@StevieGeebanga You don't 'hold' to $1M.
You wake up one day and it fricken happened.
No cap. No roadmap. Just chaos in your favor.
No bank, no freeze, no permission.
Just BTC doing what BTC does. ⚡️
@kit_sats Just print out a Bitcoin statement for your address/es. It'll list the UTXOs' date, Bitcoin purchased, as well as the cost in fiat. Just be sure to use a VPN or Tor to mask your IP so your Bitcoin address is not associated with your IP. blockchair.com/bitcoin
Samsung EVO Plus 4TB SSD + 32GB high quality 6400MHz LPDDR5 RAM = ~$1,000 😵
RAW MATERIAL COSTS.
We have been taking a loss on every sale for the past few months. Had to raise prices today.
The more Bitcoin you stack, the more paranoid you become. It's not delusion. In a world racing toward programmable money and digital control, it's the protocol upgrading your threat model in real time.
True sovereignty is BitcoinControl.org
The time is coming when "no man can buy or sell, unless he has the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name." Rev. 13:17
Bitcoin Control, a special project of the Bible Society.
They took this man’s property… not because they needed it… but because they wanted it.
He built something worth roughly $400,000… his land, his investment, his future.
The county steps in under eminent domain… claims it’s for a fire station.
Public use. Public good. Sounds clean… sounds lawful.
But watch what actually happened.
They forced him out… cut him a check for $175,000.
Not market value. Not fair value. Half.
Then… just months later…
They flip the same property.
No fire station. No public use.
Luxury development.
And suddenly that same land is worth hundreds of thousands more…
A $675,000 gain… off land they took from a private citizen under the authority of the government.
That’s not development.
That’s not planning.
That’s conversion of private property using state power.
And here’s where it gets serious…
A judge steps in… looks at the facts… and says what should’ve been said from the beginning:
You cannot take someone’s property under eminent domain for one purpose…and then turn around and use it for something completely different just to make money.
So what happens next?
The court doesn’t just slap the city on the wrist.
The judge orders them to make it right.
Not politically right… not cosmetically right…
Legally right.
That means undoing the damage… compensating based on actual value…
because what was taken wasn’t just land……it was equity… leverage… opportunity… and control over one’s own future.
This is what people miss about eminent domain.
It’s one of the most powerful tools government has…and when it’s abused… it stops being public service and starts looking like state-sanctioned taking for profit.
If the facts are as stated… the court saw it for exactly what it was.
Not a mistake. A misuse of power.
And that’s why the ruling hit as hard as it did.
#AStoneGroove
How will your child learn science if he is homeschooled?
Meanwhile…
“Thomas Edison was Homeschooled after his mom pulled him from school at age 7 because the teachers had labeled him “difficult due to his hyperactivity.”
Homeschool your kids.
The heartland of ancient Persia was in what is now southwestern Iran.
The Roman emperor Julian (also known as Julian the Apostate), who reigned from 361 to 363 AD launched a major invasion of the Sasanian Empire in 363 AD, aiming to decisively defeat the Persians and emulate Alexander the Great's conquests.
After initial successes, including reaching and winning a battle near the Persian capital Ctesiphon, his army faced supply issues and guerrilla harassment during the withdrawal. On June 26, 363, during a skirmish Julian was mortally wounded—likely by a spear or lance—while personally engaging in the fighting without full armor. He died shortly after from his injuries, at around age 31–32.
This makes him the clearest case of a Roman emperor dying in direct combat on Persian/Sasanian soil during an active campaign.
(Other Roman emperors met grim fates in Persian conflicts as well, but not quite the same way: e.g., Valerian was captured alive at the Battle of Edessa in 260 AD and died in captivity/humiliation in Persia, while Gordian III died on campaign against the Sasanians in 244 AD, but likely murdered by his own men rather than directly killed by the enemy in battle.)
Julian's death marked the end of his short reign and the last major Roman offensive deep into Persian territory for centuries, forcing his successor Jovian to accept unfavorable peace terms to extricate the battered army.
@Jarvay_ Sorry, my dark humor -- "Hmm, once the body passes-away, it can be skinned off and stuck between plexiglass glass filled with formaldehyde with a soft light behind it and hung on the wall as an heirloom."
What tattoo artist can do this and make it look realistic? Don’t want any half ass ink. Will travel if needed. Please share—once I hit 5,000 followers, it will be happening. #tattoo#tattooartist#ink
Remember all the "omg my grandma missed a hospital appointment because of the trucks" or "we're getting no sleep due to all the honking"
Reminds me of Greg and all these losers complaining about some absurd edge case where a UTXO can be generated that's unspendable per the BIP-110 rules.
I don't give a sh*t! Bitcoin isn't a network that exists for the purposes of storing junk data on other people's computers.
Alright addendum because it just annoys me so much.
I left Canada with my family and lived in Mexico for months in 2022 due to how bad the situation had become.
This was due to mass *compliance* with corrupt authorities.
What eventually broke the back of the nonsense was not informed intellectuals having masturbatory discussions and rationalizing doing nothing... It was a bunch of truckers staging the most successful mass protest in history.
That's BIP-110.
So hate on plebs all you want, they're the ones with the power to course correct the ship when the elites lose the plot.
Core lost the plot. If you want a lesson from COVID, it's that the true danger is people going along with white coats blindly.
Fin.
@altair_tech The hardest part of mining is waiting for the “best ever” share to update to a higher number. At some point it will seem stuck on one number for days, weeks, or months—then poof, the number jumps higher.
Mining is like running a refrigerator: you turn it on and let it run 24/7.