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Sid⚡️
sid@nostrplebs.com
npub1j6ze...0hft
Bitcoin + Lightning⚡️ | Data Analyst
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sid 17 hours ago
bitcoin cashu nostr bitchat tor torrent signal life is good
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sid 2 weeks ago
A simple way to sanity-check any asset you’re thinking of buying, whether it’s a rental property, commercial real estate, gold, whatever … Look at the smartest person you know. A friend, colleague, relative, or even someone you follow online. Then ask yourself: if they had the same amount of money I do, would they buy this exact asset? If the answer is no, pause. Spend at least a week thinking through why the smartest person you know has zero interest in it. That question alone will save you from a lot of bad purchases.
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sid 3 weeks ago
Savings are deferred effort. They represent years of work, discipline, and planning. They rely on one core assumption: that value earned today will still exist tomorrow. As intelligence becomes abundant, that assumption starts to break. Assets feel less durable. Portfolios feel unstable. Savings begin to feel like they’re slowly melting away. Careers face the same pressure. Many jobs exist only because intelligence is scarce and expensive. As intelligence becomes cheap, large parts of human work lose their usefulness. Effort no longer guarantees preservation of value. When identity is tied to profession, that identity becomes fragile. Time itself starts to feel mispriced. Dignity, once linked to output, weakens. Families feel the strain. People quietly begin asking deeper questions about purpose, effort, and security. That reaction is rational. The singularity isn’t coming, it has already begun! Money sits at the center of this tension. Money’s role is to coordinate value across time. It records contribution, preserves purchasing power, and allows effort today to become security tomorrow. But as intelligence accelerates, the goods and services money measures become increasingly abundant. When abundance spreads faster than money can adapt, money loses its ability to coordinate what remains scarce across time. A monetary system built for a slower world struggles under this speed. And that brings the focus back to Bitcoin.
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sid 3 weeks ago
I really believe that the people who truly understand energy and how to channel it are the ones who’ll end up leading humanity. They just get how the world fundamentally works. They understand atoms and the physical world better than anyone else. So if you’re thinking about how to educate a child, I think the first thing they need to learn is energy. It’s a tough concept for a kid to grasp, but metaphors and examples really help. They need to learn all the different forms of energy and how humans have learned to channel them - electrical, chemical, kinetic, everything. Human progress has basically been about figuring out how to harness and channeling energy, and that’s how we’ve built the modern world. And like Tesla said, if you really want to understand any topic, concept, or even the meaning behind something, you’ve got to think in terms of energy.
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sid 1 month ago
Bitcoin is superior because it lets weak people protect what they own from stronger people.
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sid 1 month ago
Most economists with PhDs will tell you Bitcoin is the most useless asset - and from their worldview, they’re right. If you believe treasury notes are trustworthy, that people will always have faith in them, and that they form the unshakable bedrock of the monetary system, then Bitcoin looks pointless. But if trust in treasury bills - even those issued by the most powerful country in the world is eroding, and they’re no longer a true foundation, then that worldview collapses. And in that case, those same economists are completely wrong. Whether Bitcoin is 100% useless or 100% essential depends entirely on your worldview. Ten years from now, we’ll know which worldview won. In hindsight, it’ll all seem obvious. I subscribe to the latter view - that trust in the old system is breaking down, and there’s no realistic way to rebuild it.
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sid 1 month ago
Unpopular opinion: Human intelligence may soon have negative market value.
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sid 1 month ago
Unpopular opinion: when the dust settles — whether that’s in 10 years or 20 — the real winners of the internet and the digital era won’t be the US or Big Tech. They’ll be Indians, especially English-speaking Indians. Yes, the companies that indexed and monetized the internet were built in the US. But digital adoption didn’t end there. The internet took off in the ’90s, scaled in the 2000s, and exploded in the 2020s. By the 2040s, Indians will be the largest users of the internet purely by population. They speak English, they’re digitally native, and they’re not comfortable — which means they’re hungry, ambitious, and motivated to climb economically. That combination matters more than who built the platforms. In the long run, the biggest beneficiaries of digital will be the people who use it at scale with urgency. By that measure, Indians win. And ironically, the biggest losers may be the West, which built the systems but grew complacent inside them.
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sid 1 month ago
Trading is Kinetic Energy. It creates friction, heat, and fees. HODLing is Potential Energy. It stores value and stabilizes the system. In a world where everyone is dissipating their energy... the only rational strategy is to conserve yours.
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sid 1 month ago
In physics, the most stable structures are simple (like a Pyramid or a Crystal). Bitcoin is a crystal. It is a rigid, mathematical structure with no moving parts (no management team) to break.
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sid 1 month ago
When Bitcoin moves, it moves violently. Don’t try to be cute and time it - just stay in.
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sid 1 month ago
Scientists and engineers have never held economists in especially high regard, and there’s a reason for that. Economics traditionally hasn’t required an understanding of closed or isolated systems - things like feedback loops, control systems, or conservation laws. But in the real world, mass, energy, and constraints matter. Physics teaches you that moving mass is expensive. The heavier something is, the more energy it takes to move it. If you want speed, you reduce mass toward zero - that’s how you scale fast. Energy, efficiency, and conservation aren’t optional details; they’re fundamental laws. For a long time, economics could ignore this. It didn’t really matter. But Bitcoin changed that. Bitcoin is the first time technology, energy, mathematics, and economics collided head-on. Suddenly, you can’t talk about money without talking about energy. You can’t talk about value without understanding conservation, efficiency, and closed systems. In a post-Bitcoin world, you can’t be a serious economist without appreciating these principles. Economics no longer lives in abstraction - it’s grounded in physics now.
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sid 1 month ago
Unpopular opinion: American citizenship is no longer an asset, it’s becoming a liability. In the 20th century, US citizenship was the ultimate advantage. It gave you freedom, rule of law, opportunity, and free flow of capital. That’s why everyone wanted it. But the 21st century is running in reverse. As capital flight accelerates, governments will move to protect their capital base. And the first line of defense will be restricting citizens from moving money out. When capital controls kick in, citizenship stops being a shield and starts being a cage. Things like “gold card” and similar programs are mostly a mirage. The groundwork for capital protectionism is already being laid. The real risk is ‘the great taking’ & probably a decade away, but the direction is clear.
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sid 1 month ago
Buying residential or commercial real estate as a way to invest your savings is like being a young person today and deciding to build your entire future around learning legacy software just to ship a basic SaaS product. It worked in the past, it’s questionable today, and it’ll look outright foolish tomorrow.
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sid 1 month ago
Bitcoin is a Dissipative Structure. It is a digital organism. It "eats" low-entropy energy (electricity), uses it to repair its cellular structure (the ledger), and excretes high-entropy waste (heat). If you cut the power (food), the structure eventually loses its consensus (integrity) and dies. It is a living, breathing thermodynamic entity that lives on the internet.
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sid 1 month ago
Bitcoin Thermodynamics 1. Input: High-Quality Energy (Electricity). 2. Process: Mining (The "Heater" that secures the network). 3. Output 1 (Waste): Massive Entropy (Heat & Noise). 4. Output 2 (Value): Zero Entropy (A perfect, unchangeable record of truth i.e., blockchain).
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sid 1 month ago
“21 M” Bitcoin image
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sid 1 month ago
Current system manipulates money to control people, causing inflation and division. Bitcoin offers a path to true freedom through deflation and decentralization. Embracing it requires agency to build a better world.
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sid 2 months ago
AI automates logic and analysis, the investment world is shifting from "realism" (spreadsheets and models) to "abstraction" (interpretation and perspective). In this environment, traditional financial frameworks are becoming obsolete, making "abstract" assets like Bitcoin more essential. To thrive, individuals must seek internal balance and learn to navigate a world that is no longer easily measured or categorized.
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sid 2 months ago
Now that everyone has a smartphone camera that takes perfect pictures, being a "realistic" painter isn't a special skill anymore. Because AI can do all the math and data work, the real "superpower" is having a unique vision and staying calm when things get confusing. Holding bitcoin and taking care of your health are tools to help you stay steady while the old ways of doing things disappear. Conserve your energy.