The original article this piece is responding to: Reflections on Bitcoin Culture.
Bitcoin changes our lives.
Itâs an almost spiritual observation that weâve all seen within ourselves. After acquiring some, learning how it works, and to various degrees delving into what this decentralized, uncensorable, proof-of-work money is, weâve seen our lives change. It echoes history. Some people see god in it.
Bitcoiners have had their lives upended, their perspectives shifted, and their value systems altered. We see how our behavior changed from our pre-Bitcoin selves, our emphasis now squarely placed on real things, hard things, the long term, and the local. We look to our inner selves, and we look after ourselves. We see to our families. We set our own house in order before we criticize the world.
Bitcoin encourages higher-level thinking, of the dynamic kind that once characterized good economics. Once a Bitcoiner, we become less prone to believing commonly accepted just-so stories â more skeptical and interested in verifying rather than trusting.
Anyone whoâs been in Bitcoin for a while can point to countless such examples in their own lives. Itâs undeniable, therefore, that Bitcoin itself has a culture. It affects change in the people it welcomes; you donât change Bitcoin, Bitcoin changes you.
The values embedded in it are rules that people who embrace this monetary revolution canât help but internalize. Whether they understand it or not is unimportant. Bitcoin is for anyone, sure, but you donât stay that same person after Bitcoin has changed your life; youâre a different âanyoneâ than when you first opened your fiat eyes.
Bitcoin allowed us to see much of the stupidity of the collective delusions at the base of the state, democracy, central banks, public health, public schooling â public anything, really. Itâs the same realization that makes us put huge question marks on climate change worries or trans ideology.
In the world of fiat, anything goes. You can unverifiably feel oppressed, a man can unverifiably be a woman, anyone whoâs sad or distracted can unverifiably feel autistic or depressed. If the lord of the printing press doesnât feel like thereâs enough money around, he makes more. Violently extorting productive members of society is held as a morally good thing and celebrated. The experts and fiat media voices say the world ends in twelve (or five) years, and if you disbelieve them or ask for verification, youâre on par with the Nazis.
In Bitcoin, this playbook doesnât fly anymore. Identifying as receiving a block reward does nothing, political votes become irrelevant, nobodyâs unverifiable feelings reign supreme, and cheating gets harder. UTXOs donât have a sex. It all goes out the window, revealed and denuded for the nonsense it always was.
Thus, something doesnât add up in Margot Paezâs recent article thrashing Bitcoin culture. She writes:
Big muscles are flexes because theyâre unfakeable â like a hash under the difficulty target. A transaction is valid and confirmed or it isnât. Itâs right there, objective, and verifiable to anyone who cares to look.
Pull-ups are flexes because they display truth, regardless of what anyone else thinks about an invisible ego beneath. You can do them, or you canât; theyâre verifiable and undeniable. A muscle-up doesnât ask for permission or tries to confuse you about nuances to an imagined reality.
This stands in contrast to the fiat, legacy world â of which trans ideology is merely one of the least material but verifiably stupid examples â where words are violence, invisible and unverifiable identities rule, fiat schools canât teach people to read or count, Uber doesnât have any cars, and the banks donât have your money. Itâs a broken culture, where the only thing running away faster than the deaths of despair are the deficits in a profligate Treasury, forever bound to send welfare checks to rent-seekers.
Itâs a culture dominated by sensitivity instead of truth, that celebrates weakness instead of strength and responsibility and self-improvement, that encourages therapy even though it barely works and shoves you pharmacy-full of meds and injections at the first sign of trouble.
Thatâs why Iâm not sold on this âProgressive Bitcoinerâ ethos flying around. Progressives came to Bitcoin and carved out a niche for themselves, and for now that works well as a bridge over from the hyper-leftwing clown world to our world. But you wonât be a Bitcoiner and long remain a progressive; theyâre mostly incompatible ideas.
Progressivism came to Bitcoin as a breath of fresh air, but it will ultimately die here.
Bitcoin strips a government of control over transactions and economic value. A progressive requires a large and invasive government to uphold and enact the many things they yearn for. If you still want those goodies, but not the violent organized crime syndicate we call government, youâre merely a libertarian with a strong social ethos. Congrats. Iâve said so before regarding Jason Maierâs A Progressiveâs Case for Bitcoin, and I maintain that in time Bitcoin will change him too, like it has the rest of us.
Bitcoin sooner or later forces you into seeing the world of truth and acting in unfakeable ways, looking to what is rather than whatâs voiced or recommended by âexperts.â On the way there one usually complains loudly about the mean Bitcoiners not seeing the world you do.
Itâs not a coincidence that so many Bitcoiners proudly and diligently consume steak. We saw that the nutritional guidelines were gunk (some might even say corrupt), and the people pushing them were obese, ill, and ugly. We ate a bunch of meat and felt better. Do I look unhealthy to you?! we ceremoniously ask.
The LGBTQ flags that Paez defends sit next to flags with âFree Palestineâ â even though Palestinians arenât exactly known for their pro-gay values â and âSlava Ukraini,â celebrating a country that scores among the worst on the Rainbow Europe index and routinely counts as Europeâs second most corrupt country (behind Russia). These are not serious people. You know something is rotten when originally peace-loving leftists celebrate the very warmongering people they should detest.
The ultimate shit-test is the clown world shitshow, not Bitcoiner culture. In fact, the truth and honesty in Bitcoin culture is the antidote.
Quit whining and go do some pull-ups.
This is a guest post by Joakim Book. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.
Full story here:
Bitcoin changes our lives.
Itâs an almost spiritual observation that weâve all seen within ourselves. After acquiring some, learning how it works, and to various degrees delving into what this decentralized, uncensorable, proof-of-work money is, weâve seen our lives change. It echoes history. Some people see god in it.
Bitcoiners have had their lives upended, their perspectives shifted, and their value systems altered. We see how our behavior changed from our pre-Bitcoin selves, our emphasis now squarely placed on real things, hard things, the long term, and the local. We look to our inner selves, and we look after ourselves. We see to our families. We set our own house in order before we criticize the world.
Bitcoin encourages higher-level thinking, of the dynamic kind that once characterized good economics. Once a Bitcoiner, we become less prone to believing commonly accepted just-so stories â more skeptical and interested in verifying rather than trusting.
Anyone whoâs been in Bitcoin for a while can point to countless such examples in their own lives. Itâs undeniable, therefore, that Bitcoin itself has a culture. It affects change in the people it welcomes; you donât change Bitcoin, Bitcoin changes you.
The values embedded in it are rules that people who embrace this monetary revolution canât help but internalize. Whether they understand it or not is unimportant. Bitcoin is for anyone, sure, but you donât stay that same person after Bitcoin has changed your life; youâre a different âanyoneâ than when you first opened your fiat eyes.
Bitcoin allowed us to see much of the stupidity of the collective delusions at the base of the state, democracy, central banks, public health, public schooling â public anything, really. Itâs the same realization that makes us put huge question marks on climate change worries or trans ideology.
In the world of fiat, anything goes. You can unverifiably feel oppressed, a man can unverifiably be a woman, anyone whoâs sad or distracted can unverifiably feel autistic or depressed. If the lord of the printing press doesnât feel like thereâs enough money around, he makes more. Violently extorting productive members of society is held as a morally good thing and celebrated. The experts and fiat media voices say the world ends in twelve (or five) years, and if you disbelieve them or ask for verification, youâre on par with the Nazis.
In Bitcoin, this playbook doesnât fly anymore. Identifying as receiving a block reward does nothing, political votes become irrelevant, nobodyâs unverifiable feelings reign supreme, and cheating gets harder. UTXOs donât have a sex. It all goes out the window, revealed and denuded for the nonsense it always was.
Thus, something doesnât add up in Margot Paezâs recent article thrashing Bitcoin culture. She writes:
ââŚpopular influencers who are often millennial men spending a lot of time taking photos of themselves flexing their muscles in front of a mirror. I really wonder how big those muscles have to get to protect the fragile ego buried beneath those muscular fibers.â
Big muscles are flexes because theyâre unfakeable â like a hash under the difficulty target. A transaction is valid and confirmed or it isnât. Itâs right there, objective, and verifiable to anyone who cares to look.
Pull-ups are flexes because they display truth, regardless of what anyone else thinks about an invisible ego beneath. You can do them, or you canât; theyâre verifiable and undeniable. A muscle-up doesnât ask for permission or tries to confuse you about nuances to an imagined reality.
This stands in contrast to the fiat, legacy world â of which trans ideology is merely one of the least material but verifiably stupid examples â where words are violence, invisible and unverifiable identities rule, fiat schools canât teach people to read or count, Uber doesnât have any cars, and the banks donât have your money. Itâs a broken culture, where the only thing running away faster than the deaths of despair are the deficits in a profligate Treasury, forever bound to send welfare checks to rent-seekers.
Itâs a culture dominated by sensitivity instead of truth, that celebrates weakness instead of strength and responsibility and self-improvement, that encourages therapy even though it barely works and shoves you pharmacy-full of meds and injections at the first sign of trouble.
Thatâs why Iâm not sold on this âProgressive Bitcoinerâ ethos flying around. Progressives came to Bitcoin and carved out a niche for themselves, and for now that works well as a bridge over from the hyper-leftwing clown world to our world. But you wonât be a Bitcoiner and long remain a progressive; theyâre mostly incompatible ideas.
Progressivism came to Bitcoin as a breath of fresh air, but it will ultimately die here.
Bitcoin strips a government of control over transactions and economic value. A progressive requires a large and invasive government to uphold and enact the many things they yearn for. If you still want those goodies, but not the violent organized crime syndicate we call government, youâre merely a libertarian with a strong social ethos. Congrats. Iâve said so before regarding Jason Maierâs A Progressiveâs Case for Bitcoin, and I maintain that in time Bitcoin will change him too, like it has the rest of us.
Bitcoin sooner or later forces you into seeing the world of truth and acting in unfakeable ways, looking to what is rather than whatâs voiced or recommended by âexperts.â On the way there one usually complains loudly about the mean Bitcoiners not seeing the world you do.
Itâs not a coincidence that so many Bitcoiners proudly and diligently consume steak. We saw that the nutritional guidelines were gunk (some might even say corrupt), and the people pushing them were obese, ill, and ugly. We ate a bunch of meat and felt better. Do I look unhealthy to you?! we ceremoniously ask.
The LGBTQ flags that Paez defends sit next to flags with âFree Palestineâ â even though Palestinians arenât exactly known for their pro-gay values â and âSlava Ukraini,â celebrating a country that scores among the worst on the Rainbow Europe index and routinely counts as Europeâs second most corrupt country (behind Russia). These are not serious people. You know something is rotten when originally peace-loving leftists celebrate the very warmongering people they should detest.
The ultimate shit-test is the clown world shitshow, not Bitcoiner culture. In fact, the truth and honesty in Bitcoin culture is the antidote.
Quit whining and go do some pull-ups.
This is a guest post by Joakim Book. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.
Full story here: