ProgrammableTX

9.2K posts

ProgrammableTX banner
ProgrammableTX

ProgrammableTX

@ProgrammableTx

Greatest accomplishment: beating Dark Souls 3, and yeah I know it's not the hardest Dark Souls.

United States 가입일 Haziran 2010
1.2K 팔로잉3.6K 팔로워
ProgrammableTX 리트윗함
Richie - oss/acc
Richie - oss/acc@richiemcilroy·
apparently software as we know it is dead because Susan from accounting is going to vibe code a calendly alternative while on her lunch break I think some of you need to go outside and speak to real people
English
221
385
8K
862K
ProgrammableTX
ProgrammableTX@ProgrammableTx·
@paranoidbull Also the article seems to imply that the majority of US consumers/technologists/gig economy employees will be using unbranded AI head units to build bespoke software that coordinates all of their consumer and professional activity. This is a fairly ridiculous premise.
English
0
0
0
18
Paranoid Bull
Paranoid Bull@paranoidbull·
Doing actual hard things. Nuclear. Advanced power. Building things in the real world. Actually powering all this “AI” and continuing to advance it. That is a boom. And AI can’t do that but it can speed it up.
English
1
0
2
467
Paranoid Bull
Paranoid Bull@paranoidbull·
Sigh…fine. Read this thing. 1) “The euphoria was palpable. By October 2026, the S&P 500 flirted with 8000, the Nasdaq broke above 30k.” 🤡 2) 70% Consumer economy is friction so mortgages die. NO 3) Private credit is dead because of SAAS. Yes. Private Credit = SAAS = Dead.
Citrini@citrini

JUNE 2028. The S&P is down 38% from its highs. Unemployment just printed 10.2%. Private credit is unraveling. Prime mortgages are cracking. AI didn’t disappoint. It exceeded every expectation. What happened?​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ citriniresearch.com/p/2028gic

English
1
0
5
2.9K
ProgrammableTX
ProgrammableTX@ProgrammableTx·
If you're freaking out over the AI doom fiction circulating tonight, I can suggest an antidote. Read Chapter 7 of Henry Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson, published in 1946.
ProgrammableTX tweet media
English
0
5
13
676
ProgrammableTX
ProgrammableTX@ProgrammableTx·
Alden is the best.
Lyn Alden@LynAldenContact

@GeorgeSelgin The good news is, they didn’t “turn Bitcoin into” anything, because bitcoin itself is unchanged during that time. These are simply shifting narratives around a rather fixed protocol. In other words, the fiat system has shaped itself around Bitcoin.

English
0
0
4
189
ProgrammableTX
ProgrammableTX@ProgrammableTx·
@WalkerAmerica The sudden appearance of Ver support coming out right now is fucking weird. Ver was a complete tool.
English
0
0
7
78
Walker⚡️
Walker⚡️@WalkerAmerica·
A bunch of political influencers who never talk about bitcoin just started spreading Bitcoin Epstein FUD, and promoting Roger Ver and “Bitcoin Cash” propaganda. It’s just so painfully obvious what’s happening… It’s the exact same thing that happened with the coordinated Zcash push… Insiders with heavy bags are looking for low IQ bag-buyers to dump on, so they pay influencers to astroturf support. Don’t be fooled.
English
39
41
440
15.9K
ProgrammableTX
ProgrammableTX@ProgrammableTx·
How do you know how many people were made rich? Seems that you are stating a highly dubious assumption as fact. You employ a time tested political dog whistle but with no substance. Credit and therefore banks have existed on a hard money standard before. Bitcoin was never going to destroy banks. I would characterize Roger's crusade for cheaper payments as incoherent but in the end it was just self serving, and misguided ideologues with only a surface understand of Bitcoin were then and obviously continue to be susceptible to his rhetoric.
English
0
0
1
60
Martha Bueno
Martha Bueno@BuenoForMiami·
Epstein was heavily involved in the global financial system. He also financed the side of the Blocksize wars that wanted small blocks (and won), which changed Bitcoin from P2P digital cash that would have revolutionized the world’s financial markets into a digital gold that made a few people rich. All banks are now getting in on Bitcoin, instead of Bitcoin being the thing that destroys all banks and the fractional reserve currency that enslaves us. The people who have the most to gain from digital gold call me stupid for following the trail to its obvious conclusion. Bitcoin may have started as a way to decentralize, but it was corrupted by the very institutions it was supposed to break free from. I don’t get paid to promote anything. I have never been paid to promote anything. I believed in Bitcoin. I believed in Ross Ulbricht and what he tried to accomplish. I fought for Roger Ver because the truth is more important than making money. I wish I was wrong, but the Epstein file dump points to the opposite. This isn’t financial advice; this is follow the money.
Martha Bueno@BuenoForMiami

*Epstein invested $500,000 in Blockstream's 2014 seed round through Kyara Investments III. That's the small block company. YOUR side. *Austin Hill and Adam Back flew to meet Epstein in St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands in April 2014. They didn't go for the weather. *Epstein donated $525,000 to MIT's Digital Currency Initiative, which then paid the salaries of Bitcoin Core developers Wladimir van der Laan, Gavin Andresen, and Cory Fields. Joi Ito literally thanked Epstein in a 2017 email saying the funds "allowed us to move quickly and win this round." *Jeremy Rubin, co-founder of the MIT Digital Currency Initiative, emailed Epstein directly asking him to finance his Bitcoin research. So when you say "Epstein was working with these people if anything" about the big blockers, you have it exactly backwards. The Epstein files prove he was funding the small block infrastructure. Blockstream. MIT DCI. The core developers. The entire institutional apparatus that "won" the blocksize war had a convicted sex trafficker's money running through it. You wrote a whole book about sound money, I would hope that you follow the money, even when it leads somewhere uncomfortable for your narrative.

English
92
37
260
19.1K
ProgrammableTX 리트윗함
Oliver L. Velez ⚡️ 1%'er Bitcoiner
Gold is out here trading like Fartcoin. I never want to hear from a gold bug again that "btc can't be money because it's too volatile." They've all lost their rights to say that to Bitcoiners. I also never want to hear this nonsense again either: "It takes too much money to move the btc price now. Big moves are no longer possible." Bullsh*t. If a $36 trillion asset can move like a meme coin , a $1.5 trillion one can rocket more. OK. Carry on and stack harder. You don't have enough bitcoin.
Oliver L. Velez ⚡️ 1%'er Bitcoiner tweet media
English
271
317
2.2K
131.1K
ProgrammableTX 리트윗함
Carnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙
Novak Djokovic: “My kids don't have phones and won’t until they’re mature enough. They complain everyone at school has a phone except them. When everyone follows the herd, conformity is expected but it doesn’t have to be that way. That’s where we differ.” Novak gets it
English
51
310
3.2K
113.9K
₿aseload 🍷
₿aseload 🍷@baseload21·
Bitcoin usually does the opposite of the general sentiment on X. Just sayin’ I m probably one of the last bull out there
English
22
2
105
5.8K
ProgrammableTX 리트윗함
Lawrence Lepard, "fix the money, fix the world"
President Trump must pardon this man! @potus. Please retweet to get trending.
Jesse Tevelow@jtevelow

American entrepreneur Keonne Rodriguez built a successful Bitcoin wallet app called @SamouraiWallet. He’s now being sent to prison for it. In a few weeks, Keonne will begin his 5-year sentence behind bars, unless the Bitcoin community can save him by pressuring the US Administration to offer a pardon. When I heard about this story, it sounded like fake news, so I went straight to the source. In this exclusive interview, @Keonne is descriptive, logical, and vulnerable. His story is heartbreaking and terrifying. By the end, it's evident he's sitting directly in the crossfire between freedom tech and surveillance states. This is a critical moment in history—a moment for the Bitcoin community to stand up. Just as @RealRossU was pardoned, @Keonne must be forgiven, too. We cannot allow one of our own fellow Bitcoiners to spend time in jail for building a legitimate product that protects our Bitcoin and strengthens the network. We must unify to ensure @Keonne is freed. Alone, he doesn’t stand a chance. But with support from faithful Bitcoiners, we can bring awareness to his cause. Knowledge is power. Watch the interview and vocalize your support for @Keonne in the comments. Show Summary: In this gripping conversation, Keonne shares his harrowing experience of building Samourai Wallet, a non-custodial Bitcoin wallet focused on user privacy, and the subsequent FBI raid that led to his arrest. He discusses the legal challenges he faced, including conspiracy charges and the pressure to plead guilty, despite his innocence. The conversation highlights the broader implications of privacy in the cryptocurrency space and the political motivations behind his prosecution. Keonne’s story serves as a cautionary tale about the intersection of technology, law, and personal freedom. It is a moment in Bitcoin’s history that could define how we protect our freedom in the digital age. Key Takeaways: - Samourai Wallet prioritizes user privacy and control over funds. - The FBI raid was a shocking and aggressive response to a tech startup. - Keonne faced serious charges without any prior criminal history. - The legal system pressured him into a plea deal despite his innocence. - Public statements on social media were used against him in court. - The indictment was based on misinterpretations of his actions and intent. - Keonne’s case highlights the challenges of privacy in the cryptocurrency space. - The financial burden of legal fees was overwhelming for Keonne and his family. - Home confinement significantly impacted Keonne’s quality of life. - The case raises important questions about free speech and innovation in technology. Chapters: 00:00 Introduction to Free Speech and Innovation 02:41 Building Samurai Wallet: A Focus on Privacy 05:13 The FBI Raid: A Shocking Turn of Events 08:05 The Arrest: Confusion and Fear 10:45 Understanding the Charges: Conspiracy and Tweets 13:24 The Legal Battle: Navigating the System 16:04 The Impact of Social Media on Legal Proceedings 18:59 The Bail Conditions: A Million Dollar Bond 21:44 Life Under Home Confinement 24:33 The Ongoing Fight for Justice 29:03 The Burden of Legal Costs 31:11 Impacts of Home Confinement 33:31 The Decision to Take a Plea Deal 38:22 The Brady Violation and Its Implications 43:05 Sentencing and Aftermath 56:51 Community Support and Call to Action This story is brought to you by @LABNetwork21. Thank you to @Puncher522 ,@bobvankirk, @BTCsessions, @EricVStacks and countless other bitcoiners for already stepping up.

English
77
951
2.3K
139.2K
RŌNIN
RŌNIN@ronin21btc·
Worth a read #Bitcoin
SightBringer@_The_Prophet__

⚡️The generational wealth split is the central organizing force of the next twenty years of American politics, macro, and asset selection. Here is the real geometry. 1. The US is not just unequal. It is locked. People think this is: •“old people are rich” •“young people can’t buy houses” •“boomers had it easy” That is a cartoon. The deeper structure is this: The largest cohort of wealth in human history is now held by the least economically productive group. When one generation controls the balance sheet and another controls the labor engine, a society becomes structurally tense. This is the system now. 2. True power comes from who controls the asset base. And right now, the seventy-plus cohort controls: •the real estate base •the equity base •the bond base •the political donor base •the trust and estate infrastructure •the zoning bottlenecks •the pension capital •the philanthropic capital They can sit on assets for decades because they have no economic need to sell. Young people cannot wait for decades to buy into those assets. This is a structural trap, not a cycle. 3. The result is something extremely rare in history. You have a society where: •the young produce most of the real economic output •the old own most of the financial claims on that output That is not capitalism. That is not socialism. It is a hybrid pressure cooker that has only one escape valve. 4. That escape valve is non custodial, non political, non permissioned digital asset accumulation. Bitcoin is not popular with millennials and Gen Z because they are rebellious or ideological. It is because: It is the only major asset where the asset base is not already owned by the seventy-plus cohort. Housing? Owned. Equities? Owned. Bonds? Owned. Private equity? Owned. Land? Owned. Bitcoin is the only vessel where younger cohorts can accumulate a claim on future wealth that is not downstream from older cohort ownership. That is the real truth. 5. The US knows this dynamic exists and is quietly adapting policy around it. Why is the US leaning into AI, reshoring, fiscal support, and risk asset inflation? Because the government understands two things: 1. You cannot confiscate or dethrone the older cohort’s asset base. 2. You must give the younger cohort new assets to grow into or the system fractures. The government will never say this out loud. But this is the real structural logic behind: •AI industrial policy •Bitcoin ETF approval •stablecoin integration •massive fiscal support •reshoring incentives The system needs new asset ladders. It cannot grow the old ones fast enough. 6. What I really believe deep down: The generational wealth imbalance is not a problem that America will solve. It is a pressure gradient the system will route around. And the routing takes the following shape: •AI becomes the new productivity engine •Bitcoin becomes the new neutral store of value •stablecoins become the transactional layer •fiscal policy keeps real growth from collapsing •asset inflation continues because it must •political cycles rise and fall around redistribution narratives •the old cohort stays rich •the young cohort builds a new asset universe In other words: Bitcoin, AI, and US policy are not disconnected stories. They are the structural answer to the fact that seventy year olds own one third of the wealth. This is the real truth. The system is mutating, not collapsing. And Bitcoin sits directly on the fault line where that mutation releases its pressure.

English
4
0
19
6.6K
ProgrammableTX 리트윗함
inscribor
inscribor@inscribor·
The GOAT @aantonop weighs in on the spam debate. Andreas explains with elegance why @LukeDashjr Knots fork is both futile and detrimental to bitcoin. Full video on @aantonop Patreon.
English
168
214
1.1K
294.8K
ProgrammableTX 리트윗함
nunchuk_io
nunchuk_io@nunchuk_io·
Introducing Nunchuk 2.0: Autonomous Inheritance. The first assisted Bitcoin inheritance solution with an on‑chain failsafe. Designed to outlive the company that created it. Enforced by the Bitcoin network, not by us. 🧵
nunchuk_io tweet media
English
17
78
392
528.2K
InvisibleHandBTC
InvisibleHandBTC@InvisibleHandbt·
@ProgrammableTx The way i feel when i can spend a whole day trying to understand a single page of a text
English
1
0
0
16
ProgrammableTX
ProgrammableTX@ProgrammableTx·
This quote is about the treacherous path one takes when first beginning the study of economics. It's from from "The Promises Men Live By" by Harry Scherman: "Obviously there can be other avenues of approach to the subject; and the approach is all-important. The first few steps inevitably determine how far one shall get in understanding. The mere approach may lead one quickly to a bog, in which one wanders, weighted down, forever after." It reminds me of many of my friends whose first and only exposure to economics is a movie about Wall Street, a perfunctory conversation with an advisor at a retail investment bank, or worst of all a college lecture course which takes for granted the very concept of money itself.
English
2
0
3
134