The people are the best part when I can get out of my head enough to talk to them.
How much do the people you meet in practice resemble the people you find on Twitter, etc? I've always been hesitant, imagining that it would be a room full of laser eye types screaming the usual talking points into each other's faces; every time somebody orders a hamburger and gets a cheeseburger they all look knowingly at each other and say "bitcoin fixes this!" in unison.
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Having hosted over 100 meetups, and attended plenty others, it depends on various factors, not the least of which the "image" of the meetup to newcomers and how those people find it. Some meetups make a concerted effort to establish their bitcoin only credentials, I very deliberately maintain an open door policy, but I strictly oppose shilling. Regardless, I've run into shitcoiners at obviously bitcoin maxi meetups, and certainly at my own. I have the benefit of living in the Miami area, which has both lots of people in the area and lots of tourists constantly streaming through. In two years of weekly meetups I still meet new local bitcoiners, and I get to meet plenty of foreign or out-of-state bitcoiners here on vacation. Were I somewhere with fewer people and less tourism, I would expect less variety of participants. To conclude a quickly hashed argument, I find most people friendlier and more nuanced in person than on instant-pleasure social media.
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Thanks for the thoughtful answer. Sounds like there's a lot of room to curate the vibe you're after. It's interesting to think about what vibe I'd want, and how to get it.
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People mostly talk about random stuff. It always interesting to hear what brings people to the monetary fringes. I prefer the technical meetups so people with discuss more protocol/craft/product stuff.
You’ll actually have an easier time being a bitcoin moderate/skeptic at a bitcoin meetup than you will online - as with most things.
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Yeah, it's a good point -- even for the exact same people you would despise online, when you are physically in front of them, most of the time our millennia-old social machinery keeps things from getting too sideways, for the same reason that people (including oneself) wind up being giant dicks while driving in ways they would never do face-to-face.
Sobering thought. Can't tell if it's optimistic or the opposite.
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Optimistic for humans in a group and the opposite for humans in isolation.
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