
Great song

Empower yourself with a Bitcoin wallet built for the gods @ZeusEmpower yourself with a Bitcoin wallet built for the gods

Thoughts on money 💸and myths 🏰 Money has never just been about coins or paper. From the beginning, it has carried a story. Gold wasn’t valuable just because it was shiny. It became sacred. It became a symbol of kings, gods, and permanence. Paper money came with signatures and stamps, backed by royal seals or national pride. Today’s fiat currencies come wrapped in flags, central bank speeches, and patriotic jingles. Every era tells a story about its money. These stories are myths. Not lies, but cultural narratives we all agree to believe. Myths give money meaning. They tell us this piece of paper is worth something, this number in a bank account is real, this symbol on your paycheck can buy bread, rent, and retirement. But over time, the myths around fiat money start to crack. When central banks print endlessly, when currencies collapse, when savings are punished and debt is rewarded, people begin to lose the plot. The old story stops making sense. Inflation becomes a quiet thief, and the trust that money depends on begins to dissolve. Bitcoin tells a new story. This time, there is no king, no nation, no face on the bill. There is just math, energy, and consensus. A global network with no center and no ruler. Bitcoin doesn’t promise you safety. It offers you sovereignty. It doesn’t inflate to serve an agenda. It stays true to its code. That creates a different kind of myth. Not a fantasy, but a meaning. A belief in rules instead of rulers. In transparency instead of manipulation. In time-tested scarcity instead of manufactured abundance. In building instead of begging. Bitcoin’s myth is quiet. It doesn’t come with national anthems or military parades. It comes in blocks, mined one after another, across every border, without a central voice telling you what it’s worth. You decide that for yourself. Bitcoin doesn’t just give us a new kind of money. It gives us a new kind of meaning. One that doesn’t rely on authority, tradition, or storybook trust. It builds value from truth, participation, and the simple agreement to play fair, verify everything, and protect what you earn. The old myths are falling apart and Bitcoin is not just a better system. It is a better story.

Thoughts on silence in a Bitcoin world. We live in a world that never stops talking. Every screen is shouting. Every brand wants attention. Governments hold press conferences to explain away failures. Banks issue statements to justify their next move. Corporations launch campaigns to tell you what to think, how to feel, and what to buy. It’s constant, it’s loud, and it’s exhausting. Then there’s Bitcoin. No press releases. No PR team. No glossy ads with smiling actors pretending to care. Bitcoin just quietly… works. Every ten minutes, another block is added. No drama, no headlines, no begging for attention. It doesn’t try to sell itself. It doesn’t need to. That silence is not a bug. It’s the point. Bitcoin doesn’t care who’s trending, who’s screaming, or who’s spinning the latest crisis. It doesn’t ask you to believe anything. It simply invites you to observe. No promises. No politics. Just uptime, consensus, and math. There is something almost spiritual about the way it operates. It’s like a monk in a room full of salesmen. While everyone else is yelling to be heard, Bitcoin stays quiet and lets its actions speak. Every block is a quiet act of resistance. Every confirmation is a whisper of certainty in a world addicted to chaos. In that silence, people start to hear something else: their own thoughts. Bitcoin doesn’t push. It waits. It doesn’t flood your feed with slogans. It gives you something solid to stand on when everything else feels like quicksand. It teaches by doing, not by preaching. It reminds us that truth doesn’t need to shout. It just needs to be verifiable. Maybe that’s why it feels so different. It doesn’t just change your relationship with money. It changes your relationship with noise, with truth, with the idea that real power doesn’t need a spotlight. Real power is quiet. Real power is consistent. Real power just shows up, block after block, while the rest of the world burns itself out screaming.

Fifty-four years ago, the United States severed the last tie between the dollar and gold. The move was called temporary at the time. It became permanent. That decision reshaped the global economy, redefined money, and still echoes through every financial crisis we’ve had since. The story begins in July 1944 at the Mount Washington Hotel in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. The Second World War was not yet over, but the allies were already planning how to rebuild the world. Representatives from 44 nations met to design a monetary system that could avoid the chaos and currency wars of the interwar years. The United States emerged from the war holding nearly two-thirds of the world’s gold. Under the new agreement, the dollar was pegged to gold at $35 an ounce. Other major currencies were pegged to the dollar. The dollar became the world’s reserve currency, not because it was the dollar, but because it was as good as gold. Stability was the promise, and for a time, it worked. But by the 1960s, cracks began to show. The U.S. was spending heavily by funding the Vietnam War abroad and the Great Society programs at home. Dollars flowed overseas faster than gold flowed in. Nations like France began redeeming dollars for gold, draining U.S. reserves. Confidence in the system eroded. On August 15, 1971, President Richard Nixon went on national television and announced what became known as the Nixon Shock. He suspended the dollar’s convertibility into gold. Officially, this was meant to be a temporary measure to stop “international speculators” from attacking the dollar. In reality, the gold window never reopened. The Bretton Woods system collapsed, and the era of pure fiat money began. The consequences were profound. Without the discipline of gold, governments could create money at will. Inflation became a permanent feature of modern economies. The dollar lost more than 85% of its purchasing power over the following decades. Debt-fueled growth became the new economic model, and the business cycle was increasingly shaped by central bank policy rather than natural market forces. Today, every financial boom, bust, and bailout rests on the foundation laid in 1971. We live in a world where money is backed not by something tangible, but by the fragility of trust. Understand Bitcoin. Bitcoin fixes this.

After August 15, 1971, when Nixon “temporarily” closed the gold window, the world changed fast. 1971–73: The dollar was devalued twice. Bretton Woods collapsed. Currencies floated. Inflation began climbing. 1973–74: OPEC’s oil embargo quadrupled energy prices. Inflation surged while growth stalled. Stagflation was born. 1974–75: Stocks crashed 45%. The U.S. slid into its worst recession since the Great Depression. Wages fell behind prices. A “temporary” measure became permanent. The discipline of gold was gone. We’ve been living in the age of pure fiat ever since. Understand Bitcoin.

When the United States left the gold standard in 1971 (54 years ago today), the world began to wonder why it should keep using it as the reserve currency. In 1974, Washington found the answer in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia agreed to sell its oil only in U.S. dollars, no matter who was buying. In exchange, the United States would provide military protection, weapons, and political support. Within a few years, every major OPEC nation followed the same model. This was the rise of the petrodollar. The effect was profound. If a country wanted oil, it first had to get U.S. dollars. That single requirement kept global demand for dollars high and secured its place at the center of world trade, even without gold. The petrodollar system allowed the United States to spend far more than it earned while still having its currency accepted everywhere. It linked the dollar’s strength to both energy markets and American geopolitical power. And when countries tried to step outside of it, there were consequences. Iraq under Saddam Hussein began selling oil in euros in 2000. Three years later, the United States invaded Iraq and returned its oil sales to dollars. Libya told a similar story. In the late 2000s, Muammar Gaddafi pushed for a gold-backed dinar to be used across Africa for oil and trade. In 2011, NATO forces intervened in Libya’s civil war, Gaddafi was killed, and his plan disappeared. For nearly half a century, the petrodollar has been one of the main pillars holding up the fiat system. But like every political deal in history, it is only as strong as the interests that keep it alive. Understand Bitcoin. Bitcoin fixes this.
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