pull down to refresh

Today, my egg lady stopped by to deliver two dozen eggs. She’s great - comes right to my door every couple of weeks with her chickens’ eggs. She raised her prices from $5 to $6 a dozen, and when I asked why, she gave the usual spiel about the economy: “Prices are crazy, feed’s expensive, etc.” Somehow, this led to me talking about Bitcoin.
She’s heard of it but isn’t a fan. This Southern woman in her late 60s called technology one of the worst things ever and said Bitcoin’s bad for the environment - typical stuff you hear. I asked her, “Do you trust the government? Do you like the government?” She said, “Hell no.” I explained that Bitcoin is a big middle finger to the government. I told her the media she’s hearing from doesn’t get it, so no wonder it’s unclear. As someone who uses Bitcoin daily and has spent a few years integrating it into my life, I can say it’s a way out.
She wasn’t sold, though. Stuck in her ways, I guess. That’s fine - you can’t help someone who isn’t open to it.
I think Bitcoin is something people need to discover on their own. You can’t just drop it on them and expect a lightbulb moment. It probably depends on their worldview, where they are in life, and how open they are.
Still, it feels early. The question is, how early are we?
I’m curious to hear from folks who were around when the internet was just coming online in the ‘90s. When did you stop and wonder, “How early are we?”
tide is turning, more people around me are waking up to the true potential of Bitcoin as mistrust in government institutions grows. But still many view Bitcoin primarily as one of investment option rather than a form of money. In that sense we are still early.
reply
CBDC Yuan + mBridge are much more likely to be the replacement protocol for the USD and trade payments than Bitcoin.
Bitcoin has a role to play but its not as the dominant global currency of trade.
I would love to be proven wrong but the sad fact is most people are sheep.
reply
We're a little less early than a couple years ago...
reply
That is for sure. ETF's and BlackRock on the map
reply
We’re so early that antigovernment chicken ladies are barely even aware of bitcoin.
reply
This is true
reply
Oh stop the "early" nonsense already.
reply
Got in early - now retired. Living the Dream. Good luck to the late comers.
reply
What does that dream look like?
reply
Freedom from financial pressure. Able to work on projects that would otherwise not be possible. Have built three houses for family members. Living offgrid on land with amazing view of the Alps in a cabin I built from timber I milled on site and planting a food forest. And a lot more. Bitcoin has empowered many people to do many things that would otherwise never have been viable.
reply
0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Fabs 16h
Where did you learn to build a cabin?
reply
Been renovating houses since the 1980s. Building new is easier in many ways.
Timing is everything. If you have time time to wonder if you are early, doesnt that already mean you are? You would definitely know if you were late.
reply
This is a great way to think about it.
reply
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Car 20h
It’s all good by the 3rd time she hears it she will be ready. Good on ya for bringing it up. 1sat=1sat
reply
It’s early until you live in mild to high hyper inflation. Then you adopt based out of necessity, not curiosity or want
reply
Better late than never