Tom Inglis
1.1K posts

Tom Inglis
@TomInglis18
Exploring ideas & influencers surrounding Bitcoin



What TV show was amazing at first but became unwatchable for you later on?







The 99.6th percentile of WORST 4 year CAGR periods for Bitcoin is 9.1%. (+240 BP’s over 50 yr US M2 money supply CAGR) The 75th percentile of WORST 4 year CAGR’s for BTC = 48.3% (+4,160 BP’s over 50 yr US M2 CAGR) Check out some of our new tools 👌🏼








🚨 New York Times: Old People Suck and We Should Take Their Stuff It's time do away with these societal "grifters" and "stowaways," says an eminent Yale professor —MATT TAIBBI The New York Times on old people: It is not ageist to ask whether older people should be required to give more to younger Americans… Older Americans favor restrictions on immigration… there is a correlation between age and resistance to policies to halt the overheating of the planet… impose age ceilings on political offices… Older Americans own much of the most desirable real estate… It is not ageist, finally, to impose policies to transfer jobs, houses and wealth down the generational chain. Yale law professor Samuel Moyn, whom I interviewed once, always seemed generous and reasonable, even when our politics differed. But unless it’s an elaborate meta-joke, the above column and forthcoming book Gerontocracy in America: How the Old are Hoarding Wealth and Power in Americaadvance some of the most intellectually vicious ideas I’ve ever seen. The Godwin’s Law factor alone is a shocker. Moyn observes that people of years have accumulated money and influence and contrives to end the “tyranny of the old” by having “the elderly divested of political power, wealth, and property,” because reasons. The title of the Times piece, “Older Americans Are Hoarding America’s Potential,” carries the obscene lefty connotation that no one really owns anything and the elderly, by din of living too long to begin with, and having a generally shitty quality of life compared to the young, and voting incorrectly/selfishly (hilarious, in the context of open scheming to seize their savings) and wasting resources “playing for time” for “another day, month, or year among loved ones” makes them lousy stewards of what the author unironically calls “our inheritance,” i.e. their homes and bank accounts. racket.news/p/new-york-tim…

DOCUMENTARY CLAIMS SOLUTION TO $80B BITCOIN MYSTERY A new documentary claims to have identified Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto, suggesting the system may have been built by cryptographers Hal Finney and Len Sassaman, both now deceased. The film argues this could explain why 1.1 million untouched Bitcoins—now worth over $80 billion—have never been moved since being mined in Bitcoin’s early days. The mystery remains unverified, but the theory suggests the fortune may be dormant because its creator is no longer alive.













