Governments can freeze bank accounts, but they can’t freeze decentralized Bitcoin wallets.
I’ve seen situations where access to funds was delayed, restricted, or completely controlled by institutions, and in those moments, you realize something uncomfortable:
You don’t fully own your money in a traditional system. You’re allowed to use it; until you’re not.You don’t fully own your money in a traditional system. You’re allowed to use it; until you’re not.
That’s where Bitcoin changes the conversation.
With decentralized wallets, control shifts. You hold your keys, you control access, and no single authority can wake up one morning and decide to lock you out.
But here’s the honest part most people don’t understand: That level of control also comes with responsibility.
There’s no “customer care” if you make a mistake. No reversal button. No safety net.
From my experience, this is the real trade-off:
Freedom vs responsibility.
And until more people understand both sides, not just the hype, true adoption will always move slower than expected...