40 sats \ 1 reply \ @rodpalmer 30 Apr \ parent \ on: Congress To Vote On The US Joining Ukraine, Dan Held To Advise Military bitcoin
Can you please submit a bill that makes it illegal to prosecute someone for laundering the CIA's money? You shouldn't be able to arrest people for that, in a Democracy
Isn't odd? It makes you wonder who else is getting paid to be controlled opposition even though we are not controlled.
- Process and come to peace with the gravity of the situation myself, first. I can't be helpful to anyone else or my own family until I am able to act in a calm and measured manner
- Create a compliance checklist broadly scoped for most situations
- Discipline myself to adhere to the checklist in all circumstances, regardless of my initial emotional reaction
- Focus on being a good example for others and be a walking blueprint to follow
- Hope that I can comply my way out of the situation
Do you agree that compliance is the path to separating money from state and how does Unchained plan to execute a subversive compliance strategy?
Full disclosure, although I am not strictly speaking "anti ordinals", I am still not convinced that Ordinals are something worth spending MY money or resources on. I don't necessarily think Ordinals are a scam or that you are a scammer but I do think scamming is CURRENTLY the primary use case after money laundering (which I do support lol)
In that context, my question for you is what do you see as being the long term value or long term use case for Ordinals? Specifically, I am curious if you have a long term vision or a deeper understanding of Ordinals either as a scaling solution, as a type of abstract, open source layer two which allows anyone to build software based on a ordinal number theory, a burgeoning file storage solution, or a new use case for Bitcoin altogether which I haven't considered?
OR.. are you agnostic about all of that? Do you simply see Ordinals as a business opportunity that may or may not be sustainable?
That's how I feel about our political system and rule of law, these days. I can't tell what's real and what's satire.