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Kevin
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The Money is Bitcoin Moving Forward Founder Of Bitcoin For The Hood 🇺🇸
Count Down And I’m Nowhere Close To The Goal Please Support Thanks Lets Make This Happen Plebs 🧡  BTC for the BBQ: Fueling Our Educational Community Feast! We're hosting our annual Community BBQ—For 2026 This will be the first one we're making it a special Bitcoin Educational Barbecue Our goal is pay it forward:to provide a full day of free food, fun, and safe activities for the neighborhood children and to introduce parents and community members to the basics of Bitcoin and financial sovereignty. We are seeking to raise the equivalent of $1,000 USD in Bitcoin (BTC) to cover all costs and make this unique educational event a huge success. Your BTC Donation Will Directly Fund: * Food & Refreshments: Covering the costs of burgers, hot dogs, side dishes, and drinks for the community. * Children's Activities: Ensuring we have supplies for games, prizes, and engaging activities to keep the kids entertained. * Educational Materials: Printing simple, easy-to-understand guides and flyers on "What is Bitcoin?" and "How to Get Started." * Logistics: Covering necessary permits, supplies, and equipment rentals (like grills and tables). Why a Bitcoin Educational BBQ? This event uses the universal language of good food and community fun to teach a crucial lesson. Your support helps us provide not just a great meal, but also the knowledge that can truly empower our neighbors and build long-term financial literacy in our community. Our Goal: $$$1,000 USD Equivalent in BTC How to Donate with Bitcoin Every satoshi is a step closer to our $1,000 goal and a successful event! Please Scan QR Code Or Directly @primal The Social Media App Thanks 😊  Prefer to help in person? We also need volunteers to help grill, manage activities, and chat with community members about the basics of digital money! Email us to join the team: BitcoinForTheHood@gmail.com Thank you for helping us bring food, fun, and financial education to our neighborhood! Thanks Bitcoin For The Hood
Fire 🔥 in Apartment Building in Downtown Oakland California Jan19, 2026 4:11pm image
This is Why We Early Bitcoiners #Bitcoin 👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽👇🏽 The adoption of modern payment cards wasn't an overnight sensation; it was a decades-long transition from store-specific credit to the universal plastic we use today. While the first "modern" credit card appeared in 1950, it took about 20 to 30 years for credit cards to become mainstream, and even longer for debit cards to find their footing. The Credit Card Timeline (1950s–1980s) The adoption of credit cards followed a "slow then fast" trajectory. * 1950: The Spark: The Diners Club card was the first "universal" card, but it was made of cardboard and only accepted at select restaurants. Within a year, it had 20,000 members—a niche success. * 1958–1960: The Bank Breakthrough: Bank of America launched the BankAmericard (the precursor to Visa) by "carpet bombing" Fresno, California, with 60,000 unsolicited cards. This was the first card to offer revolving credit (the ability to carry a balance). * 1960s: The Mainstream Push: By 1966, the first national licensing program began, and Mastercard (then Master Charge) was formed. By the end of the 60s, credit cards were no longer just for travel and dining; they were becoming everyday tools for the middle class. * 1970s: The Infrastructure Era: The invention of the magnetic stripe (IBM, 1969) and the first electronic point-of-sale terminals (1979) made transactions faster. This removed the "friction" of manual paper imprinters. The Debit Card Timeline (1970s–2000s) Debit cards actually took much longer to gain public trust because they lacked the "float" (the time between buying and paying) that credit cards offered. * 1966–1970s: Early Experiments: The first "debit-like" cards were used for ATMs, but they weren't used at stores. The first actual debit card for retail was likely the "Dash" card in 1978. * 1980s–1990s: The Long Climb: People were reluctant to switch from checks. In 1990, debit cards accounted for only a tiny fraction of transactions. * 2004: The Tipping Point: It wasn't until 2004 that the number of debit card transactions in the U.S. finally surpassed the number of checks written. Adoption Speed Comparison | Technology | "Birth" Year | Years to Reach "Mainstream" | Key Turning Point | |---|---|---|---| | Credit Card | 1950 | ~20 years (1970s) | National bank networks & magnetic stripes | | Debit Card | 1978 | ~25 years (2000s) | Widespread ATM usage & consumer trust | Why did it take so long? * The "Chicken and Egg" Problem: Merchants wouldn't accept cards until enough people had them, and people wouldn't carry cards until enough merchants accepted them. * Psychology: In the mid-20th century, carrying debt was often seen as a social stigma. It took decades of marketing to reframe "debt" as "convenient credit." * Security: Before magnetic stripes and EMV chips, fraud was easier, and authorizing a transaction meant calling a bank on the phone to check a paper list of "bad" card numbers. Would you like to know more about how the technology of the cards themselves changed, or perhaps the history of the major networks like Visa and Mastercard?
Bitcoin For The Hood Foundation. 2020 1. The current financial system has failed the hood for generations 2. Black families are twice as likely to be unbanked or underbanked as white families. 3. Predatory payday lenders, check-cashing spots, and high overdraft fees drain billions every year from our neighborhoods. 4. When you don’t have a “good” credit score or the right zip code, traditional banks and loan officers shut the door in your face. Bitcoin doesn’t care about your zip code, your credit score, or what your grandparents did. 5. Bitcoin is the ultimate “no permission” money • Anyone with a $40 used smartphone and internet can own Bitcoin, send it, receive it, and store it—no ID, no minimum balance, no approval from a bank manager required. That single feature is revolutionary in communities that have been redlined, over-policed, and financially excluded for decades. • 1. Inflation is a hidden tax on the poor—and it hits Black households hardest • The dollar has lost more than 85% of its purchasing power since 1971. Savings in a checking account or under the mattress literally evaporate every year. Bitcoin’s fixed supply of 21 million coins makes it the hardest money ever created. Over the long run, it protects the little wealth our people manage to build instead of letting inflation quietly steal it. • 1. Remittances and family support without getting robbed • A lot of us send money back to family in the South, the islands, or Africa. Western Union and MoneyGram take 7–15% on average. Bitcoin lets you send $200 across the world for pennies, and the receiver gets the full amount in minutes. That’s real money staying in Black hands. • 1. Wealth-building upside that doesn’t require a degree or a suit • From 2010 to today, Bitcoin went from $0.25 to over $100,000. A single mom in the projects who put $100 into BTC in 2015 instead of a payday loan would have over $50,000 today. That’s generational wealth created without needing venture-capital connections, a Wall Street job, or inherited property. • 1. Ownership, not extraction • Most “financial inclusion” programs from big banks are just new ways to extract fees. Bitcoin gives actual ownership. When you hold your own private keys, nobody can freeze your account, garnish it without a court order, or de-platform you because of who you are. • 1. Black entrepreneurs finally get a level playing field • Crowdfunding, e-commerce, content creation—Bitcoin and Lightning Network let creators and small businesses get paid instantly, globally, with almost no fees. No more waiting three days for Stripe to release funds or getting your PayPal account locked for “suspicious activity” because your customers are in the wrong neighborhood. • 1. It’s bigger than charity—it’s justice • Giving people fish feeds them for a day. Giving people access to a parallel financial system that can’t discriminate against them feeds them for a lifetime. Bitcoin isn’t a handout; it’s a hand-up that the old system never offered us. If we want to close the racial wealth gap in our lifetime, we can’t keep playing by the same rules that created the gap in the first place. Bitcoin is the biggest financial opt-out button Black America has ever been handed. Let’s press it—together. Stack sats. Build wealth. Free the hood—one block at a time. 🟧⬛ Please Support Thanks Kevin Lane