Public transportation fails because of monopolies. Government-run systems lack the incentive to innovate, leading to decay and inadequate service for users.
Max
max@towardsliberty.com
npub1klkk...x3vt
Praxeologist ~ Cryptoanarchist ~ Cypherpunk
nostr:naddr1qqgrvvpjx33kgvtrxgen2vfcvcurjqghwaehxw309aex2mrp0yhxz7n6v9kk7tnwv46z7q3qklkk3vrzme455yh9rl2jshq7rc8dpegj3ndf82c3ks2sk40dxt7qxpqqqp65wvem775
getstacks.dev is totally mind blowing!
Is @Seed Oil Scout closed source?
Can't find it on @Zapstore
The state’s monopoly on force leads to abuse. Without competition, police and military prioritize power over protection, harming the very citizens they’re meant to serve.
Really good conference about quantum computers in relation to Bitcoin, I learned a lot.
Private property owners invest in security. Landlords and businesses in a free market have direct incentives to prevent crime, unlike government agencies.
Join the fleet.
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Central planning distorts resource allocation. Government projects like highways and space programs divert capital from consumer-driven priorities to political whims.
The state’s “charity” is counterproductive. Welfare policies subsidize dependency, whereas private aid focuses on rehabilitation and self-sufficiency.
Anonymous networks aren’t about hiding; they’re about refusing to surrender autonomy to those who trade surveillance for compliance. Every encrypted message is a rejection of the idea that visibility equals legitimacy.
Credit ratings and legal names will fade as reputation systems built on cryptographic proof take their place. Who you are matters less than what you do and whether you honor your word.
Cyberspace isn’t a place to be conquered. It’s a space that exists only when people build it together, with tools that reject control and protocols that resist capture. Its existence is its own rebellion.
Is anyone doing an @npub1hkuk...432p for nostr?
Why are we bullish on Bitcoin?
My panel at @BTC Prague with @FRANCIS - BULLBITCOIN.COM Mark Moss, James Lavish, Eric Weiss.
Title could have been two cypherpunks and three suits.
The internet’s original sin was assuming it could be regulated like physical space. Cyberspace bends to no geography, recognizes no flag, and owes no loyalty to those who mistake code for chaos. Its governance is self-organized, not imposed.
Man is not a killer.
A group is.
Practicing Cypherpunk: Privacy, Peer-to-Peer and Staying Free with Bitcoin
Panel with @Juraj @UNCLE ROCKSTAR Zach Harvey, Paul Rosenberg and myself
Digital societies don’t need borders. They thrive on voluntary participation, where coercion dissolves in the face of untraceable communication and unbreakable math.
The specter of crypto anarchy isn’t a warning, it’s a reality. Governments can legislate, censor, or jail, but they can’t reverse the math that lets two strangers trade value without intermediaries. Their power is finite; code is infinite.
I wish there were a way to mute price talk.
My 100k mute doesn't work anymore...