resistancemoney
Andrew M. Bailey
I’m here to chew bubblegum and talk about bitcoin and I’m all out of bitcoin
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npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 Profile Code
nprofile1qqszv3w274cx5vtk0jfp2v5htgrelpv4pcgqd02svh6a6qsnu6zg49spz3mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduqs6amnwvaz7tmwdaejumr0ds4g6jmm
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2025-03-28T09:29:35Z Event JSON
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Last Notes npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney guy who gets harsh soap in one eye and immediately puts it in the other — “to even things out” (a parable about egalitarian leveling down) npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney The quickest way to a lefty's heart is to poo-poo libertarianism. For extra points, call it 'propertarianism'. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney *bitcoiner! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney @npub1der…xzpc have you seen this? Privacy tech from a bit coiner! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney The digital computer is a lever. Software is a lever of levers. Agentic AI is a lever of lever of levers. Act accordingly. What does this mean for me, personally? For writing philosophy or running a classroom, not much. For dealing with the mountains of data I've hoarded over the decades, everything. Scripts, which I didn't have to write, handle it all for me, and now I have easy access to years of quotations, music, photos, papers, books, notes, correspondence — all locally hosted, all exactly fit for my own purposes. It is good to have a lever of lever of levers on staff. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney more important questions than… which other ones? npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney guy who writes everything in markdown now, but refuses to let robots write for him npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Portfolio apps are great for monitoring the situation. But they track your IP, location, assets, even your identity. In the recent past, data from millions of users has leaked, resulting in phishing, identity theft, or physical wrench attacks. Darkfolio fixes this. Darkfolio can't leak information it doesn't have. When you refresh, the server sends 7,000+ asset prices (stocks and crypto) every time. Your phone extracts what it needs locally, so a server never learns what you're monitoring. And you can run it all through Tor. No accounts, no emails, no cloud sync. Even better, Darkfolio's developer, @npub10af…0xj0, is pledging the first $10k in net revenue back to the cause of your digital privacy. It's live on the iOS App Store today. Craig is a friend, but no one paid me to write these tweets. I am, instead, an enthusiastic early tester and now daily user myself. Darkfolio has what I always wanted from a portfolio app. It may be what you've been looking for too. Give it a try! https://getdarkfolio.app npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney horror story in six words: "Can you jump on a call?” npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Austrian economics stans would do well to drop the victimhood over being ignored, and instead claim victory, because the best of that tradition — above all, its microeconomic insight — was so well-integrated into mainstream economics. You don't get Alfred Marshall and supply and demand charts, or neoclassical price theory, without Carl Menger (both a marginalist and an Austrian) and the subjective theory of value. Price lies at the intersection of supply and demand — i.e., subjective valuations. Price theory as we know it now doesn't ignore what the Austrians learned. Instead, it gives it all more rigorous foundations and expression using calculus. And fergodssake, Hayek won a Nobel prize (shared), and remains one of the most widely quoted and cited economists, by economists, to this day. Mises, I'll concede was "quietly buried". Imagine an Aristotle scholar complaining that logic classes don't focus on categorical syllogisms anymore. Of course they don't; we can do all that and more, now, using Fregean and post-Fregean notation and mathematics. We see the superset now, and teach it first. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney There was a tiny but super interesting cottage of industry in the 18th and 19th centuries, computing these dates based on genealogies in the Hebrew Scriptures! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Rough estimate. :) npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney When did mankind fall? Catholics: 500,000BC. Adam and Eve. Chicago Conservatives: 1287. Birth of William of Ockham. Constitutionalists: 1861. First Lincoln executive order. Goldbugs: 1913. Federal Reserve Act. Bitcoiners: 1971. Fiat money. Me: 2009. Node.js. (and the rest of the AJAX/websockets/React/html5 nexus — a stack that enabled live updating of webpages, which in turn meant you didn't need to refresh to get notifications. made social media what it is.) npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Agentic AI is all the rage. Here's how it's playing out, among those I know best: - 7/10 are mucking about and experiencing a "gee wiz, tech is cool" moment - 2/10 are less productive, stuck with increasingly messy codebases (or making their substacks/social-media-feeds worse by overproducing) - 1/10 are boosting valuable productivity by an order of magnitude, sometimes in visible ways, but mostly hidden npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney 100%. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney There is no bigger red flag of charlatanism, for people in my line of work, than dropping a new take on unifying quantum and gravity. AI glazing is making this worse, because now the quacks can spit infinite technical slop for free, in addition to the usual metaphysical hokum. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney I think Kant was out to lunch on that. So do lots of intellectuals I know, and read, and find most insightful. You might want to expand your reading habits, if it feels to you like “virtually all modern Western philosophy” follows Kant in this respect! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney need a bitcoin shitpoast? I gotchu fam. want an actual argument? we have that too. thousands of bangers for your use and pleasure, all trained on Resistance Money and on tweets from yours truly: resistance.money/tweets/ npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Somewhere out there Senator Warren is unbothered, focused, moisturized, and drafting a bill to make math illegal. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Which Western intellectuals do you have in mind? The ones I find most insightful would agree with you that there’s an objective world, knowable, etc. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney And now a picky point: the right way to read the diagram is not as a strict Venn, according to which every part of physics etc, is also a part of philosophy. Rather, philosophy overlaps all the (blue) bits between the disciplines, and the white borders around each discipline. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney You understand philosophy a lot better when you see it as The Inter-discipline. Why is philosophy so hard? Because it has no defined techniques, problems, established knowledge base, or ends. Why does philosophy sit so uneasily within the humanities? Because it extends far beyond them. Philosophy lives in the cracks. https://image.nostr.build/a1f9a884cc82043e7172aa9551d9f0005bb59a24f16768168235c74aeb2898de.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Systematic philosophy and tight deadlines do not mix well. There's always a string to pull. But if you give that bad boy a tug, as intellectual honesty often requires, the whole thing starts to untie. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney I’ve done fancier things in the past, but my present setup is exceedingly simple. I keep tens of thousands of mp3s, collected over the last 25+ years, on my own hard drive, and listen to them with Apple Music. I connect my phone with a cable and the library transfers over painlessly. No streaming, no surveillance, no subscriptions, no nonsense. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney AI can be used to either extend your abilities or stunt them. The line between is fuzzy, but quite real. We'd do well to say the Serenity prayer here, and ask for wisdom to tell the difference! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Good correction. I’m not deep in that world myself, though I do host all media locally and have no music subscriptions. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney It’s more about devs than companies. Each element has its own enthusiasts, and a strong open source culture. You know the bitcoin ones well, I’m sure. The others are similar in spirit, and passion, and usefulness. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney There is a place for big tech in all of this: even free tiers of chatbots can teach you how to use all of these tools. The price of sovereignty goes down every day. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney The Sovereignty Go Up tech stack: - Host your own AI infrastructure (local models) - Host your own media (plex) - Host your own money (bitcoin) - Host your own social media (nostr) No censorship, no big data, no surveillance, no subscription fees, no blockades npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney When is automation bad? AI is all very cool and fun to think about. But I view widespread use with growing unease because of what it does to our thinking. Why? 1. The labor theory of value — according to which, in at least one form, the value of an item produced is proportional to the toil in making it — is false. Some things are very costly to produce (imagine, for example, a statue made of your earwax), but have no value to anyone. 2. Some forms of automation are clearly good. I'm glad cars exist, and steam shovels, and dishwashers, and elevators. They multiply our efforts, reduce our misery, and enable meaningful work, play, creativity, and leisure. 3. Automation of creativity and cognition is not the good kind of automation. Indeed, it is dangerous. But why? It is not because effort alone is valuable (see point 1), nor is it because automation is bad (see point 2). 4. One way of phrasing the question at hand is this: where is the line? Where does the good kind of automation end, and the bad kind begin? Is there a line, after all? Does the line mark a difference of degree, of kind, or what? 5. Instead of asking whether work alone produces items of value, I'd like to shift our focus a bit: away from what is produced, and towards the person producing. My first hypothesis is this: whatever value there is in meaningful work alone manifests in developed human capacities, excellence, or virtue, not in the item produced. These are genuinely valuable, and their development and exercise can be hampered by automation. 6. Is automation as such bad, after all, then, since all automation displaces or leaves undeveloped at least some human capacities, excellence, or virtue? Perhaps so. To some degree. Philosophers might call this a 'pro tanto' bad: bad to some degree, and in some way. But something can be bad to some degree, and in some way, without being bad overall. Exercise, for example, is bad because it is temporarily unpleasant, but good overall because its effects make the effort worth it. One way of taking things here is to say that even the good kind of automation is pro tanto bad, but not bad overall. 7. My second hypothesis is this: what is displaced when automating creativity or cognition is far more precious than what is displaced in purely physical automation. Yes, there is excellence in shoveling well, which excellence is lost when using a steam shovel. But the loss of this excellence is far less tragic — indeed, not tragic at all — compared to the lost excellence of thinking well, as when someone has outsourced thinking to a machine. 8. So we have, then, one way to draw the line: look at what is displaced, and assess its value; when the human excellence displaced by automation is precious indeed, automation of its distinctive tasks is worse for us. We get the desired result, that automation of cognition or creativity is not so good compared to automation of physical labor, by way of the auxiliary hypothesis that the virtues of mind, as it were, are superior to those of the body. 9. I'm not totally satisfied with the proposal just yet. I don't like the implied hierarchy of human excellences, with the physical ones on the bottom, and the cognitive or creative ones closer to the top. And the whole setup, as though we were weighing things out, seems exsanguinating and false to my own experience in just the way cheap consequentialism does: the sort of thing Anscombe would rightly make fun of, and to great effect. 10. Perhaps automation of creativity and cognition as such is not so bad after all. Perhaps what matters is the context in which it occurs. To develop that idea, here is a third hypothesis. What matters here is not any one kind of hard toil, as such (for example: digging trenches, or writing long hand); what matters, instead, is that there be hard toil somewhere or other in a productive chain. It is the existence of such friction somewhere or other that enables the exercise of virtue, but not so important where the friction lies. So, the idea goes, automating some of your cognitive tasks — using a calculator, say — does you no harm, provided you are still doing something hard — thinking through a shopping list, say. You have not robbed yourself of opportunities to exemplify excellence in thinking, in using the calculator, the idea goes, since there are other opportunities to do so elsewhere in the chain of tasks. 11. Both practical and theoretical questions arise. I'll raise a few of the former. - Why would anyone choose to make life harder by foregoing automation? Even if there is some rarified sense, visible perhaps to philosophers and other weirdos, in which meaningful toil is good for us, who has the fortitude to choose it? Of course some people will make this choice. We all know a guy who still uses fountain pens despite the mess. But that guy is an outlier. There are questions here about human psychology, but also institutional design: do we want to build situations that nudge us towards friction because it is valuable? That create friction? - Where is the friction, where is the hard work to be done, in a world with increasingly sophisticated AI tooling? Prompt engineering? Hardly; a machine can do that for you just as well. In consumption? Not obvious. Customized slop built on the fly for just one pair of eyes is all too easy to slurp down; plug in and enjoy, no effort required. - Must we despair? I actually think not. My own experience with using AI tooling is of vast new landscapes of meaningful effort opening up before me. Vibe coding up little games, as I do daily, gives me new and more things to do in total, not less. It feeds my mind new and delightful frictions to work through — though it does decrease my need to ever touch actual code. The world that gives me unease is not one where everyone does this; that's actually a pretty cool outcome, and for the best. 12. There's one more angle I want to try out here. Why is slop bad? One answer is that it took no effort to produce. Via the labor theory of value, we can immediately infer that it is of little value itself. Because the labor theory of value is incorrect, this can't be quite right, I think. But deeper reflection on what 'no effort' means can uncover an insight. When we put effort into producing something, we don't thereby make it valuable, but we do send a signal. The signal is this: "I found this valuable to produce, so much so that I gave of my time and life and energy, just to make it." This signal is absent when slop is slung into the void. Indeed, something like a counter-signal is sent: "I found this project of so little worth that I was unable to actually make something myself, so I outsourced it all; but I still think you should consume it. Enjoy!" This counter-signal is kind of annoying, and I think often disrespectful to one's audience. There may be more than one way in which slop is bad; but this is definitely one of them. Slop is disrespectful. 13. There's another way slop debases us; it fools its creators. When you copy and paste your slop from the chatbot into your Substack or social media feed, you feel as though you've done something. "I made this." A quick dopamine hit. It's like getting a reward in a video game — a new spell, a new power, an upgrade to your base. Feels good. But make no mistake. The feeling is no more true to reality than the one you get from a video game reward, and if you indulge in it much your grip on reality will diminish. 14. Bonus: Bitcoiners are persistently confused, incidentally, on some of these questions — about labor and value, that is. They think that because bitcoin rests on proofs of work — cryptographic demonstrations of energy and compute deployed in finding new blocks and adding them to the chain — that the result must itself be valuable. Incorrect! See point 1! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Hey @npub1twx…0lwg, what are Trey’s private keys? DM them to me now, please, for science. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney It’s like a classical computer but it can only multiply single digit numbers. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Step One: don’t be wrong Step Two: don’t be boring One must do these in order. Working on step two! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney What kind of bitcoiner are you? As for me: - Bitcoin is money. - Bitcoin has no intrinsic value, because it has no cash flow and isn't valuable in itself. Rather, it has extrinsic value because it is a useful tool that can do things other monies cannot do. - Fees, not filters, are the way to knock out spam. - Lightning is good, especially as a privacy tool, but not what we'd hoped for, and not a complete scaling solution. Full blocks will drive the L2 tech stack forward. - Ecash is very nifty, and we should experiment more with it. Privacy is good, and bitcoiners should use more privacy tools. - Quantum risk is real. - People will inevitably build financial games atop bitcoin. They're sort of good, in that they can increase demand for the base asset, benefiting earlier adopters. But they're sort of bad, because they are parasitic on bitcoin's core value proposition (being uniquely useful as resistance money), without actually enhancing or directly making use of that core value proposition. - Hyperbitcoinization — as when bitcoin becomes the dominant global money — is unrealistic. Moreover, fantasies of this kind are totally unnecessary for either a positive moral evaluation of bitcoin or a bullish stance. Something can be good, and wise to acquire, without taking over the world. - Bitcoin makes the world a better place — not always, not in every respect, not for everyone, but on net, a better place. https://image.nostr.build/a70237d4386497a6acc98d2df5013f5f5579356b5c9ff59b6618f48cae7489fd.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Well said. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Five Theses on "Bitcoin is for Criminals" 1. If bitcoin is for anyone, then bitcoin is for criminals (and infants, and students, and Catholics, and demisexual vibeswomen, and so on). If you wish to say that bitcoin is for anyone, then you probably shouldn't get all upset when someone says that bitcoin is for criminals. That bitcoin is for criminals follows logically from your own view. Bitcoin is for anyone; so bitcoin is for criminals. 2. Since some laws are bad, some criminals are good. Sometimes it is not just okay, but morally mandatory, to commit crimes, as when disobeying unjust laws. Tools that facilitate resistance of this kind should be praised, and their resistant powers should be celebrated, not hidden. Bitcoin is such a tool, for it enables anyone to resist the tyrants who'd get between us and our money. Some criminals are good; bitcoin is for them. 3. You might agree that bitcoin is for anyone, and that technically it thus is for criminals too, but think that it isn't especially well-suited for crime. After all, cash is more private, and USD in various forms is proportionally far more criminal in its use than is bitcoin. These are fair points. But they miss something important. Bitcoin can do things cash cannot (it is digital), and doesn't require the cooperation of a pliant banker. Bitcoin bypasses monetary authorities. Many of those authorities are state actors; they enact and enforce laws. We call the people who disobey or resist state actors "criminals". There is no shame in saying bitcoin is for them. Bitcoin is useful in the crime of resisting monetary authorities; and that is a good thing. 4. You might agree that bitcoin is for criminals, but wish to keep that message hidden or muted, so as to not scare away would-be investors or users, and thereby enhance your own profits. Bitcoin's price is purely a function of demand (since supply is fixed). If there are groups of people who have special reason to use bitcoin, or who simply *must* use bitcoin, their presence sets a floor for demand. That floor is bullish, and also rebuts speculative scenarios in which demand falls to zero, and with it price. So long as there are people who'd like to disobey the tyrants and take control over their own money, bitcoin is a useful tool. And tools that are both useful and scarce tend to command a positive market price. That bitcoin is for criminals is not a shameful truth; it is bullish. 5. Does saying that bitcoin is for criminals incorrectly imply that it is *only* for criminals? It does not, any more than 'children like to draw' implies that *only* children like to draw. Bitcoin is for criminals; but it is not only for criminals. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney yes npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Correct. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Seen. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney censorship is all around us, and pervades all big tech platforms. but because it consists in what is not seen, it is often very hard to see. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney indeed https://image.nostr.build/f8426d784ca22ee587c2884463d155d783532eea8a6dd36ec7b711686f42170b.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney middlemen have their place (from Tibor Fischer's My Bags are Big; a good read) https://image.nostr.build/3e7716ab577d5425f08fe5ee19dd217220771ea4c171e86b22e775494214bb04.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney All the best evidence supports a sh*t waterfall interpretation. I am bound to the evidence! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney I don't always get quoted in my local paper of record. But when I do, I am unable to refrain from saying what I really think about crypto token pumpers Source: https://www.straitstimes.com/life/the-crypto-bros-are-back-the-hubris-never-really-left https://image.nostr.build/9c8ac0a560f309d1c001d5731a56bf6379560adddf701b4a50f5ac6b4984ce2a.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Philosophers are thought killers! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney "Acquit Roman Storm, and I will end all tariffs." Wow! https://image.nostr.build/7c0688f2bf4445f454c4bf4923ab630f7ec4d27e4924f5ac58159afe9bc2e274.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney the first time I heard the term 'thought leader', I thought it was a joke and laughed. an insane thing to call yourself. same for 'changemaker'. little did I know. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney This follows from a more general principle. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Gerrymandering illustrates how automation in policy can be better than discretion. If you give a legislature the power to chop things up as they will, they will do so in ways that benefit the dominant local party. A better alternative is for an algorithm to draw districts instead, regularly revising so as to keep seats across a territory in line with popular vote (so that, e.g., when 40% of Californians vote GOP, GOP gets 40% of the House seats for California). Bitcoin obeys a similar principle. Rather than delegating monetary policy to trusted authorities, it automates that policy in highly predictable ways, and regularly revises (i.e., the difficulty adjustment) to keep things in line with what's expected. The outcomes needn't be optimal for this system to be superior, note; for there is no guarantee that those trusted parties will enact optimal policies, and they often fail in this task! The best argument for automated policy, then, is not that it is for the best always and everywhere, but that it is typically for the better. https://image.nostr.build/d0553d1eb8b651541eaf43049f012bf84ab36d62dc9d1085f4545adc59d8db27.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney politician ::lies:: world ::sighs:: me ::sighs not so:: https://image.nostr.build/e32f1d82a258859a2d30e5d722d4d206afd061ae9715c55b14041b4927ac144a.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney some people out there don't know who Barbara, Celarent, Darii, and Ferio are, and it shows npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney There is no guarantee that the miracle will persist. The price of liberty is always eternal vigilance. And more GitHub repos. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney The miracle is not over. Rather, it hides, and you have to look closely to detect its presence. Bitcoin, Tor, nostr, bittorrent, e2ee messaging, VPNs — all flawed tech stacks that nonetheless protect us from full disenchantment. https://image.nostr.build/9cd1c40e0d883251e5ca0cff404383fa1990eff167aecdc9254ae52d1023f4b9.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Schrödinger's bitcoin: an asset superpositioned between youthful ('we are still early'), and aged indeed ('bitcoin is here to stay'). We collapse to whichever position is convenient, of course, and return to the superposition when the move is complete. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney It is unfortunate that the very protocol that'd be great for recovering addicts is also great for drug dealers. But that is in the nature of the beast. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Airport calls for "Friends of Bill W" is an interesting use case for bitchat. I could see that finding actual use, and for the good. For those not acquainted with this subculture: People in recovery often find airports challenging — this is a place where one is socially permitted to drink at any hour of the day — and call for help there to remain sober. An anonymous location-based, p2p chat app fits the bill. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney It is a good day to rise with the sun and to visit the bank branch for a sixth time to see if I can wire out my “own” money to my “own” account. https://image.nostr.build/0b32f4e6631fcb2113a4c7e364f0035087cab1e7fd31adb46f2f4cf0d930d2b3.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney As we say, furthermore, the other version of the argument requires hyperbitcoinization, an implausible scenario that in its more likely forms actually involves *enhanced* rather than limited state fiscal capacity (through early acquisitions of bitcoin). If states work to dramatically accelerate bitcoin appreciation, it will likely be to their benefit, not their harm. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney The specific version of the argument being replied to here trades on bitcoin’s resistant properties — that it is harder to tax or confiscate money held in self-custody. A little history is helpful in evaluating this claim. The existence of cash — money held in self-custody — did not destroy the state. So though it may restrain state spending to some extent, the most dramatic version of that objection is likely incorrect. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Rumors that bitcoin will destroy the state are exaggerated (Resistance Money, p. 255) https://image.nostr.build/ca61205bf4105865b6f460ccb031f5c01e3759f4eaa4f0c2a3f862d763009d37.jpg https://image.nostr.build/cbb3514a0735086427d0db92b4e63b3b8fc50c894b229a270f769c1430672828.png #note1pjq…rcnw npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney “The trade-off is a massive one-time off-chain data transfer of ~5 TB for a SNARK verifier circuit with 5 billion gates.” #note14sc…qhk5 npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney This has always been what attracted me to bitcoin, and what I still look for on the internet today — something closer to the wild Usenet and IRC and forum experiences I had in the 90s than curated Instagram feeds or censored news and opinion on Twitter. Pirated music. Sharing ideas. An ever-shifting cast of pseudonyms. #note1amq…ks2q npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney There’s a bunch of bots that do this now — scrambling and reposting notes. I can’t quite figure out their game. If you do, let me know. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Thank you so much, Jake, for your kind attention and the post! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney In-depth discussion of 'What Satoshi Did', published in the recent _Satoshi Papers_ edited collection. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6royz4oKBbU npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Fast food is drugs npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Nostr isn’t a drug; it’s food npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney dr. ecash! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Thank you, Martin npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney The canonical account says that it was rain, alongside something a bit more mysterious: “When Noah was 600 years old, on the seventeenth day of the second month, all the underground waters erupted from the earth, and the rain fell in mighty torrents from the sky. The rain continued to fall for forty days and forty nights.” npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Noah was a conspiracy theorist. And then it rained. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney A strange man is yelling in my mentions, @craig please rectify ASAP npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney One of the best effects of the current American administration is to remind people that some laws are bad, and that some crime is good. I fear they will forget the lesson very quickly, upon taking back power. But it is a good lesson! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney bitcoin is for criminals Source: HRF's Financial Freedom newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/hrf.org/financial-freedom-newsletter https://image.nostr.build/61d71a1d86a668de0960db8fc19fd793442bc7e5783418ab2059bd4686a7fb72.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Could you share it via email, please? wrathius at gmail dot com! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Send me a draft when you’ve got one up and running! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney About once a year, I send a student on a Ph.D. program in Philosophy — very rarely in other words. As it should be! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney A big part of my job is career coaching: asking young adults what they want out of work life and how they'll get it. I get all sorts of answers. But never once has a student shared a dream of buying U.S. Treasuries. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney I am officially neutral or slightly skeptical about a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. But here's an argument I'd like to develop and evaluate: Our world is increasingly multi-polar, with realignments of who knows what kind on the horizon. Borders will change. Cross-border payment systems will realign too. It seems useful to have on hand a way to transfer value across those new and shifting borders, without the cooperation of intermediaries. Bitcoin, unlike other digital monies, can do this. So the reason to stockpile some bitcoin isn't merely that it is likely to become more valuable. It's that it is uniquely useful, and it is wise to stockpile useful tools you might need. Objection: if the USFG really needs to pay mercenaries or buy munitions or spy software or whatnot, and doesn't have a way to wire dollars to sellers, it can just buy bitcoin at the very moment of need — no need to buy it now. Reply: the objection only works if we assume that bitcoin's value will remain flat or decline. Otherwise, the counter is: acquiring some bitcoin now will allow the USFG to benefit from appreciation, and make any future purchases using bitcoin cheaper. Another reason I prefer this style of argument over the proposal that the USFG should buy bitcoin now, merely for the reason that it will likely rise in value, is that it is explicitly framed around bitcoin's unique point of usefulness. The fundamental reason to buy bitcoin isn't that Number Go Up, it's that bitcoin can do things other tools cannot. This also supplies us with a plausible answer to the question: why bitcoin? why not TSLA? Or NVDA? Because bitcoin can do things these other assets cannot. Its value lies, not merely in expectation of future appreciation, but in utility. Objection: acquiring bitcoin, in the hopes to someday use it for cross-border payments, is best done in secret. A Strategic Bitcoin Reserve is most useful when covert. Reply: that's probably correct. But there are limits to what a democratic government can do, covertly. And acquiring bitcoin in public enhances any Number Go Up effect, by providing a clear and widely-known signal of bitcoin's value. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney hey I know that guy https://www.btcpolicy.org/articles/meet-the-fellows-andrew-bailey npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Philosophers: "that noble tradition of thinkers who were so annoying that their countrymen would either execute them (Socrates), banish them (Aristotle), excommunicate them (Spinoza), or not have sex with them (Kant)." From Robert Gressis' memoire, "The Most Awkward Man in Japan: Dispatches from a Philosopher Abroad" (2024) (It's good, and much funnier than one might guess, given that it's written by a philosophy professor!) npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Gives boomer energy npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Random person emailing me their thoughts about bitcoin and money, but without any indication they know anything about my research. It happens! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney I get the most interesting emails! https://image.nostr.build/2350c367ac962cc0b12bf928c32e1ca7f0b1259f62d7167fee5d69c43ab77350.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney - Will autocrats attempt to expand their power over payments? - Will central banks continue to print, and sometimes go belly up? - Will other cryptos prove to be fraud and delusion? If you say “yes” to these questions, congratulations: you understand the case for bitcoin. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Nihilism — the view that nothing could really matter — is both false and mischievous. False: some things do matter, regardless of our attitudes. Mischievous: if you believe it, your life will become less meaningful and good. Nihilism is, then, rather dangerous. It'd be good to have an antidote. There are many, in fact: 1. Love: giving and receiving 2. Old Books: they remind us of what matters by taking us far away 3. Long Walks: we are animals, not spirits, and animals live best when animated npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney So also: some people have awesome and correct views, and act on them. When censors block your access to those views, they block your ability to understand the world, to predict how it will unfold, and to act on the basis of evidence. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Some people have repugnant views and act on them. When censors block your access to those views, they block your ability to understand the world, to predict how it will unfold, and to act on the basis of evidence. npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney 2025 draws nigh. What advice do you have for me, for the coming new year? npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Shops that sell things for bitcoin are good. Good luck! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Will do! 🫡 npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Very cool; thanks! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Every few months I post this, in the hopes that we’ll find a taker. Any book sellers out there interested in stocking ‘Resistance Money’ and selling it for bitcoin? We can get you copies from the press at a steep discount. No author kickbacks or royalties or funny business: we just want people to be able to buy the book for bitcoin! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Thank you! npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Hard to think of a better holiday bundle tbh https://image.nostr.build/849172d15ecd738c4ba9bcbcbdd3299a841f3e39d63f48d9a4dae28fc0cdf58f.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney 1. If they do Free Ross on Day One, we're going apeshit. 2. If they don't Free Ross on Day One, we're going apeshit. 3. Therefore, we're going apeshit (from premises 1-2) Pretty convincing argument tbh https://image.nostr.build/fb5c26f0fd60a0c955bc91d62deb62ac6fdc719425228d9962d5331667091c78.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Thank you, eggyolk! The two features this review identifies — writing to clarify rather than to wow, offering understanding rather than polemics — were top of mind for us as we wrote the book. https://image.nostr.build/b30b2212518b9fee9d54beff1b93e6096e413e08c91483d0f5821f92ba2fc25f.jpg npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney 🙏🏾 npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney Many such cases. #note18s3…wdva npub1yezu4atsdgchvlyjz5efwks8n7ze2rssq674qe04m5pp8e5y32tqfdawc7 resistancemoney That is so kind of you. Thank you so much for reading, and for *seeing* our work. Chapters 9 and 10 were probably the hardest to get out, so it is especially meaningful to us if you found them useful or good!