Bayman11771

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Bayman11771
npub1k4re...4ftd
Director of Government Affairs, Bitcoin Policy Institute

Notes (20)

Are you part of an organized #Bitcoin meetup? Do you have a good group of active members? If so, we’d like to know! Please tag your group in a response. nostr:npub1978t0ppn7wc4akp8knsjhqyed3d776xptn7qvkuaf3nrj4qu32vqg28wxa
2025-04-27 18:09:07 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
I haven’t been posting much over the past few weeks. But I’m starting feel….expressive again. Not a reflection of my conviction that #Nostr is the way.
2025-04-23 02:40:32 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Grifters complaining that other people grifted… image
2025-04-23 02:34:58 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
All my normie friends are starting to see it….. #bitcoin
2025-04-19 02:51:44 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Yes, policymakers. Countries are moving toward hard, neutral reserve assets and away from dollar-denominated assets. Regardless of what we do, the race to accumulate #Bitcoin is also already under way. We can start now and lead, or we can hesitate and prepare to play catch-up. image
2025-03-22 22:07:27 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Catching up on my delvingbitcoin.org reading when I should be sleeping…..
2025-03-22 04:30:17 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
I subscribe to more than a few writers on Substack. Forget X. I don’t think there’s a platform that would benefit more from incorporating zaps. Substack could take a small risk and completely revolutionize- again - the self publishing market. Unlock an article you want to read with a zap. Stupid easy.
2025-03-22 04:00:38 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Saint Patrick’s Day and my copy of The Satoshi Papers arrived - best Monday I’ve had in a bit! image
2025-03-17 21:42:28 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
#Nostr, welcome nostr:nprofile1qqspcsdz46v2tae5kts7hkkkzupjlzt8nnasgxlq39wwrhvj2lkhy4spp4mhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mqpzemhxue69uhkyarr9e4kcetwv3sh5afwvdhk6vzsevv to the club!
2025-03-15 00:00:12 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
After an amazing week for #Bitcoin in Washington, DC, enjoying drinks with friends on a Friday. image
2025-03-14 23:50:23 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
My key takeaway from the developments of the past few weeks - if stablecoins were reliably available on #Bitcoin rails, altcoin chains would wither and die pretty quickly.
2025-03-12 21:22:27 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
This was a CRAZY day for Bitcoin in Washington, DC. Ignore the FUD, ignore the ups and downs of daily price action. We are winning friends. We haven’t won, there’s work to be done. But anyone who spent this morning with Congressional leadership, administration, and industry leaders couldn’t help but feel the palpable change of Bitcoin’s influence in Washington, DC.
2025-03-12 04:24:34 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
When life allows, I often spend Sunday afternoons catching up on reading (I never keep up with all my subscriptions) and, as I did today, flipping through the “archives.” I’ve failed in my aspiration to scribble routinely, but over the years I was a diligent chronicler of periods in my life I knew would be both meaningful and transitory. I was away in service for much of my daughter’s first year, and although I regret that to this day, the journal I kept at the time (written to her, should fate have prevented me from seeing her grow up) is quite dear to me. Another well-chronicled chapter of my life was the period of my adolescence when I lived Germany – West Germany, to be specific. As I flipped through the pages, the entry on October 19, 1988 specifically caught my attention – the day I first visited East Berlin. My thoughts this afternoon are less about the details of the experience and more about how it and others served to construct my worldview. Since those Cold War days, I have been an Atlanticist as a matter of temperament. I have spent a not insignificant portion of my life in Europe, both as an adolescent and later in life professionally. I’ve at least stepped foot in a large plurality of the countries generally understood as constituting Europe, and to this day feel myself indebted to the Western cannon. Although later in life some of the fecklessness I saw emerge in European political culture frankly annoyed me, I never fundamentally questioned the foundational nature of the importance of our relationship with Europe or its place in the global order. It's difficult to pinpoint the time when that fecklessness drifted into seemingly deliberate failure. Whatever autopilot this class was able to rely on seems to have been fatally disrupted by the mass immigration caused by the Arab Spring and associated collapses of Libya and Syria. The European political class can hem and haw about the dangers of emergent populist movements in their politics, but the reality is these movements were predictable creations of these elites’ own policies. Their reaction of choice – attempting to hold the proverbial beach ball under water will no doubt end with the predictable eruption of force that occurs once that beach ball slips your grasp. Back in 2011, many Arab governments were facing what felt to be an inevitable tidal wave of support for Islamist parties, threatening to overturn the established regional order. Most chose the same method European leaders seem to have chosen today – hold the beach ball under as long as you can. But King Mohamed 6 of Morocco chose a different path – he brought the Islamist PJD into government and with that, immediately removed the air from that proverbial beach ball. Now part of the “problem,” the PJD later suffered the same electoral defeats establishment parties had suffered under the barrage of the PJD’s criticism. I can’t help but feel that the European establishment (perhaps more accurately, the western European establishment) is on a collision course with reality. They’re drifting toward overt repression to keep populist parties out of government, cobbling together coalitions that will only hasten or even amplify their collapse. They’re pathologically attached to energy policies that make their vision of rearmament and industrial renaissance a near fantastical delusion. They’re doing nothing to repair the frayed social consensus that pushed them to this precipice in the first place. Back to East Berlin in 1988, reading my journal today I can vividly relive that euphoric buzz I felt about a year later when the Wall fell and communism collapsed in the East. And with that buzz, the optimism most of us felt about the European project in general. Of course I was young at the time, and as optimism so often is, a lot of this was always aspirational. But to think that well within one lifetime, we’ve experienced both revival and decline is dizzying.
2025-03-09 20:56:48 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Wonder what happened here last night….? image
2025-03-09 16:03:32 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Had the previous regime understood or even knew about eCash, I’ve no doubt there would have been investigations and prosecutions. The incentives were obvious - shutting down financial innovators sharing their vision through open source software was encouraged and rewarded. Today, for the time being, the government doesn’t seem inclined to prosecute developers. The new regime seems to cast a benign eye toward financial innovators and people deploying open source software for the world to use. This is a welcome change, and as #Bitcoin becomes stickier in the global financial system, there is an opportunity to move the Overton Window on payment tech, and perhaps even let loose a renaissance in the only recently lost appreciation of the value peer to peer cash transactions. Today Bitcoin is pushing a wide path through the resistance of the legacy financial and regulatory system. Behind it, a golden opportunity for developers and innovators to draft off this disruption. I think eCash is a prime candidate - maybe even the candidate we all need - to slip into that position.
2025-03-08 04:08:41 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
I don’t think even most Bitcoiners get the revolutionary nature of #ecash. nostr:nprofile1qqs9pk20ctv9srrg9vr354p03v0rrgsqkpggh2u45va77zz4mu5p6ccpz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduhszxrhwden5te0wfjkccte9eekjctdwd68ytnrdakj7ege9wx is a national treasure….of every nation. Use it, learn about it. It’s that good.
2025-03-07 23:58:23 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
It was a great day for #Bitcoin today. The USG’s policy is to hold on its balance sheet an asset that didn’t exist 20 years ago. Tell me how that’s not winning.
2025-03-07 23:53:24 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
The only digital asset the US should stockpile is #Bitcoin. If for some reason the USG ever needed a surplus of XRP, for example, all they need to do is give Ripple a call and Ripple can print as much as the government might need. Easy peasy.
2025-03-06 16:27:29 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Today the CEO of Ripple announced the creation of a new independent crypto education group - the National Cryptocurrency Association. Omitted from the post was who is actually running this new independent association. image image
2025-03-05 16:08:53 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →