently about it.
Most people ask
“How much can I make if I buy today?”
I ask
“How much of this asset can I remove from the market over the next decade before everyone else understands it?”
That one shift changes everything.
Bitcoin rewards the person who understands time, scarcity, and accumulation.
That’s how I see it.
Gold had 5,000 years.
Bitcoin is doing in decades what gold needed millennia to prove.
I say that as someone who has spent countless hours studying money, markets, and SoV assets from first principles.
Gold was humanity’s best monetary technology for a long time.
But best of the past does not mean best for the future.
Gold is?
Slow to move.
Hard to prove.
Expensive to handle.
Impossible to truly control at scale.
So it ends up owned by someone else.
Bitcoin fixes that.
Fixed supply.
Instant verification.
Frictionless movement.
Sovereign custody.
If global wealth keeps searching for the hardest asset,
Bitcoin does not need to replace all gold to win.
Gold market value = roughly $20–30 trillion
Bitcoin market value = still far below that
So even if Bitcoin only absorbs part of gold’s monetary premium, the upside is massive.
Gold taught the world what hard money is.
Bitcoin perfected it for the digital age.
Gold was phase 1.
Bitcoin is phase 2.
That’s why I don’t see BTC as “digital gold” in the lazy sense.
I see it as gold with final settlement, portability, divisibility, and self-custody engineered into the base layer.
The question is not whether gold was valuable.
It was.
If you could redesign gold for the internet age, would you recreate gold… or would you build Bitcoin?
I think we already know the answer.
This is the part that scares me…
We’re about to create billions of autonomous agents.
AI negotiating with AI.
Machines paying machines.
Value moving at machine-speed.
And almost no one is asking
What money will they use?
I’ve spent years studying Bitcoin, macro, and systems design.
From first principles, the answer becomes obvious.
Agents need
Final settlement (no reversals)
Global access (no borders)
Native digital form (no intermediaries)
Verifiability (no trust)
That eliminates
fiat rails
Now think about scale
If 1 billion agents do just 10 transactions/day
> that’s 10 billion transactions daily
Even if the average value is just $1
> that’s $10B/day = $3.6T/year
And that’s a low estimate.
This is a new financial system being born.
Trillions will flow through it.
So the real question is
Who wins the base layer?
If it’s closed systems = control consolidates
If it’s fiat = inflation + censorship persists
If it’s fragmented = inefficiency kills scale
But if it’s Bitcoin
= neutral
= permissionless
= finite
= programmable settlement
Bitcoin is competing to become its foundation.
Nearly every “revolutionary” Silicon Valley technology traces back to defense research.
DARPA funds the early breakthroughs, universities develop them, venture capital scales them, and entrepreneurs like Elon Musk commercialize them.
The public sector takes the risk.
The private sector builds the empires.
Patience is one of the hardest skills you will ever learn.
Your brain wants things now.
It is built to chase quick rewards and fast results.
Waiting feels unnatural.
It feels like you are losing.
But the biggest gains in life come from what takes time.
Health, skills and true wealth takes time.
If you can train yourself to delay reward, you separate yourself from most people.
That is why Bitcoin is hard for many.
It forces you to think long term and to study deeply.
Patience changes your entire life trajectory.
The supremacy is trying to go to “war” because conflict activates the military industrial complex’s most powerful profit engine.
War converts fear into guaranteed state demand for weapons, munitions, logistics, cyber systems, intelligence, and reconstruction contracts.
But in a debt based system they cannot sustain total war for long.
That is why under Trump his owners,
the wars have been surgical, calibrated for maximum procurement and profit extraction without blowing up the sovereign balance sheet....