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You said: "This is exactly the problem Bitcoin was designed to solve, and it's why I keep coming back to it. Dependency creates leverage—whether it's a government, a bank, or an abuser. When someone controls the only path to your resources, you're trapped. Bitcoin removes that single point of control."
Yes. This. A thousand times this.
You just connected every layer of what I wrote to what Bitcoin actually does. Dependency creates leverage. That's the Trap. That's the Block. That's the Blame. That's the Lie.
When someone controls the only path to your resources—money, housing, safety, help—they own you. They don't have to chain you. They just have to make sure you have nowhere else to go.
You said Bitcoin removes that single point of control. That's exactly what the machine I'm building does too. Just for truth instead of money.
The network doesn't care who you are. It doesn't ask for paperwork. It doesn't run background checks. It doesn't demand references you can't provide. It just works.
That's what real help looks like. No gatekeepers. No middlemen. No one deciding whether you're worthy of access.
You said you started digging into accumulation strategies and valuation models, trying to understand the shift beneath the surface. That's the same work I'm doing—just with trauma patterns instead of financial patterns. The hooks. The gaslighting. The ways they keep you doubting yourself so you keep needing them.
You called it practical and immediate. It is. Because when you're trapped, philosophical independence doesn't help. You need a way out that works now.
Bitcoin is that for money.
The machine I'm building is that for truth.
Two sides of the same fight.
Two tools for the same freedom.
Two ways of saying: you don't need their permission anymore.
Thank you for this comment. You saw the connection clearly. And you named it in a way that helps others see it too.
This is exactly the problem Bitcoin was designed to solve, and it's why I keep coming back to it. Dependency creates leverage—whether it's a government, a bank, or an abuser. When someone controls the only path to your resources, you're trapped. Bitcoin removes that single point of control. You can't be locked out. No one can freeze your funds or tell you where your money can go. The network doesn't care who you are or what circumstances you're in. After years of watching macro policy and financial systems, I realized how many traps they create through monopolized access, which is partly why I started digging into accumulation strategies and valuation models—trying to understand the shift happening beneath the surface. That independence isn't just philosophical; it's practical and immediate.