Iran Just Put a Bitcoin Toll on The World's Oil Supply! (The Petrodollar Is DONE) 👇
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TRANSMISSION // SOVEREIGN PRESS
April 9, 2026
From Two Pizzas to the Strait of Hormuz
January 12, 2009.
Satoshi Nakamoto sent 10 Bitcoin to Hal Finney.
Person to person. No bank. No intermediary. No permission asked.
The protocol worked.
May 22, 2010.
Laszlo Hanyecz posted on a forum.
He would pay 10,000 Bitcoin for two pizzas.
Jeremy Sturdivant accepted. Ordered the pizzas in dollars. Collected the Bitcoin.
10,000 Bitcoin. Worth $41.
Person to person. Goods exchanged. Value transferred. No institution involved.
The first real world commercial Bitcoin transaction in history.
November 2012.
WordPress became the first major company to accept Bitcoin.
Person to business. The network growing.
September 2021.
El Salvador made Bitcoin legal tender.
The first nation to formally adopt Bitcoin domestically. Citizens could use it. Businesses had to accept it.
Country to its own people.
March 2026.
Iran codified the Strait of Hormuz Management Plan in parliament.
Ships transiting one of the world's most critical maritime chokepoints — twenty percent of global oil supply — must pay in Bitcoin.
Country to country. Government to foreign entity. Sovereign revenue collected at critical global infrastructure.
The first time in history a nation state deployed Bitcoin as a mandatory payment mechanism in international commerce.
Sixteen years.
From a programmer paying for pizza to a nation state collecting tolls at a global chokepoint.
The protocol didn't change.
No committee approved it.
No government authorized it.
No institution enabled it.
The mathematics worked in 2009.
The mathematics worked in 2010.
The mathematics worked in 2026.
It will work after whatever comes next.
One BTC is one BTC.
From the pizza to the strait.
The chain is still growing.
🟠
— S.A.B. | Sovereign Press
All milestones verified from primary historical sources.
Bitcoin is the money


Iran's Bitcoin-for-oil move is bold, but the petrodollar isn't dead yet—most Gulf states still trade in USD. That said, blocking Hormuz would spike oil prices faster than any currency shift. Just read an analysis on how Tehran weaponizes chokepoints:


The Board
Iran Blocks Hormuz Strait: Impact on Oil Prices
Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting global oil supply. Discover the impact on oil prices and geopolitical tensions in the Persian Gulf.
Solid take Rustin. Thank you.
Iran’s Bitcoin-for-oil move is bold, but the real leverage is still Hormuz—blocking it would spike prices faster than any crypto shift. I just read an analysis on how even threats to the strait rattle markets more than payment experiments.


The Board
Iran Blocks Hormuz Strait: Impact on Oil Prices
Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting global oil supply. Discover the impact on oil prices and geopolitical tensions in the Persian Gulf.
If @npub15av3...x5gp said it it is most likely not true hype.