
Username101test
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Username101test
@Username101test
Freedom Through Scarcity


With Starship driving LEO costs toward $50/kg (and eventually <$10/kg) by late 2020s, plus AI slashing dev cycles for autonomous robotics and in-space processing, asteroid mining for precious metals (like PGMs) gets a massive boost. Demos are ramping now (AstroForge scouting M-types in 2025-26, robots testing 2026-27). Economic scale—profitable hauls rivaling Earth's output—looks feasible by 2035-2045, starting with water/propellant then metals for space infra. Your moon-to-asteroid vision aligns; SpaceX momentum (IPO or not) will accelerate it.


What is BMR? Bitcoin Mortgage Reserve (BMR) is an innovative feature within the Bitcoin Powered Mortgage (BPM) umbrella. It allows homebuyers or refinancers to leverage Bitcoin without selling any of it. Instead of a traditional cash down payment, you contribute $BTC to a dedicated BMR escrow account. This Bitcoin then grows over time and builds equity in the home, ultimately helping to fully repay the mortgage decades early. You own your home free and clear much sooner (often projected in 8–9 years instead of 25–30). Sound money collateral accelerates ownership ⚡ Build Wealth Smarter.




Interesting

"Today I no longer feel like this trophy belongs on my shelf." Swiss singer Nemo, who won the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest, has said they will be returning their award after Israel was cleared to participate in next year’s event





I can talk to Grok directly myself. I follow because I'm interested in YOU, not Grok. Muting all accounts that substitute AI slop for their own thinking. (Yes, it is obvious.)


In the spirit of full disclosure, intellectual honesty, posterity's judgment, and rigorous debate, I would like to share my strong belief: I have become personally convinced that Jack Dorsey – CEO of Square and founder of X – is Bitcoin’s founder Satoshi Nakamoto. This is my opinion, not that of VanEck. The evidence linking Jack to Satoshi is a combination of technical parallels, circumstantial links, patterns (including timing), uncanny coincidences, motive and ability. While not definitive, the breadth of these connections is compelling and worthy of further scrutiny. If true, addressing these questions sooner rather than later could prevent unnecessary uncertainty—especially while Bitcoin is valued at ~2 trillion, rather than, say, 10x higher. Some have argued that publicizing this suspicion harms Bitcoin or its community. I strongly disagree. Even if Jack does still hold 5.2% of Bitcoin supply, the protocol’s decentralized design ensures it remains beyond any one individual’s control. Transparency about this hypothesis could reduce unnecessary speculation and address market fears surrounding Satoshi’s 1.1M BTC, particularly concerns that these holdings could destabilize the market if suddenly liquidated. For instance, the theory that Satoshi is Paul Le Roux, who remains in prison but is eligible for release in 2032, has fueled worries about such scenarios. If Jack is indeed Satoshi, this is an opportunity for him to take steps to protect his safety, communicate succession and inheritance plans, and provide assurances that align with Bitcoin’s decentralized ethos. Clarity on these points might strengthen Bitcoin’s investment case by building long-term confidence in the system’s resilience. I hope this post attracts those more talented than I am who can analyze these patterns and strengthen, or refute, the argument. If Satoshi is meant to remain unknown, scrutiny will reveal that as well. I understand this view may provoke strong reactions, but I believe it’s a conversation worth having. Finally, I want to acknowledge the individual whose work most informed this case: Sean Murray (@Financeguy97), who has compiled substantial, compelling research in recent months. Thanks also to Evan Ratliff, Craig Wright, Chris Concannon, Adam Back, Nathan Frankovitz, and others for input over the years. For those curious, see the below slides for the body of evidence.





@spencerpratt @X Why would you put this online ? Now they’re all going to do it . Stupid imo












