Alan Hibbard

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Alan Hibbard

Alan Hibbard

@AlanHibbard

Co-host, @GoldSilver_com YouTube channel. I explain why gold, silver, and bitcoin are essential to society. -DM for media appearances

NY & FL Katılım Haziran 2012
1.2K Takip Edilen2.1K Takipçiler
Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
@Devin82m @MakeGoldGreat Thanks! You’re right about Deliveries. But unfortunately @MakeGoldGreat is using the word Deliveries when it should be Withdrawals (as labeled in the spreadsheet). In this case (withdrawals), the metal *is* leaving the vaults.
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Cyber Mountain
Cyber Mountain@Devin82m·
@MakeGoldGreat @AlanHibbard made a great point that "delivered" doesn't mean it's physically removed from Comex vaults, it's just a warrant (document) changing hands. So take these "delivery" numbers with a grain of salt.
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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
@drkmath777 @BTCOVERFIAT Thanks Joe! Not necessarily becoming more scarce over time, but becoming more energy-intensive to create each successive unit.
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HOLDER OF LAST RESORT [NO2X] [HODL]
I like how Bitcoin's monetary policy is predictable. Everything is based upon mathematics and the principle that every four years Bitcoin becomes harder to acquire. There are no games being played. The FED could come out tomorrow and say they're printing more money #StoreOfValue
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MBAeconomics
MBAeconomics@MBAeconomics1·
Another 12 sigma hour for silver. Negative 15% #silver in an hour happpens once every 7.42 trillion years. At this point the banksters should make silver free! The nature of these fake paper slams guarantee the #comex is failing in march. Buy the fucking dip apes.
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Jason Mrochek
Jason Mrochek@JasonMrochek·
This is an EXCELLENT video. @AlanHibbard does a phenomenal job breaking down the statistical reasons that the recent volatility in #silver isn't as scary as the interwebs suggests. You're speaking my language Sir!
GoldSilver@GoldSilver_com

Silver’s volatility isn’t a warning sign — it’s the signal. Big swings are exactly what history shows during major silver repricing phases. Learn why “impossible” moves are actually normal for silver 👇 🔗 Read/watch here: hubs.la/Q041GH260

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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
My dad handed me two clothespins. “This,” he said, “is the story of everything.” In one hand: a clothespin from the 1960s. Solid hardwood, smooth from decades of use. It still works perfectly, some 60 years later. In the other: a clothespin from 2025. Lighter, paler wood, brittle. The spring is thin and unstable. Marketed as “extra durable,” my dad just raised an eyebrow. At first glance, it’s just two clothespins. But they tell a bigger story — the shift from durability to disposability, from craftsmanship to cost-cutting, from stewardship to constant consumption. This is planned obsolescence in action. Products are designed to fail so we must keep buying. Slowly, subtly, they break. Frayed wires, cracked hinges, brittle springs. Not because we want more, but because the old was never built to last. The costs are everywhere. Landfills overflow. Wallets empty. And maybe most quietly, our spirits grow accustomed to impermanence, to the idea that nothing is meant to endure. What if this philosophy extends beyond objects? What if it shapes how we treat relationships, communities, homes, even the Earth — as temporary, replaceable, disposable? It doesn’t have to be this way. That 1960s clothespin reminds us another path is possible. That we once made things to last, and we can again. That quality, care, and intention matter. That we can design for repair, for continuity, for meaning. The story in my palm is about more than laundry. It’s about the choices we make — and the world they create. Credit: Sustainable Human
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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
Over 10M views for a reason. A classic.
Bridgett Fertig@LightOnLiberty

The Rothschild Central Banking Hidden Money Matrix: How Big Banks and Big Government Steals Your Wealth Through the Federal Reserve Scam A 30 min documentary on how the Rothschilds, Rockefellers, and Globalist Elites created the U.S. Federal Reserve to enslave American citizens and bankrupt our nation to destroy it from within. People are finally waking up to the realization that our modern monetary system is nothing more than a massive fraudulent parasitic scheme designed to siphon wealth from hardworking citizens to banks and government elites and they've been rising up to fight back. The Federal Reserve, despite its official-sounding name, is a private banking corporation owned by major central bankers who live in England, it is NOT a government agency. Created in 1913, the same year the income tax amendment was passed (no coincidence), this system enables the continuous theft of your purchasing power through a complex web of Treasury bonds, Federal Reserve checks written from empty accounts, and fractional reserve banking. When the government needs money, it issues bonds — IOUs — that banks purchase. These banks then sell these bonds to the Federal Reserve, which creates currency out of thin air by writing checks on accounts with zero balances. This newly created currency is multiplied through fractional reserve banking, where banks can lend out up to 90% of depositors' money while still showing the full amount in accounts. This results in a monetary system requiring ever-increasing debt, with more debt in existence than currency to pay it off - a mathematical impossibility designed to enslave us through perpetual taxation. Our founding fathers fought against central banking for this very reason, which is why the Constitution specified only gold and silver as money. Today's system violates these principles, robbing us of our LIBERTY and transferring wealth to bankers who, as a former Bank of England director allegedly stated, "own the earth" and "with the flick of a pen will create enough money to buy it back again" if it's taken away. The worst part, our system was ALL created and owned by disgusting satan worshipping cannibalistic child trafficking pedophiles. This is the system you're all assimilating together to help President Trump fight against and abolish.

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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
The events in Venezuela 🇻🇪 are about regime certainty. Regime certainty requires: -gold -energy -[perceived] ability to enforce rules Maduro's seizure checks all three boxes.
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Eric B. Schorvitz
Eric B. Schorvitz@ebschor·
Calling Bitcoin the "best money ever" is overhyped. Good money needs scarcity plus real-world utility as a medium of exchange, store of value, and unit of account. BTC excels at scarcity but struggles elsewhere. Medium of exchange: Base layer handles just 3-7 transactions per second. Visa does thousands. Lightning helps, but it's clunky with liquidity issues and often custodial. Few people use BTC for daily spending; it's mostly traded speculatively. Store of value: "Digital gold"? Extreme volatility hurts. In 2025, BTC hit highs above $125k before dropping to around $88k now, with big swings that wipe out wealth fast. Unit of account: Nobody prices goods in BTC due to wild fluctuations. Merchants prefer stable USD. It has a low ~0.8% issuance rate (heading to zero by ~2140), but value is pure speculation, no intrinsic uses like gold. That's why the world ditched the gold standard in 1971: it was too rigid to expand money for growth, wars, or crises. Moderate inflation (~2%) is actually good; it encourages spending/investing, eases wage adjustments, and avoids deflation spirals. BTC is a cool scarce asset, but not superior money for a growing global economy needing flexibility. Hype overlooks the volatility and low real usage.
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Jeff Swanson
Jeff Swanson@theswansjr·
Money does not exist in nature. If every human vanished tomorrow—poof, Thanos snap—money dies with us. Not slowly. Instantly. Because money isn't real. It's not gravity. It's not water. It's not some fundamental law of physics carved into the universe's source code. Gravity pulls planets whether you believe in it or not. Water cycles through ecosystems without asking for permission. Those are natural phenomena. They persist. Money? Money is a shared hallucination. A collective delusion we all agreed to participate in because the alternative, pure barter, was a logistical nightmare. Look around. Animals hoard food. Birds collect shiny objects to attract mates. Squirrels bury acorns. But they're not pricing those acorns in "nut dollars." There's no interest rate on stored seeds. No squirrel is taking out a loan to front-run winter scarcity. That's instinct. That's biology. That's not money. Money only exists when humans assign value to something and agree that it represents stored labor, future purchasing power, or social coordination at scale. Without minds to recognize it, gold is just a shiny metal in the ground. Bitcoin is just dormant code on dead servers. Carl Menger figured this out in the 1870s. Money emerges organically from human action and voluntary agreement—not government decree, not divine mandate. Gold became money because humans decided it had the right properties: scarce, durable, divisible, portable, verifiable. We built entire civilizations around that consensus. But here's the kicker: gold isn't inherently money without us assigning it that role. It's just element 79 on the periodic table. Bitcoin? Same deal. It's a digital construct we engineered because we needed better properties for a global, hyperconnected world. But in a human-less universe? Bitcoin's ledger halts. The network dies. The protocol becomes a fossil record of a species that once tried to escape monetary debasement. This is the part most people miss: The evolution of money doesn't happen because it's etched into the fabric of reality. It happens because we build it. We improve it. We upgrade the operating system. Seashells → Gold → Paper → Digital. Each iteration solves problems the previous one couldn't. Each step is a reflection of human ingenuity, not natural inevitability. And right now, we're in the middle of the biggest monetary upgrade in human history. Bitcoin isn't "real" in the sense that it exists independent of us. But neither is the dollar. Neither is gold as money. The difference is Bitcoin was engineered—deliberately, mathematically, incorruptibly—to be the best form of money humans have ever created. 21 million hard cap. No central authority. No counterparty risk. No inflation. No debasement. It's not real because it's natural. It's real because we made it that way. And that's the point.
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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
@DSBatten Join the city as a resident & proud taxpayer! Sounds like the community I’ve always wanted to live in but never thought was possible. Until Bitcoin….
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Daniel Batten
Daniel Batten@DSBatten·
Bhutan is empirically dismantling almost every theoretical argument used against Bitcoin It's economy is thriving, and it is now using its Bitcoin stack to build a sustainable Mindfulness City It is not selling its Bitcoin, but using it for collateral and risk-managed yield
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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
@ACG_2903 Thank you 🙏🏼 It took me a long time to have those epiphanies!
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ACG
ACG@ACG_2903·
@AlanHibbard Yes, I've seen some people talk about the physics of money, but they can't explain it like you do in video 4.
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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
@ACG_2903 I wish! I’ve been thinking along these lines and searching for years… I’ve heard people mention these words, but I haven’t seen anyone make energy & entropy central to “what money is.” I think I’m going to have to produce this content myself!
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ACG
ACG@ACG_2903·
@AlanHibbard @AlanHibbard thank you for this 6 chapters. Could you recommend any book, thesis or article to delve deeper into entropy, energy and money?
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Alan Hibbard
Alan Hibbard@AlanHibbard·
@cryptomattz @hedera Hey Mattz, I classify HBAR as a currency (fast, lightweight, intended to MOVE, optimized to reduce friction). I have no interest in "holding" currencies (arcade tokens, hotel points, frequent flyer miles, government fiat, crypto, etc) I USE them but I don't "hold" them. Cheers!
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mattz
mattz@cryptomattz·
@AlanHibbard Great vidz, @AlanHibbard Question: What are your thoughts on $HBAR? I know Mike made an episode on crypto for in his "Hidden Secrets of Money" series where he explained @hedera. Thank you!
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