"I hate incompetence. I think it’s probably the only thing I do hate. But it didn’t make me want to rule people. Nor to teach them anything. It made me want to do my own work in my own way and let myself be torn to pieces if necessary."
Howard Roark (The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand)
Tommy Volk
tommy@bitcoinpark.com
npub1jgnw...qcgk
Anarcho-Capitalist
Software Engineer
Making the state obsolete
Talked to a friend the other day who runs a small business. He's not a bitcoiner but I've talked to him about it here and there. He mentioned how much they have to pay in credit card fees, so naturally I brought up the ability to circumvent that using lightning. I showed him Zaprite and he seemed genuinely interested. At $25 per month for a Zaprite subscription, and assuming that you save 2% in fees and pass half of that savings back to the customer (i.e. you save 1%), you'd need to get $2,500 per month paid in Bitcoin. The conversation ended with "this doesn't quite make financial sense... yet" but I don't think it'll be long until it becomes a no-brainer for most small businesses, even if neither the business nor the customers care about Bitcoin.
Is anyone working on printing physical paper E-Cash notes? The folks at
have made paper Bitcoin notes with a visible public key and a scratch-off private key - I'd be interested in something similar but replacing the public key with a federation invite code and the private key with E-Cash. Not the most practical and secure way to hold E-Cash but the tangibility would be cool.

Noteworthy
About - Noteworthy
Is there a Chrome extension that replaces dollar values with sats? I want to stop thinking in fiat
How close are we to companies viewing a college degree as a negative when hiring?
Of course it depends on the industry, but in general
Gresham's law: "bad money drives out good"
I had someone ask me how Bitcoin could succeed given this law. But Gresham's law isn't a law like the laws of physics - rather, it's describing people's natural responses to incentives. If bad money really did drive out good, people would use dirt as money, or perhaps even the words "thank you" uttered by the purchaser. Clearly this isn't a universal law. Instead it is the outgrowth of two different types of money with different intrinsic values being declared by governments to have the same face value. When the US government replaced silver coins with silver plated coins, businesses were forced to accept both types of coins at the same dollar-denominated value. So when someone needed to buy something, they would want to spend the coins that were worth less and hold on to the ones that were worth more.
There are currently over 22 million people who worked for the US government. This including federal, state, and local (but excludes military). Here is a list of companies whose combined employee count reaches just over 10 million - less than half of this number.
Walmart
Amazon
Home Depot
Target
Kroger
Berkshire Hathaway
FedEx
JPMorgan Chase
IBM
Wells Fargo
Microsoft
CVS Health
Bank of America
Walgreens Boots Alliance
Comcast
Raytheon Technologies
General Electric
General Motors
Oracle
Apple
Boeing
AT&T
Johnson & Johnson
Tesla
Intel
Lockheed Martin
Verizon
Procter & Gamble
General Dynamics
Northrop Grumman
Pfizer
Coca-Cola
American Express
Merck
HP
Goldman Sachs
McKesson
Chevron
Uber
Netflix
eBay
Airbnb
Lyft
Morgan Stanley
Sources:


Statista
Total government employees U.S. 2023| Statista
In 2023, around 19.58 million people were working for state and local governments in the United States.

Companies ranked by number of employees - CompaniesMarketCap.com
Ranking of the world