Bitcoin is fundamentally a bottom-up technology. It’s about decentralizing power, allowing individuals—regardless of their wealth or status—to opt out of the parasitic structures of fiat and centralized control. Hyperbitcoinization, in my view, isn’t something that needs elite coordination or a top-down push. Rather, it's about people making the conscious choice to shift their energy and value out of fiat and into a system that benefits from voluntary adoption and self-sovereignty.
You’re right that the parasitic elites will resist Bitcoin, but that’s where Bitcoin’s strength lies: it doesn’t need to overthrow them in a direct confrontation. Just by refusing to participate in their system and redirecting our energy into Bitcoin, we’re creating a parallel economy, a system that naturally rewards those who opt in. Over time, Bitcoin’s decentralized nature makes it impossible for elites—new or old—to control. It thrives on the collective strength of individuals choosing a better system, not on an organized counter-elite flipping the tables.
In essence, Bitcoiners can win by simply refusing to play the old game. By redirecting energy away from the parasitic system, Bitcoin succeeds from the ground up, one person at a time, without needing centralized leadership or a financial elite to guide it. It's a different path to success—one where coordination is distributed, and power is naturally diffused among its users.
#Bitcoin
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