Ingrid Pendleton
3.1K posts

Ingrid Pendleton
@pend97033
Amo a Dios y su pureza de proposito. Agradezco por Familia y amigos.

El Salvador has a population of 6 million. There are 3 million El Salvador 🇸🇻‘s living in America today and they are all expected to return to El Salvador in the next 5 to 10 years and they plan to bring all their wealth businesses and resources with them.




Bitcoin Berlín turns 3 today. 🎂🥳⚡ Three years ago this was an idea. Today you can walk into Berlín, El Salvador without a single dollar and live your whole day in Bitcoin. Coffee, food, transport, groceries, your phone bill. All of it. What once was a dream is now a reality. Three years of building this quietly, consistently and with a community that believed before there was anything to show. More to come. 🧡🇸🇻 Thank you for being part of it. If you are nearby, come celebrate with us tonight.







#DePlaneta El excongresista estadounidense Matt Gaetz destacó que el presidente Nayib Bukele «tiene toda la capacidad para hacer las cosas como dice» al responder al periodista Tucker Carlson sobre si hay algún líder soberano en el mundo que diga «esto es lo correcto o incorrecto».

















It’s a full house at the Bitcoin Office this morning as El Salvador’s best and brightest (including diaspora in the US and Canada) compete for one of just 21 spots available in our legendary, ultra elite bootcamp phase of CUBO+ Class of 2026.








It’s interesting to see how so many media outlets, politicians, and representatives of international NGOs lie so blatantly about El Salvador. Anyone who has visited our country knows that tattoos are not only allowed, but very common. Many Salvadorans have them, even in highly visible areas: full sleeves, face, neck, hands, etc. It’s simply not true that people are required to cover them up. It’s also false that tattoo artists have been arrested. There are hundreds of tattoo shops, and many are now doing better than ever, since they can stay open late without being extorted by gangs. Tattoos aren’t even socially frowned upon. On the contrary, many people see them as body art and a form of personal expression. What is prohibited are gang symbols, but not just in tattoos. They are banned in any form: on walls, in the media, even on graves. This shouldn’t surprise anyone. In Europe, Nazi symbols are banned, and no one is outraged by it. In fact, we only restricted them in the media for one year (during the height of the war on gangs) and they are allowed again now. Yet we were scolded by the “international community” for that temporary measure, while Nazi symbols have been prohibited in Europe for 80 years. So which is it? What is acceptable for them is not acceptable for us? The European argument is that banning those symbols is necessary to prevent a return to a past they do not want to relive. Well, that is our argument too.






