Hello, and welcome back to another episode of the Mark Moa Show where we talk about the decentralized revolution, the way the world is changing, radically changing right before very eyes, you know, for good and for better. We're moving from a world of moving towards globalization and centralization to a world of decentralization, from one global super power to multipolar world, one global reserve asset to multi global reserve assets. And
we're witnessing this all in real time. And there's winners, there's losers. There's something good, there's some bad, and um, you can like it or hate it, but it's happening now. Some of the good Zoe, in my opinion, are that I believe in individual is um, I believe in individual rights, and I believe that my life should be my life to make decisions as I see fit, not for some guy in another country that I don't even know, to
decide what is best for me here. Over the last couple of days, I've been watching this docu series on Netflix called How to Become a Tyrant. I think it is. It's pretty cool, and it kind of looks at it looks at the known tyrants of our kind of more common time which is uh. Really it was a stalin maw Um Hitler of course, um momarket Afi uh Saddam Hussein and I kind of talked about them, and it talked about you know, these were dictators. So these were
very extreme examples of this. But how these dictators basically want to rule their whole country and like whatever they thought just had to be done, and so like you know, they didn't like uh, for example, one of the one of them didn't like dogs, so in the capital city that you weren't allowed to have dogs. That was it, right? And that's just one example, I mean, the most absurd things.
But what happens is is that um oh, another one I think it was Kadafi said, we we need to be we need to be we need to be self sufficient. We can't rely to the countries, and so we want every citizen now has to raise chickens. We can't buy chickens anymore. We have to raise chickens. Everyone has to have chickens. And it's like, do people even know how to raise chickens? They have room to raise chickens, and then what are all the unintended consequences of trying to
everyone happened to chicken. Have you thought about that? And so it's like, no, they haven't, and and and basically highlights that one person or one group of people just cannot have the information necessary to run society for all these people that they don't know. These are complex systems. And so I, for one, am not for these giants centralized complex systems. They've improven time and time and time and time again to be fragile and to fail and
to cause massive hardships and pain. Every one of these tyrant situations that I've just kind of walked through real quickly have led to massive devastation and loss, massive loss of human life and so forth. Um, you know, through through what happened in Russia, through Hitler and and through mouths greatly forward, it's led to over a hundred million people just starving to death alone, not even including all the people that they killed on purpose, but just the
starvation because you can't manage to that level. Um, and that's what happens. And so um we have been moving on this fast, fast tracked path towards centralization, and that is changing rapidly on a right on cue on on a tune in to your time frame that it happens, and so I like to look at some of the signposts and we can see how this is happening right
before our very eyes. One of the things I've been talking about over the last several weeks that it's been encouraging for me is to see UM the largest asset manager in the world. UM Evil Inc. Will call them one of the most evil companies who have basically taken your money and weaponize it against you. And if you don't know who I'm talking about, I'm talking about black Rock. Black Rock is the largest asset manager and they have
taken your money. So if you look at publican traded companies, so go to you know, NaSTA five hundred, look at these publican trader companies and just go look at who owns all these companies, and who owns almost every publican traded company is black Rock, Vanguard, and State Street. Black Rock being the largest one, owns almost all these companies. And how do they own all these companies? Where do they get all this money? It was ten trillion dollars
now it's down to about eight trillion dollars. They've lost a lot. Um. Where do they get all this money? Well, it's your money. It's your pensions, is your four O on case, and then they take this money and then they use it to push things that you don't want. I've been talking about this quite a bit. The reason why I've been talking about quite a bit is one
stopped giving them your money. You can easily learn to manage your money on your own rather than giving it to somebody who wants to use it against your best interests UM. That's step one. Or you can give it to other companies who might not hate you quite as much. UM. And so we're seeing massive pushback on Black Rock and their number one UM ideology that they've been pushing, which is e s G Environmental Social governance. And so we've
been seeing massive pushback. We saw multiple states, one after another after another, pulled their money or divested their money, taking it back from black Rock and said, because of your E s G mandates, we're doing this UM. Then we saw nineteen Republican led states have filed lawsuits against black Rock and other banks UM for harming their states, harming their people, harming UH or or damaging what's called
the fidciary duty to make them the most money. And now we can see that black Rock is facing even more blowback over e s G as the GOP pressure mounts. So now that the GOP pressure is building, now that we've gone through the mid terms, um, there's a lot
of pressure building about black Rocket, says. It's been a tough couple of weeks for black Rock, the world's largest money manager, which endured fresh blows from Republican officials sharply critical of e s G. Texas said one of its Senate one of its Senate committees had issued a subpoena requesting documents about black Rocks environmental social governance e s G practices and asked for at least one of six executives, including the CEO, Larry Fink, to attend a December hearing.
On the same day, Vanguard Group, one of black Rock's main rivals, withdrew from the world's largest climate finance coalition, creating a potential selling point to anti e s G clients. M hm, So you see what's happening there. So remember I told you there's three companies that own basically all the public treated companies, black Rock, Vanguard, and State Street. Black Rock is pushing this e s G narrative pedal to the Metal working against the best centers of their people,
and so now they're getting pushed back on this. People are taking their money away. Republican law makers are subpoena and then bringing them into court. And on the same day that uh, that black Rock CEO Larry Fink was called to attend to hearing, Vanguard, the second biggest one, the main rival black Rock said, you know what, we're done. We're out. We're out of this uh what they call
Climate Finance coalition. We're out of this E s G. UH last week it said it would pull about two billion from black Rock because of its E s G and or Florida so I would pull two billion from black Rock because of its E s G investments, and governor around to Santa's administration is urging the manager of its pension to remove black Rock as an asset manager.
And so we're seeing this go down. The battle of sustainable investing comes as the ten largest E s G funds by assets have posted double digit losses this year, some even more than the SMP five hundreds decline. Black Rocks billion I shares E s G aware et F is down, about Vanguards was down, and so they're hitting him where it counts, where the money counts, it says, um, Yeah. Black Rock has been a political target among Republicans. At the same time, the firm has emphasized that it continues
to manage fossil fuel investments. So now they're going out on this pr campaign saying wait a minute, wait a minute, We're not as bad as as as you think we are. We're not as evil as we think we are. And so this is what I'm encouraged by. And this is what I continue to highlight these stories, and I will continue to do this because we're winning. This is how
we win. We vote with our money. Most people just haven't really taken the time to think about this, like what are the things that you care about, what are the things that you want, and then support those things. And this is why companies working for profits is really the best goal. If I care about companies that give back to my community, then I'm going to spend my money with those companies. And a company that wants to get ahead in my community is going to donate money
to get ahead. They're going to fund the schools, they're going to fund the parks. Why would they give that money up? Will they do it in order to get more business from people like you and I who care about those things. If you're just tuning in and listen to the Mark Moa Show, we're talking about the decentralized revolution, the way the world is changing right before our very eyes. I got a couple more stories to cover, some big breaking stuff. You don't want to miss it. Don't go away.
I wanna be right back, all right, welcome back. If you just tune in, you're listening to the Mark Moss Show, We're talking about the decentralized revolution, the way that the world is changing from a globalized globalist, centrally controlled world to a decentralized world, back to individual rights and freedoms. And I was talking about before the break, uh again, talking about again how I've been. I've been bringing up as much as I can this this pushback that we
have to this globalist agenda. Now I know that by the goal is for you to own nothing to be happy. I know that's become somewhat of a meme these days, but it's true. It's on their website. This this didn't start from nowhere, all right, And it didn't start at the WF either. The u N started the Sustainable Development Goals. Decades ago they started with an agenda, and now they have an agenda. This isn't conspiracy. This is their planet's
their goal. They have it written down, all right. And there's there was seventeen points under the Sustainable Development Goals, seventeen points they're trying to transform the world, undo and do. And there are seventeen points that I don't necessarily agree with and you might not either, And so you should read those. You should become aware of, um, the goal of how they're trying to reshape this world and what
the goal, what the world would look like. If you want to know what the world would look like for your kids and your grandkids for you, it might just happen by stance for you. Most people go through life as passengers. Uh, there's a new term the kids are using these days. My kids have alerted me to it.
And they call people in PCs or non player characters and so like if there's like another kid that's like not really well known, nobody knows them, they're not they're having going on to call m an NPC and uh, in a video game, you're obviously a character in a video game, right, And and you're you're the hero or whatever you are, right, And there's lots of other people in the game, but those are non player characters. They're just there to play that role, you know what I'm saying.
And so that that's what kids these use to use these days. And and as I've thought about this, I've talked about with my kids and my wife, and there really are a lot of these in PCs in life. They are most people in life are in PCs. They're just going through life, going through the motions. They're not they're not trying to change their life or change the world of the direction. They're not trying to build in
and they're not the character. They're just an NPC. And so most people haven't really thought through where the world is going. But there are a lot of people who have, and there are a lot of people who have plans for what the world looks like in ten years and twenty years and fifty years. And if you care about that, if you care about what the world looks like for your grandkids, then you should look into these people who have these plans and then ask yourself if you like that,
and if not, then maybe do something about it. All Right, they've written books. There's lots of books. Uh. Start with Klaud Schwab's books. Read the Fourth Industrial Revolution, Read COVID nineteen, The Great Reset, Read his latest book, The Great Narrative. Read those. Go to the website, we'll look on my forum. Read the blog posts. Um you know. Read Mark Harney's book Values. He tells you the world is not going
to be better. He tells you. I'm not gonna say, I'm not gonna deep into that, but my point is is that we need to take action and work to building the life that we want, the world that we want for future generations. Now I know it's not for everybody, Like you have to you have to do a little bit better in your life in order to look a little bit further ahead. I like to say I grew up racing dirt bikes, and so in racing we'd say the fact, the farther I can see, the faster I
can go. So if I was on an open road going driving through the middle of a you know, the middle of the desert, for example, I could go a hundred miles an hour, no problem, right, I can see forever the roads as straight as it can be. But if it's raining really hard, or it's like super foggy. I gotta slow way down because I can't see very far right. And so you might have the guy on the street, the homeless person, the drug addict on the street, and all he can think about the farthest he can
see is like that next hit, maybe right. And then you have a guy who can only see like paycheck to paycheck, day to day, and then paycheck to paycheck, and then maybe month to month. And then you go all the way to the other end of the spectrum where you got the bill Gates of the world, and they're looking out multiple generations ahead, and so you got to start looking looking further out, looking further out. And
people are doing that, and so step one. I know this is an overwhelming and Dante and most of us just want to live our lives. And that's fine, I get it right. We want a better life for ourselves, for our family. I want to spend time with my family. I want to spend time to enjoy myself. But at least what you could do is you could figure out what the goals are um who has certain visions and goals, and at least just back those people and then you
don't have to do the work. And there's people doing that. I see this right here. UM. This week Disney investor SU's company alleging criticism over Florida's parental rights and so UM Disney UM decided to go woke. They decided that Disney wanted to be involved in politics, and they wanted to create a bill UM which was which was called
Florida's Parental Rights Education Bill UM. It was actually they were calling it something about don't say gay bill and Disney said that they wanted to get involved and and and push this and and uh it was it was signed into law by Rhon de Santis and forbids schools to restrict parents access to information about their children's mental, emotional and physical health. So schools didn't want to give
the parents information on the kids. And so Disney got involved in this, and uh, Rhn de Santis basically said don't don't get involved, and they did. And they said, okay, look, then you're gonna lose your your tax exempt status. And by getting involved in that, it cost Disney a lot of money. Now supposedly the CEO didn't want to, but because of so much pushed back by the employees angry employees,
the company decided to get involved. Well, then they lost their UM, they lost their special municipal district which should have been in place since nineteen sixty seven, and they lost their tax status status and now it cost Disney shareholders lots of money. Now, the thing that's key here is that the CEO of a company has a fudciary duty, meaning a legal duty to do the best that he can for the company and return as best as much
return on capital to the shareholders. So by getting involved in politics had nothing to do with returning equity to the equity owners. They're just pushing politics for what what were they were? What was Disney trying to push politics for it? And so by doing that, um they pushed their political ideology and lost their Texas and status and cost the company hundreds of millions of dollars hundreds millions
of dollars. And so now one person here has now sued them over this situation, and I think it's about time I've been asking myself. As a matter of fact, I have a friend who's a great grandson of Walt Disney, a great grandson, and their family obviously still owns a massive out of stock in the company, and I asked him about this, and I asked if they were going to do anything about this, and he's like, I don't know.
I don't know what's gonna happen. But here we have Disney investor Kenneth Simon and file the twenty two page lawsuit against Disney demand the company deliver its internal records regarding its objections to the Florida bill um. According to Simon's lawsuit, Disney's criticism of the law created a significant, significant financial risk to the company's shareholders. And so all it takes is one person like Kenneth to see the direction that the world is going and push back on that.
Support the company that you want, spend your money there by their stock, support them, and if they work against your interest, you can either decide to pull your money or you can do something like Kenneth did, and you can hold them to their financial duty. And that's how we changed the world. Now, of course, the CEO that did this lost his job. Another CEO has been put in place in Disney is on a completely different tractory. That's how we changed the world. If you're tuning in
and listen to the Markma Show. We're talking about the way the world is changing. We're talking about the decentralized revolution. I got a lot more stories toever when I come back. Don't go away right back, all right, welcome back. If you're just tune in, you're listening to the Mark mo Show. We're talking about the decentralized revolution each and every week, of course, talking about the way the world is changing, looking at through the lens of politics, finance, and technology.
Of course, technology being bitcoin, which is that decentralized technology that is changing the world. You know, we say, if you change the money, if you fix the money, you can fix the world. Which is a really big claim. Fix the money, fix the world. How can you say that? Well, it there's a lot of reasons why. One it's because of incentives. Warren Buffett's partner, Charlie Munger says, show me
the incentives and I'll show you the outcome. And a lot of people think that money is neutral, money as a tool. Money could be used for good, money can be used for evil, and that sounds right. As a matter of fact, I believed that to be true most of my life, but I've recently kind of over the last couple of years come to think that it's not actually true at all. Now I guess, I guess it's true when you think about money. But then you have to then ask yourself what is money? So, okay, that's
true for money, but then what is money? So then money is also a neutral tool. But what we consider money today most of us is currency or fiat currency or dollars, or if you're in a different country, whatever currency you have. Fiat currency is currency. It's not money. JP Morgan, the founder of JP Morgan Bank. Actually JP Morgan went before Congress in the early nine hundreds and he said gold is money, nothing else. Everything else is credit. So dollars were debt on top of gold, which was
real money. So gold God's money. Real money is neutral. It can be used for good or bad. I can use it to pay for someone's bills if they're down on their luck, or I can pay to um someone to go hurt somebody else. Right, So that that that gold would be neutral. But that's money. Currency, Fiat currency, dollars is not that at all. Fiat currency is a system built on theft, on lies and deceit. What do I mean by that? What do I mean what do
I mean it's built on theft. Well, every time the government decides to print more dollars, they steal from you. They steal your purchasing power. Every new dollar created decreases the purchasing power of your existing dollars. When you saw that this month they brought inflation downy, congratulations, CPI came down. Now we're down to the seven point one. So that means you need to work about that means you need about three more dollars this month then you needed last
month just to have the same quality of life. Now, if you make thirty bucks an hour, that's ten hours more you have to work this month. They stole ten hours of your life. That's that's theft. That's stealing from your family. You could have put the time in your family has put. Time you could have put into yourself to learn new skills. That's that's they're stealing from your retirement account. They're stealing from you. That's your life energy
they stole. So that's a system. That's that's that's based off inflation, which is theft. It's also built on lies and deceit. Do you know how many dollars are created? Do you know how many dollars will be created tomorrow. Do you how many dollars will be created over the next year. No, of course you don't. You have no idea. And and they don't even tell you. They don't, they don't. They deceive you, and they lie to you. Not only do they sive you, they also lie to you because
they say, oh, but we're not creating money. But really they are over here, but we just didn't call it that. So the system built off theft lies in the sit and so everything built off of that system is also built off of theft. Theft lies in the sit and so it incentivizes that. Now. One of the one of the quotes that I use all the time from Vladimir Lenin, not Vladimir is Uh, not Putin, but Lenin from the
nineteen hundreds Russia. He said that the best way to destroy capitalism would be too deep out the currency, to destroy the currency, and you would do it through inflation. And through inflation you can confiscate arbitrarily. Mean I can just steal whatever I want whenever I want, just by inflation. I don't have to tell anybody about it. I'm just printing money. People people are watching news going inflation, inflation inflation, gas is getting more expensive, steaks getting more expensive. I
don't know, No, they're not getting more expensive. They stole the value from your currency, so it now you need to spend more of it, and so they can steal arbitrarily, and he says that eventually, um It says, eventually you'll lose all relation and the too money and the best way to get rich will be through gambling and theft,
which is exactly we have today. And so it incentivizes a system where we only can get wealthy through stealing from others or or gambling, right, the lottery, the crypto casino, n f T, you know, Ape Zone, whatever, And that's where we're at. And so it's not the fiat money system is not neutral. It's evil, theft, lies, deceit. Now, the opposite of um lies would be truth. The opposite of deceit would be transparency, right, and that's what bitcoin is.
So bitcoin is truth, it's math, it's it's transparent, it's open for anyone to look at. Now, I've said before, one of the greatest tricks, the two greatest tricks the Federal Reserve Central banks ever played on us, was one telling us that our money supply had to expand and to that asset price is going up is a good thing. And so we've been told that our money supply has to expand, and I hear all the time like it has to expand, Right, how how can we have a
growing economy if the money supply doesn't expand? Mark So the FED says, well, well, let's just have a two percent inflation and that way the money supply expands as as as the population grows. Or so they can just steal two percent per year, which, if you do the math, that's ten percent every five years, pretty pretty big to them in an eighty trillion dollar economy. I'll take ten percent of that, would you? And so they teach us that.
But if that's true, then I would ask yourself this question, why do we have to have a money system built on theft? If inflation is theft? And how is inflation not theft? If they're able to create more money and put those units in their pocket or as use them as they see fit, the cancel on effect inversely affecting or or helping those closest to that money supply. Right, they print the money, they give it to their buddies, their their projects. If that's not theft, I don't know
what it is. Um, So then why do we need a system built on theft? And of course the answer is it's insane. Of course we don't. That would be insane, so we don't need that. And then you start to ask yourself, Okay, well then what would be the opposite? Will that be a system with out inflation? Right? There you go. Now, it's very difficult to understand one system when you're stuck inside of an existing system. I get it.
So when you're in the system that we're in today, and these are problems that I even have for myself, and in conversations that with other people, it's like, well, how would it work? What does it look like? Well, it's very hard to it's very hard to say. Right, we're hypothesizing. But what I do know, I know in my heart of hearts, is that we don't have to live in a system where one person is able to
steal from another. I do know that. I do know that if we don't incentivize theft and stealing, that the world will be better. I do know that what does it look like exactly? I mean, I don't know we we we've never really seen that before. Right, even when we are on a gold back system, we have gold coins, but those gold coins would be debased, they'd be clipped all day, and so we probably have never really seen that before. Will it be better? Will it be worse? Well? Both?
I guess it depends on which side are you on. Are you on the theft side, are you on the side adversely benefiting from that. Are you on the side that's adversely being affected by it that? It just depends. If you're just tuning in, you're listening to the Markma Show. We're talking about the decentralized revolution, talking about money fixing the money fixing the world. I got a story coming back about how much the money that we have is broken in a better way to fix it. Back with
that in more in a minute. Don't go away, all right, welcome back. You were listening to the Mark mo Show. We're talking about the decentralized revolution and talking about I was talking about the intersection of politics, finance, and technology so we can see how the world is changing. Before the break, I went on a little rant talking about money and how money can fix the world, which I know is a really big big statement. I could. I could do an episode every single week on how it's
going to fix the world? Right, fix the money, fix the world kind of a thing. But I know that a lot of times people in the United States, specifically I have a problem understanding why we need to fix the money. What does that even mean? Like our money is pretty good, right, but that's in the United States. If you are one of three billion people living under very harsh authoritarian regimes with double the triple digit inflation, you don't you don't have You would laugh if somebody
asked you that question. You're doing everything you can to get rid of that currency, right, you don't want that currency. In most cases, you can't. Right, in most cases you can't because what happens is they try to enforce what they call uh capital controls. They want to keep you locked in that they don't want. They don't want that escape valve out of the system. So you don't have to ask somebody in in Lebanon or Venezuela or Argentina or Peru or Turkey, like what's wrong with your money?
Like they could give you a million reasons why. Like in um in UH Nigeria, they are trying to put just new central bank digital currency, the e i ARA, and the people are like, why why, why would we buy the NR. It's the same thing as that regular and I are that it's horrible, we don't want it, right, they know that. But but in the US we still think our money is pretty good. But we're seeing more and more and more and more why it's not so good.
So obviously inflation being one of those. Right again, if you can get your mind around that, it's not that prices are getting more expensive. It's that your dollars just buy you less and less goods, which is exactly what's happening to their countries, just at a much faster pace. But what about what about our ability to even use our money? That's a whole different story. Now, Like I said, about three billion people live under very heart harsh authoritarian
regimes and with double triple digitiflation. So those are two separate issues. So the double triple triple digit inflation meaning that every day your money buys you have as many goods and services in the day before, that's really bad. What about the harsh autory to in regime part So, for an example, in North Korea, you know you're not allowed to have money. They come into your house every single day and if they find any money, they steal
it from you. Or if you're an Afghanistan right now, Um, you know, the Taliban is watching over all the payments and they're just taking money as they see fit. The girl that does my hair, she's from Afghanistan and she can't even get money to people back in Afghanistan because there's no way to send it because the Taliban will just take it. So there's two different issues there. Now.
In the United States, we mostly have to worry about that, right, I mean, sure, inflation, but it's not that bad seven percent, it's not like seven um. And you know our money doesn't really get stopped, right, does it, does it? Well? Have you heard about something called civil asset forfeiture? Most people haven't. Um. Yeah, civil asset forfeitture amount one. Let's see what we come up with here. I want to say it was something like in in the last year or two, it was like, oh, here we go, sixty
eight billion dollars civil asis forfeiture abuse? Why it should be ruled? Um says, sixty eight billion dollars over the last twenty years have been taken through what's called civil asset for fitture. In South Carolina alone, one state UM confiscated seventeen million alone, one state seventeen million alone last year sixty billion dollars. So what this means is that it's not it's it's just civil acts forfeiture. They see it,
they want it, they take it. They pull you over, they find cash, they take it, and they take the car with it. They see money in your account, they take the money in your account. Now you can try to go get the money back. You can't. UM you can you know, you don't have any money anymore if
you can't go hired attorney, So that's pretty hard. And then you're probably really we're worried abou trying to figure out how to make more money so you can pay your bills because they took all your money, so you gotta figure that out. But somehow you're gonna have enough money to go fight the state, right and so in most cases they don't. Now I'm just throwing this out there so you can go do your own due diligence on this. But about sixty eight billion billion dollars has
been taken in the United States. This happens Now we have PayPal doing the exact same thing. You know, PayPal announced that they can take up to dollars from your account if you say the wrong thing. No due process whatever happened to innocent ut proven guilty, what happened to you know, due process of law? That's all gone. And so these are starting to get people to think about how can we do money better. PayPal was started to be this, uh, you know, this new app to empower individuals,
and they quickly changed. Now the original founders and PayPal what's called the PayPal mafia. It's Peter Theo, Elon Musk, David Sachs. They're all champions of free speech, and they have all express shock and dismay at what's going on in PayPal. But if if you're if if they freeze that money, that's basically destroying your life economically, destroying your life right, limits your ability to exercise your political voice. Right,
your your first Amendment, it's gone right. Your second Amendment. Uh there, it's gone right. You don't have any You have no freedom if you have no ability to transact, so you destroy people economically, and that's it's almost the worst thing that you can do. Now when they launched it, what they what they had hoped, Peter Thiel said, quote PayPal will give citizens worldwide more direct control over their
currencies than they've ever had before. He said, it will be nearly impossible for corrept governments to steal wealth from their people through their old means, because if they try, people will just switch to dollars or pounds or again, in effect dumping worthless currencies for something more secure. But what if it's not the current see itself that's the problem, but it's the actual payment network like PayPal. Now, since those early days of PayPal, PayPal's grown. It's got four
and twenty nine million active accounts. Fifty of Americans, almost sixty almost six out of ten Americans use PayPal. That's a lot, six out of ten Americans. But it's become a police officer deciding what's right and what's wrong, who gets to be heard, who doesn't get to hurt be heard, what it's good for you to spend your own money on, and what it's not good for you to spend your
own money on. And of course, to make sure none of these bad people fall through the cracks, PayPal teamed up with a whole bunch of people to help them figure this out. The Anti Defamation League, the a d L Southern Southern Poverty Law Center, which sounds like they would be good organizations, but who's to say who gets to spend their own money or not? Now, like I said before, PayPal updated their acceptable Use policy, which clears the way for even more suspensions anything they deemed to
be quote unquote objectionable. They can hit you with a penalty. There's no clarity on this. So what do you do? It's not the money in in uh in uh Peter Field's original content. He said, Hey, if no government could do this to you, because you could just switch to euro yen or dollars. But it's PayPal, it's the paper, it's the payment mechanism, and we're in a digital world. But the revolt is here, the revolt is here. We have another way now. I made a video on my
main YouTube channels. You can check it out. Elon Must's real reason for buying Twitter, which I argue, is to make a new payment network, and that looks like what it's about to be here. Um. This author reached out to Elon Musk and said, h are you worried? About company you helped found. PayPal is now part of an emerging private social credit system and is buying Twitter in part an effort to fulfill the mission that PayPal seems to have abandoned. And he replied with one word, definitely.
And so there's a need. You may not have a need right now, but there's a need. People have a need. Sixty eight billion dollars were taken with no new process, and they have a need. And bitcoin is here. If you're just tuning and you listen to the Markma Show talking about the decentralized revolution, the way the world is changing through politics, finance, and technology. Covered a lot today. That's what I got. Thanks for listening. Until next time,
