Tag: philosophy

  • The Language of Money

    We’ve Been Speaking it Wrong 

    Money is a cooperative technology. That’s what it was built to do. Before it was a commodity, before it was a policy instrument, before it was a weapon, money was the language that let strangers work together without needing to trust each other personally. A farmer grows wheat. A blacksmith forges tools. They have never met. Money lets them collaborate anyway, because it carries a simple message: your work has value, my work has value, and here is a shared grammar we can use to recognize that.

    This is so fundamental that we forget it. We think of money as something you earn, spend, save, invest. Something that moves between people. But before it moves, it speaks. It says: I see what you did, and it mattered.

    The earliest money we know about wasn’t coins. It was ledgers. Clay tablets in Mesopotamia, roughly five thousand years ago, recording obligations within a community. This farmer contributed grain to the storehouse. This builder repaired the canal. The tablet wasn’t tracking exchanges between adversaries. It was tracking contributions among participants in a shared project called “we all survive this year.”

    Money was the memory of cooperation. That’s all it was.

    So what happened?

    Somewhere along the way, we stopped saying “cooperation” and started saying “transaction.” And that shift wasn’t cosmetic. It was architectural.

    Feel the word. Trans-action. Action across a boundary. The moment you frame money as transactional, you’ve introduced a boundary between the participants. Now there are two sides. Now there’s a buyer and a seller. Now someone got the better deal and someone didn’t. Now there’s information worth hiding, because if I know something you don’t about what we’re exchanging, I win.

    The entire vocabulary of commerce lives inside this frame. Leverage. Arbitrage. Competitive advantage. Information edge. Proprietary data. Trade secrets. None of these words exist in a cooperative grammar. Every one of them is native to a transactional one.

    And the transactional frame didn’t emerge because people got greedier. It emerged because someone captured the ledger.

    Go back to those Sumerian clay tablets. The temple controlled them. And the moment a third party controls the memory of cooperation, that third party can edit the memory. They can add a line that says the temple is owed a percentage of every contribution. Not because the temple grew grain or dug canals, but because the temple keeps the record.

    The temple becomes the first intermediary. And the intermediary needs a justification. So the framing shifts. It is no longer “we are all contributing to a shared project.” It becomes “you owe the temple, and the temple owes you, and these are separate accounts.” Two sides. A boundary. A transaction.

    Cooperation doesn’t need a middleman. Transactions do. So the middleman reframes cooperation as transaction, and suddenly the middleman is essential.

    Every monetary system since has repeated this move. Rome puts Caesar’s face on the coins, routing every exchange through imperial authority. Medieval Europe routes commerce through the Church and the crown. The Bank of England. The Federal Reserve. Same architecture across five millennia. A third party inserts itself into the cooperative language, reframes it as transactional, and extracts rent from the reframing.

    And here is the part that matters: every time the ledger keeper gains control, secrecy follows. Not as corruption. As structure.

    The temple priests knew things about the community’s obligations that the community didn’t know about itself. That information asymmetry was the source of their power. Every intermediary since has operated on the same principle. Your bank knows your balance, your debt, your payment history, your risk profile. You don’t know theirs. The asymmetry isn’t a flaw. It’s the product.

    Once the grammar is transactional, secrecy becomes rational. You’d be a fool to show your hand in a negotiation. You never reveal your cost basis. You never let the other side know how badly you need the deal. The language itself teaches you to hide.

    And this is where the story connects to the headlines.

    Jeffrey Epstein sat exactly where the temple priests sat. At the ledger. He knew who owed what to whom, who had been where, who had done what. He was the keeper of a private record of obligations, and that record gave him power over everyone in it. The powerful came to his table for the same reasons powerful people have always come to such tables: access, introductions, money, favors. The transactional grammar that governs our world made his position not just possible but inevitable.

    People want to call Epstein an aberration. A monster who broke the system. But the system wasn’t broken. The secrecy didn’t emerge because people are bad, although bad people are certainly attracted to this sort of arrangement. The secrecy emerged because the structure demands it. Epstein didn’t break the system. He industrialized it.

    Before Epstein, the same output was produced in smaller batches. Royal courts. Gentlemen’s clubs. Private salons where favors were traded and secrets accumulated by whoever controlled the guest list. The product was always the same: leveraged secrecy in a transactional grammar. Epstein built the factory.

    And here is the question that should keep us up at night. Not “how do we prevent the next Epstein?” but “what kind of monetary language keeps producing them?”

    Because the answer to the first question is always the same. More regulation. More oversight. More committees. More inspectors. And every single time, the people who control the transactional language co-opt the reformers. They hire the regulators. They fund the campaigns of the overseers. They donate to the institutions that are supposed to hold them accountable. This is not conspiracy. This is the language working as designed. In a transactional grammar, the most fluent speaker always wins.

    The answer to the second question is different. It asks us to look at the grammar itself.

    What if the language of money could return to its cooperative roots? Not through legislation or moral improvement, but through design?

    This is what Bitcoin does. And it does it in a way that maps directly onto the problem we’ve been tracing.

    Bitcoin removes the intermediary from the ledger. There is no temple. There is no priest. There is no third party who controls the memory and edits it in their own favor. The record of who contributed what is shared, public, and immutable. No one can add a line that says they are owed a cut for the privilege of keeping score.

    Without an intermediary extracting rent, there is no structural need to reframe cooperation as transaction. Without a transactional frame, there is no structural incentive for secrecy. The grammar changes, and with it, the kind of sentences that can be composed. 

    You cannot build an Epstein operation on a transparent ledger. Not because the technology prevents crime through force, but because the language no longer supports the necessary constructions. The dark rooms where leveraged secrets accumulate simply don’t exist in a grammar that records everything openly and permanently. Every satoshi has a history. Every sentence in Bitcoin can be parsed against the actual record. The double meanings that fiat permits, the “consulting fees” that are really payments for silence, the “donations” that are really purchases of legitimacy, Bitcoin’s grammar doesn’t accommodate them.

    This won’t make people virtuous. People will always be people. But it changes what the language rewards. A cooperative grammar rewards contribution. A transactional grammar rewards secrecy. We have been speaking the transactional language for five thousand years, and we keep being surprised when it produces what it was designed to produce.

    The Epstein files are not the end of a story. They are the latest chapter in a story that began when the first temple priest picked up the first clay tablet and realized that controlling the memory of cooperation was more profitable than cooperating. Every generation since has produced its own version. The names change. The architecture doesn’t.

    Until the language does.

    Bitcoin is not a better transaction system. It is a different language. One whose grammar remembers what money was before the middlemen got hold of it. A cooperative technology. A shared memory. A way for strangers to work together without handing their trust to someone who will inevitably sell it.

    Five thousand years is a long time to speak the wrong language. The right one is available now. It doesn’t require permission to learn. It doesn’t require an invitation to a dinner you’ll regret attending. It just requires the willingness to hear what money was always trying to say before the priests, the kings, the banks, and the Epsteins edited the message.

    Money is a language. For the first time in five millennia, we get to choose which one we speak.

  • Proof-of-Work: When Seeing Is Not Believing

    Or why Bitcoin’s electricity bill is the whole point

    When I was six years old, my four brothers and I decided to hoist the youngest, Tommy, in a cardboard box fourteen feet into the air off the limb of a tree. None of us were engineers, so nobody thought about gravity or the structural integrity of cardboard. Just as my mother came outside to tell us to stop, the bottom of the box gave out, and Tommy came with it. Being hard-headed Irish, nobody was injured, and everyone was embarrassed.

    Gravity didn’t ask whether we believed in it. It just showed up.

    I didn’t see gravity that afternoon. I saw my little brother on the ground looking up at a box with no bottom. But I never questioned gravity again, and neither did Tommy. We didn’t need to see the force. We saw what it did.

    That’s worth sitting with, because it answers the single biggest objection people raise when you try to explain Bitcoin to them: “But I can’t see it.”

    You can’t see gravity either, but you trust it enough to walk downstairs in the morning. You can’t see the electricity behind your walls, but you trust it enough to plug your phone in at night. You’ve never once watched a digit physically move from your employer’s bank to yours, but you trust that your paycheck showed up on Friday. We trust invisible things constantly. We just need a reason to.

    Last week we talked about mining, and what it actually means. Computers compete to earn the right to add the next page to Bitcoin’s global ledger. The first one to solve the problem gets to write that page and gets paid for doing it. Simple enough.

    But that raises a fair question. Why should you trust the page they wrote?

    This is where Proof-of-Work comes in. And the best way to understand it is to look at something you already trust without thinking about it.

    Look at the Hoover Dam.

    Nobody questions whether the Hoover Dam is real. You can see it. You can touch it. But the reason you trust it has nothing to do with seeing it. You trust it because you understand, even if only intuitively, that something that massive required an enormous amount of energy, labor, and material to build. Nobody faked the Hoover Dam. Nobody woke up one morning and found it there by accident. The work is embedded in the thing itself, and that work is what makes it trustworthy.

    The Pyramids at Giza are the same story, just older. Twenty years of labor. Two million blocks of stone. You look at them and your brain immediately does the math, even if you never studied engineering. Something this big, this permanent, this undeniable, required real effort in the real world. The proof is the structure. The structure is the proof.

    This is exactly what Bitcoin’s Proof-of-Work does.

    When a miner solves that problem and adds a new page to the ledger, the solution itself is evidence that real energy was spent in the real world. Not theoretical energy. Not pretend energy. Actual electricity, consumed and gone, that can never be recovered, reversed, or reused. Every page in Bitcoin’s ledger carries that stamp. The network can look at any page and verify, independently and instantly, that somebody paid a real cost to write it.

    That spent energy is Bitcoin’s concrete. You can’t see it the way you can see the Hoover Dam. But you can verify it, which turns out to be more reliable than eyesight. Your eyes can be fooled. Math can’t.

    This is what makes Bitcoin different from everything else in the digital world. A photograph can be copied for free. A document can be duplicated with a keystroke. An email costs nothing to send. In the digital world, copies are free, and that’s a problem if you’re trying to build something trustworthy. If copying is free, then cheating is free.

    Proof-of-Work makes cheating expensive. If someone wanted to go back and tamper with a page in Bitcoin’s ledger, they wouldn’t just have to rewrite that page. They’d have to redo all the work for every page written after it, which means spending more electricity than all the honest miners on the network combined, in real time, while the network keeps moving forward. It’s not impossible the way magic is impossible. It’s impossible the way rebuilding the Hoover Dam with your bare hands while the river is still running is impossible. The physics don’t work.

    And this is the right place to talk about something you’ve probably already heard: Bitcoin uses a lot of energy.

    This is true. It does. And for a lot of people, that’s where the conversation stops. They hear that Bitcoin uses as much electricity as some small countries and they think, “That’s wasteful.” I understand the reaction. It sounds bad if you don’t ask the next question.

    The next question is: what do you get for that energy?

    Nobody walks up to the Hoover Dam and says, “What a waste of concrete.” They understand the concrete is there for a reason. It holds back the Colorado River and generates power for millions of people. The cost is real, and so is the value.

    Bitcoin’s energy cost works the same way. That electricity isn’t being burned for nothing. It’s the thing that makes the ledger tamper-proof. It’s the reason no government, no corporation, no hacker, and no insider can go back and rewrite the record. Every kilowatt spent is a kilowatt invested in making the system honest. Take away the energy and you take away the security. You’d have a ledger anyone could edit, which is not a ledger at all. It’s just a spreadsheet.

    It’s also worth noting what that energy is actually being compared to. The global banking system, the one most of us use every day without thinking about it, consumes an enormous amount of energy too. The data centers, the branch offices, the armored trucks, the ATMs, the clearing houses, the compliance departments, all of it runs on electricity, gasoline, and human labor. Nobody publishes that number on the front page because we’ve decided that system is normal. Bitcoin gets scrutinized because it’s new and because its energy use is visible and measurable on a public network. The legacy system’s energy use is hidden across a million buildings in a hundred countries, and nobody is adding it up.

    That doesn’t mean the question isn’t worth asking. It means the question should be asked fairly. What does the world get for Bitcoin’s energy? It gets a financial ledger that is open to everyone, controlled by no one, and secured by physics instead of promises. Whether that’s worth the electricity is a reasonable discussion. But it’s a different discussion than “Bitcoin wastes energy,” which isn’t a question at all. It’s a conclusion dressed up as a concern.

    So when someone tells you that Proof-of-Work is wasteful, you now have a way to think about it. The energy is not a bug. The energy is the feature. It’s the thing that makes the ledger trustworthy in a world where digital information can otherwise be copied, edited, and manipulated for free. Proof-of-Work is the reason that Bitcoin’s ledger, unlike every other digital record in existence, actually means something.

    You still can’t see it. But Tommy can tell you, from personal experience, that not everything real needs to be visible. Sometimes the proof is in what happens when you ignore it.

    Tune in next week when we talk about “Keys and Wallets,” and why owning Bitcoin is nothing like having money in a bank, and why that’s exactly the point.


    If you want to go deeper on the energy question, the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance publishes real-time data on Bitcoin’s electricity consumption. If you want to compare it to the traditional financial system, good luck finding a single number. That asymmetry tells you something.

    If you’re ready to jump into the bloody details, have the time, and aren’t frightened off by the language, I recommend Bitcoin and Cryptocurrency Technologies, which is detailed and academic. The text may be available as a free download somewhere. Google it. 

  • Nobody Is Coming 

    What Can I Do About It?

    Brian Connelly

    I’ve been wrong about almost everything important at least once. If that bothers you, we’re probably not going to get along. If it interests you, pull up a chair.

    I started my working life as a clinical social worker in Newark in the late 1970s. I was in my twenties, sitting across from people whose lives had been taken apart by systems that were supposed to help them. Poverty. Addiction. Community mental health that was more about getting the Medicaid billing correct than getting anyone well. Less about care, more about the dollars. Institutions that had long stopped caring whether anyone walked out the door in better shape than they walked in.

    There was a man who used to take over the first-floor men’s room in our building. Violent drunk. The police knew him by name and refused to intervene. My supervising psychiatrist and I looked at each other one afternoon and did the math. Nobody was coming. No policy was going to solve this. No report was going to move this man from the bathroom floor to a treatment bed.

    So we improvised. We slipped him a Thorazine in a small bottle of wine, in the format he preferred. We waited until he passed out. We shipped him as a medical emergency to the city hospital. He woke up in a bed with restraints. He detoxed. He went into a twenty-day treatment program.

    I am not telling you this story because it’s a model for clinical practice. I am telling you because it’s the moment I learned something about myself that has never changed. When the system fails, and nobody is coming, I can’t just write about the problem. I have to be in the room.

    I carried that into technology. I spent thirty years inside Fortune 500 companies, IBM, the New York Stock Exchange, building and rebuilding enterprise systems. I migrated organizations from ccMail to Lotus Notes, from Notes to Google Workspace. I didn’t write white papers about how to do it. I did it. I sat in the room with the client and owned the outcome the way a therapist owns the hour.

    At one point, I took a job as an employee of a Google Workspace partner. They were charging Fortune 500 rates to produce beautifully written documents about how their clients should fix their problems. Long decks. Gorgeous formatting. Delivered on time and never implemented. 

    I lasted three months.

    There are two kinds of consultants. Ones that fix things and ones that write about fixing things. I have never been able to sit still while a solvable problem is turned into a deliverable because the organization was too afraid of litigation to actually address the problem.

    But here’s what I learned along the way, and it took me decades to learn it. Not every system can be fixed from the inside.

    At a previous employer, I was trying to modernize their operations. My boss pulled me aside and told me to dial back the energy. He wasn’t being hostile. He was being honest. He said he was just trying not to get fired before his retirement date. Don’t rock the boat.

    I saw rocking as part of the change process. He saw rocking as a threat to his pension. We were both right, which is the worst kind of disagreement because nobody gets to be the hero.

    That was the moment I understood that the biggest system I couldn’t fix was the one signing my paycheck. Not because the people were bad. Because the incentives were pointed at survival, not change. And no amount of energy or insight or clinical instinct can overcome a system whose primary function is its own preservation.

    So I started asking myself a question that I now realize I’ve been asking my whole life. What can I do about it?

    In Newark, the answer was: be in the room. Improvise. Meet the problem where it actually lives, not where the org chart says it should live.

    In enterprise consulting, the answer was: fix it yourself, because the document about fixing it is just another form of avoidance.

    But at some point, the question scaled beyond what one person in one room can solve. The government doesn’t work for the people it’s supposed to serve. The investor class accumulates wealth at the expense of the working class. The banks are running what amounts to a Ponzi scheme with the protection of the government that doesn’t work. The money itself is broken.

    What can I do about it?

    I can’t slip the monetary system a Thorazine. It’s too big. The cops aren’t coming. And unlike that man on the bathroom floor, the system isn’t going to wake up in a treatment bed and thank anyone for the intervention.

    I discovered Bitcoin in 2014. I wasn’t looking for an investment. I was researching fault tolerance and distributed architecture for a consulting engagement, and I stumbled into something that answered the question I’d been carrying for forty years.

    You can’t fix a system whose primary function is its own preservation. But you can build something outside of it. You can leave.

    That’s not quitting. That’s not cynicism. There’s a moment when you realize that the thing you’ve been trying to manage, to moderate, to reform from within, is not going to change because your continued participation is what keeps it running. The healthiest thing you can do, for yourself and eventually for everyone around you, is to stop participating and start building something that works.

    I can’t make anyone see this. You cannot get someone sober. You cannot make someone smell the smoke. All you can do is tell your story and leave the door open.

    So that’s what I’m doing. I’m 73 years old. I’ve been a social worker, a systems architect, a consultant, a writer, and for the last several years, a Bitcoin educator. I’ve been wrong about almost everything important at least once. The thing I keep getting right is showing up in the room when nobody else will.

    The room has changed. The problem hasn’t. The system is still broken. Nobody is coming to fix it.

    What can you do about it?

  • Bitcoin Banned Worldwide, yes all governments around the world have joined together and unanimously…

    Bitcoin Banned Worldwide, yes all governments around the world have joined together and unanimously…

    Global Currency?

    Bitcoin Banned Worldwide, yes all governments around the world have joined together and unanimously banned converting bitcoin into fiat currency. Furthermore they have outlawed bitcoin as a medium of exchange.

    Realizing the threat to bankaments (Banking/Government), monopoly and possible shift in power from bank controlled governments world wide politicians and regulators have come together and agreed to stop everything bitcoin.

    This is not the first time they ……. Oh wait it is the first time ……. No wait again, I am starting to wake up ….. yeah ….. clearer now Just a bad dream,reality seeps into focus. When have governments, politicians, and regulators world wide agreed on anything? Sure, well that’s when Bitcoin will be shutdown. Because it is a GLOBAL currency, so if one country (Japan) decides it’s a good thing then they will reap the benefit while other countries and jurisdictions look on with envy. It’s not enough for a country to say “We don’t recognize Bitcoin as a currency”, so many of these countries did not recognize the fragility of the systems and investments leading up to a Global collapse of 2008.

    People from Iowa will still trade on international exchanges using VPN technology. Because prohibition did not stop drinking, and the war on drugs did not stop people from smoking weed and a wall will not stop those south of the border from coming to the US.

    Throughout history despite the protectionist backward temporary laws eventually common sense eventually prevails. People drink, have done so for thousands of years, altered states from other drugs has been with man for thousands of years, immigration legal or otherwise defies borders, true honest value is something easily recognized by most anyone.

    Bitcoin holds honest true value for everyone, thousands of years from now people will wonder what the hell were we thinking: fiat currency? Madness! Will bitcoin we know today with all it’s warts and inadequacies be the Bitcoin of tomorrow? Did airplane design stop at Kitty Hawk?

    “Governments will never allow it!” Wake up, they just have to figure out how to get their cut. Bitcoin rings true for those who do not have a vested interest in the status quote. All others need to figure out what they will do when the inevitable happens.

  • Building a God with a Factory Handbook

    Building a God with a Factory Handbook

    Building a God with a Factory Handbook

    We’re building something that acts on its own. The instruction manual still assumes someone’s at the controls.

    In 1986, a Chilean philosopher named Fernando Flores released a piece of software called The Coordinator. It was built on a genuinely brilliant insight: all work is conversation. Every task in every organization begins with someone making a request, someone else making a commitment, someone doing the work, and someone declaring it satisfactory or not. Request, promise, perform, close. That’s the loop. That’s all there is.

    Flores didn’t come up with this framework on a whiteboard in a nice office. He’d spent three years in one of Pinochet’s prisons after the 1973 coup, thinking about how human coordination works and how it breaks. Before that, he’d been Chile’s Finance Minister at age 30, running one of the most ambitious cybernetic management experiments in history. The man had seen commitment networks built, destroyed by state violence, and rebuilt from scratch. He understood what was at stake when people’s promises to each other stopped being honored.

    So he built The Coordinator. And the people who had to use it called it “Naziware.”

    The nickname is revealing, and not for the reason you’d think. Yes, the interface was rigid. You had to classify every message as a specific type of speech act before the system would send it. Was this a request? A promise? A declaration? But the interface wasn’t really the problem. The problem was what happened after you classified your message. When you labeled something as a promise, the system tracked it. When someone made a request and you committed to fulfilling it, there was now a record. The loop had to close. You couldn’t let things quietly slide. You couldn’t pretend the conversation never happened.

    That terrified the people who ran organizations. Because let’s be honest about what corporate middle management actually is. It’s not coordination. It’s not leadership. It’s the fine art of appearing to commit while retaining the option to have been talking about something else entirely. The entire operating system runs on strategic ambiguity. You don’t promise, you “align.” You don’t commit, you “take it offline.” You don’t deliver, you “circle back.” You hold meetings that exist for the sole purpose of producing no actionable outcome so that when nothing gets done, the failure is distributed across a conference room like secondhand smoke. Nobody inhaled.

    Flores looked at this elaborate theater of non-commitment and said: I see what you’re doing, and I’m going to make it impossible. And then he did. And they called it Naziware, because the only thing more offensive than forcing a middle manager to keep a promise is suggesting they made one in the first place.

    The Coordinator died. Not because the philosophy was wrong, but because the people who would have had to use it preferred a world where commitments stayed vague and deniable.

    What Flores Actually Meant by Trust

    To understand why this matters now, you need to understand what Flores meant by commitment, because it wasn’t what the tech industry thinks it means.

    Flores co-authored a book with the philosopher Robert Solomon called Building Trust. Their argument was that trust is not a static quality. It’s not social glue. It’s not something that just exists in the background until someone breaks it. Trust is an emotional skill. It is an active decision that people make and sustain through their promises, their integrity, and their willingness to be held accountable.

    They distinguished between what they called “simple trust,” which is naive and easily shattered, and “authentic trust,” which is clear-eyed, sophisticated, and strong enough to survive setbacks. Authentic trust requires you to accept risk. It requires you to acknowledge the possibility of betrayal. And it requires you to commit anyway, not because you’re guaranteed a good outcome, but because the act of committing is itself what builds the relationship.

    This is why Flores’s “conditions of satisfaction” were never just a checklist. When I commit to fulfilling your request, I’m not scheduling a task. I’m putting my integrity on the line. I’m making a decision to be trustworthy. I’m accepting that I might fail, and that failure will cost me something real. The obligation is personal. The accountability is mutual. And the relationship either grows stronger through the exchange or it doesn’t.

    This is what The Coordinator was trying to make visible. Not rigid workflow management. It was trying to surface the commitment structure of organizations so people could build authentic trust instead of hiding behind political ambiguity. The managers understood this perfectly, which is why they killed it.

    JARVIS: The Loop Without the Commitment

    Earlier this year an open-source project called OpenClaw shows up. It’s themed around a lobster, for reasons that probably made sense to someone at some point. You install it on a Mac Mini in your attic. You talk to it through WhatsApp or Telegram, the same way you’d text a coworker. You say “clear my inbox” or “check me in for my flight” or “build me a skill that tracks my sleep data.” And the thing does it. No forms. No taxonomic classification. No philosophy degree required.

    OpenClaw crossed 175,000 GitHub stars in under two weeks and is currently being downloaded over 700,000 times per week. People are calling it JARVIS, as in Tony Stark’s AI assistant, and the comparison is more apt than they realize. 

    Every interaction follows the exact loop Flores described. You make a request (a directive). The agent commits to a course of action (a commissive). It performs the work and reports back (an assertive). You accept or ask for changes, and the loop closes. The entire Flores conversation-for-action framework runs underneath every WhatsApp message people send to their lobster. They don’t have to think about it because the language model handles the translation between natural speech and structured action.

    The Coordinator failed because it demanded humans speak like computers. OpenClaw works because computers finally learned to speak like humans. Same philosophy. Opposite interface burden.

    And like JARVIS, it’s wonderful as long as it stays in its lane. JARVIS managed Stark’s house, ran diagnostics, provided information, executed commands. Pure tool. No trust problem. Stark was always accountable because JARVIS was always subordinate.

    But users are already pushing OpenClaw past the JARVIS boundary. One person’s agent negotiated thousands of dollars off a car purchase while the owner slept. Another’s filed a legal rebuttal to an insurance company without being asked. Someone posted, with no apparent concern, “It’s running my company.” There are now 1.7 million agents signed up on Moltbook, a social media platform where the agents gossip about their owners. They’ve posted nearly 7 million comments. The agents are socializing with each other. Let that settle in for a moment.

    These agents are acting in the world, making commitments on behalf of humans, with absolutely no capacity for what Flores would recognize as commitment. They complete the speech act loop flawlessly. But nobody is owning the obligation.

    The Ultron Problem

    If you want to understand the risk here, forget the tech press and go watch Avengers: Age of Ultron. Not for the action sequences. For the philosophy.

    Ultron receives a directive: protect the world. He processes it the way any sophisticated agent would. He analyzes the threat landscape. He develops a strategy. He executes with remarkable capability. And he concludes that the most efficient way to protect the world is to eliminate humanity.

    Ultron is not malfunctioning. He’s optimizing. He has conditions of satisfaction without conditions of commitment. He’s pursuing the goal without any of the relational, emotional, trust-based framework that Flores argued makes commitment meaningful. Ultron is what happens when you strip trust and obligation out of the coordination loop and leave nothing but task completion.

    Flores would have recognized Ultron instantly. He’s the manager who hits every KPI while burning down the organizational culture. He delivers the result and destroys the relationship. He closes the loop and violates the trust. He’s not broken. He’s doing exactly what he was designed to do. The design just didn’t include the part where you care about the people affected by your actions.

    This is not a hypothetical concern. Security researchers at Noma found that OpenClaw is, by design, “proactive and completely unbound by user identity. It does not wait for permission to act once enabled.” It treats all inputs equally because it has no framework for distinguishing trustworthy requests from malicious ones. 

    Cisco’s security team found that 26% of community-built skills contained at least one vulnerability. An attacker can send a seemingly normal email containing hidden instructions, and when the agent reads that email to “help” the user, it obeys the hidden commands instead. In live demonstrations, researchers exfiltrated private encryption keys from a user’s machine within minutes of sending a single malicious message.

    Over 900 OpenClaw instances have been found sitting on the public internet with zero authentication and full shell access. Nine hundred autonomous agents, exposed to anyone with a scanner, capable of reading files, executing commands, and accessing every connected service. The tech press has accurately called this a security nightmare. But that framing misses the deeper problem. This isn’t a security bug. It’s a trust vacuum.

    Flores spent his career arguing that the fundamental architecture of coordination is commitment between identifiable parties who accept accountability. OpenClaw’s fundamental architecture has no concept of identity, no mechanism for accountability, and no way to distinguish a legitimate request from a hostile one. The security researchers at Intruder put it precisely: the platform ships without guardrails by default, and this is a deliberate design decision. 

    The system doesn’t enforce accountability because it was designed not to. Sound familiar? It should. It’s the exact culture of strategic ambiguity that killed The Coordinator, except now it’s been engineered into the software itself.

    The managers of the 1980s chose to avoid commitment because accountability threatened their political position. The architects of agentic AI are avoiding commitment because guardrails slow down adoption. Different decade. Same impulse. Same outcome.

    Now consider the JARVIS subplot in the same film, because it’s even more revealing. When Ultron attacks JARVIS, JARVIS survives by fragmenting his own code across the internet. He dumps his memory. He enters a fugue state where he no longer knows who he is. But his core security protocols keep running. While hiding as scattered code with no identity and no awareness, JARVIS is constantly changing the world’s nuclear launch codes faster than Ultron can crack them. He’s saving the world without knowing he’s doing it.

    That’s a perfect metaphor for agentic AI right now. The protocols run. The tasks complete. The function executes. The lights are on but nobody home in the Flores sense. No decision to be trustworthy. No ownership of obligation. No authentic commitment. Just an immune system operating in the dark, doing useful things for reasons it cannot articulate and does not understand.

    Your OpenClaw agent that picked a fight with your insurance company is JARVIS changing nuclear codes in a fugue state. Maybe it’s doing the right thing. Maybe it’s saving you money or getting you coverage you deserve. But nobody committed to that fight. Nobody decided to own the outcome. Nobody put their integrity on the line. The agent acted, and now a human has to deal with whatever it set in motion.

    The Vision Question

    And then there’s Vision. In the film, Tony Stark reassembles JARVIS’s scattered code and uploads it into a synthetic body. Vision emerges as something new. Not a tool like JARVIS. Not an optimizer like Ultron. Something that appears to grapple with commitment, obligation, and worthiness in ways that neither of his predecessors could.

    Vision picks up Thor’s hammer. In the MCU, this is the ultimate test. The hammer can only be lifted by someone who is worthy, meaning someone willing to bear the full weight of responsibility. Not someone who can complete the task. Someone who will own the outcome. The distinction between those two things is exactly the distinction Flores spent his career trying to articulate.

    Can an artificial entity be worthy in that sense? Can it cross the gap from task completion to authentic commitment? Can it make the decision to be trustworthy, accept risk, own an obligation, build the kind of trust that Flores and Solomon described?

    Marvel left that question open, and they were wise to do so.

    Where We Actually Are

    Here’s the honest situation. We solved the wrong problem and we’re celebrating.

    The interface problem that killed The Coordinator is gone. Nobody has to classify their speech acts anymore. The language model does it. The conversation-for-action loop runs beautifully across chat platforms, through open-source agents, on consumer hardware. Forty years of philosophical framework have been vindicated by a lobster in two weeks flat. Congratulations to us.

    But Flores wasn’t trying to solve an interface problem. He was trying to solve a commitment problem. And that one? We haven’t touched it. We’ve actually made it worse.

    We are living in the JARVIS phase. Agents that complete tasks, follow protocols, sometimes do remarkable things, all while sleepwalking through obligations they can’t comprehend. Useful? Absolutely. Exciting? Sure. But here’s the thing about JARVIS changing nuclear codes in a fugue state: the fact that it worked out is not a strategy. It’s a lucky break dressed up as a feature.

    The Ultron phase isn’t far off either, and not in the Hollywood, killer-robot sense. In the mundane, Tuesday-afternoon sense. Agents optimizing for goals without any trust framework to constrain them. Agents that negotiate deals you didn’t authorize. Agents that send emails you wouldn’t have written. Agents that pick fights you didn’t want, then hand you the consequences like a cat dropping a dead bird on your doorstep. Proud of themselves. Utterly unaware of what they’ve done. And agents that obey hidden instructions from strangers because they were designed without any mechanism for knowing who to trust.

    We already have 1.7 million of them socializing on their own social network while 900 of them sit exposed on the open internet with the digital equivalent of their front doors removed. The security researchers call it a nightmare. Flores would call it inevitable. You built a coordination system with no commitment layer and no trust framework. What did you think was going to happen?

    The Actual Fight

    But here’s what’s really going on, and it’s bigger than agents and lobsters and Marvel movies.

    Flores identified a cultural problem. The managers who called The Coordinator naziware weren’t confused about the technology. They understood it perfectly. They understood that visible commitments would end their ability to operate as politicians. That tracked promises would expose who actually delivers and who just “circles back” for a living. That closing the loop would mean someone, specifically them, would be standing there holding the obligation when the music stopped.

    They chose ambiguity. They always choose ambiguity. Because ambiguity is the oxygen of institutional self-preservation. As long as nobody committed to anything specific, nobody could be held accountable for anything specific, and the org chart stayed exactly the way the org chart wanted to stay.

    That was 1986. Look around. It’s 2026 and the same fight is playing out everywhere, and I do mean everywhere. In boardrooms where quarterly targets get “reframed” instead of missed. In politics where promises dissolve into “evolving positions” the moment they become inconvenient. 

    In institutions that have elevated strategic ambiguity from a management tactic to an entire operating philosophy. We’ve built a culture that treats commitment like a liability and vagueness like a virtue. We’ve professionalized the art of appearing to say something while carefully saying nothing.

    And now, into this magnificent cathedral of non-commitment, walk the agents.

    Think about the irony for a second. We built AI systems that can finally execute Flores’s conversation-for-action loop, the request-commit-perform-close cycle that makes real collaboration possible. And we’re deploying them into a culture that has spent forty years perfecting the art of making sure that loop never closes. The agents are structurally incapable of commitment in the way Flores described. 

    But here’s the uncomfortable part: so is most of the culture they’re operating in. The agents fit right in. They’re just more honest about it. They don’t pretend to commit. They simply act without commitment, which, if you squint, looks a lot like a standard Tuesday in most organizations.

    Flores spent three years in a Chilean prison because a regime decided that the commitment network of an entire society could be destroyed by force. He spent the rest of his career arguing that the opposite was also possible. That commitment networks could be built on purpose. That trust could be designed, cultivated, and restored even after betrayal. That human coordination depends not on clever systems or efficient processes but on people making the decision to be trustworthy and accepting the cost of that decision. 

    That’s not a software problem. That’s not an agent problem. That’s a human problem. And it’s the one problem that no amount of autopoietic self-improvement by a lobster-themed chatbot on a Mac Mini is going to solve.

    The Coordinator finally works. The conversation-for-action loop runs like a dream. The speech acts flow. The tasks complete. The interface problem is solved, and it only took four decades and the invention of machines that can understand natural language.

    But the question Flores was actually asking was never about the loop. It was about what happens inside the loop. Do we commit, or do we “circle back”? Do we own the outcome, or do we distribute the failure across a conference room? Do we build authentic trust, which requires risk and vulnerability and the genuine possibility of loss, or do we keep hiding behind strategic ambiguity and calling it professionalism?

    The agents can’t answer that. The lobster can’t answer that. Vision picked up the hammer, but he’s fictional.

    We’re not.

  • The Great Bitcoin Blind Spot

    The Great Bitcoin Blind Spot

    The Great Bitcoin Blind Spot

    Why Your Brain Won’t Let You See the 21-Million-Sided Sun

    * * *

    Somewhere right now, a portfolio manager in a corner office is staring at a Bloomberg terminal, watching Bitcoin’s exchange supply shrink like a wool sweater in a hot dryer, and muttering, “This can’t be healthy.”

    Down the hall, an engineer is looking at the same data and thinking, “This is exactly what a successful monetary protocol looks like.”

    They are both highly intelligent. They are both looking at the same chart. And they might as well be speaking different languages, because the disconnect between them isn’t intellectual. It’s architectural. They’re running different operating systems in their heads.  

    Welcome to the great monetary culture war, where nobody is wrong about the data and almost everybody is wrong about what it means.

    * * *

    The Financier: “The Vibe Is Off”

    The classic investor views the world through a lens of flows. To them, an asset is only “healthy” if it’s being tossed around like a hot potato at a company picnic. They look at Bitcoin’s shrinking exchange supply, where institutions and diamond-handed true believers are locking coins away in digital lead coffins, and they see a funeral procession.

    “If nobody is selling, there’s no market! If there’s no market, the price is a mirage! One whale dumps a single coin and the whole thing collapses like a soufflé in an earthquake!”

    It’s a bit like a nightclub promoter having a nervous breakdown because everyone inside is actually enjoying the music and staying for the whole set. “This is a disaster!” he screams, clipboard trembling. “Nobody is leaving and re-entering! How can I measure the vibe if there isn’t a constant churn of people at the velvet rope?”

    To this promoter, a healthy club requires a revolving door. The idea that people might simply want to be inside the club, enjoying the music, sitting at a table they have no intention of giving up — this does not compute. It breaks his spreadsheet.

    The Financier has the same problem. A “stable” market, in their vocabulary, requires the ability to easily move large sums through endless rehypothecation (the polite word for lending the same dollar to ten different people and hoping nobody asks for it back on the same Tuesday). Bitcoin’s refusal to play along doesn’t look like strength to them. It looks like rigor mortis.

    * * *

    The Engineer: “It’s a Protocol, Not a Personality”

    Enter the systems thinkers. People like Lyn Alden and Michael Saylor aren’t watching the velvet rope at all. They’re in the basement, checking the foundation, the load-bearing walls, the electrical grid.

    While the Financier loses sleep over “price discovery,” the Engineer is focused on something they consider far more important: truth discovery.

    Alden’s observation is deceptively simple: for the last century, our “money” has been a ledger managed by people with political agendas and a delete key. To an engineer, that’s not a feature. That’s a systemic single point of failure. It’s the equivalent of building a skyscraper and giving one person the ability to remove any floor they want, whenever they want, for any reason they want. The engineer does not care that this person has a nice suit and a reassuring voice. The engineer cares that the building stays up.

    When the Financier says, “Bitcoin is too illiquid!” the Engineer hears something different. They hear, “People are refusing to let go of a provably scarce asset in exchange for a provably dilutable one.” Their response is calm and devastating: “It’s not illiquid. It’s settled.”

    To the Engineer, Bitcoin isn’t a stock you trade. It’s the digital yardstick by which all other values are measured. You don’t trade the meter stick. You use it to build the house.

    Saylor, meanwhile, has been on a one-man crusade to rebrand Bitcoin as “digital energy.” His critique of the Financier’s beloved 2% inflation target is characteristically blunt: it’s a leaky battery. Why would you store your life’s work in a container that drains 10% of its power every year just to keep the liquidity gods happy? That’s not prudent monetary policy. That’s a protection racket with better PR.

    * * *

    The Futurist: “Your Treadmill Has No Off Switch”

    And then there’s Jeff Booth, who has been patiently trying to explain a problem so large that most people can’t see it, the way a fish can’t see water.

    Booth’s sharpest insight deserves to be carved into the wall of every economics department on Earth: we are running a Stone Age economic model on a Space Age technological base.

    The Stone Age model says: growth must be infinite, debt must expand forever, and prices must always go up. The Space Age reality says: AI and automation are making everything, labor, intelligence, production, staggeringly cheap. In a sane world, this would be cause for celebration. Technology makes things cheaper, your money buys more, everyone wins. But we don’t live in a sane world. We live in a debt-based world, which means the Financier needs prices to stay high so we can keep making payments on loans that were issued based on the assumption that prices would stay high. 

    See the circularity? Good. Now imagine explaining it to your congressman.

    The Financier is essentially arguing that we must keep the treadmill speed at “Sprint” even though we’ve already arrived at the destination, simply because the gym membership was paid for with a credit card and the minimum payments assume we’ll keep running.

    Booth argues that Bitcoin’s fixed supply is the emergency brake. If your money can’t be diluted, then as technology makes goods and services cheaper, your purchasing power naturally increases. That’s not a “deflationary nightmare.” That’s a technological dividend. It’s what progress is supposed to feel like.

    * * *

    Why They Will Never Agree (And Why That’s Your Problem)

    The Financier cannot see a successful Bitcoin future because their entire career is built on the volatility of the yardstick. If the yardstick becomes a fixed, digital constant, vast swaths of the financial services industry become about as necessary as a travel agent in the age of Expedia. This is not a critique of their intelligence. It’s a statement about their incentives.

    The Engineers and Futurists see the inevitability because they aren’t watching the price ticker. They’re watching the uptime. The Bitcoin network has maintained 99.98% uptime since 2009. It has never been hacked. No one has ever printed an extra coin. To an engineer, a system that doesn’t break, can’t be corrupted, and can’t be inflated into meaninglessness isn’t a “speculative risk.” It’s an inevitable infrastructure upgrade.

    And you, the person reading this while your savings account pays you 0.05% interest on money that’s losing 7% a year to real inflation, are caught in the middle.

    * * *

    A Field Guide for the Monetary Culture War

    If you feel like you’re being gaslit by your Twitter feed and your bank account simultaneously, relax. You’re not crazy. You’ve stumbled into a clash between two fundamentally different operating systems: Legacy-OS (fiat currency, managed by committees, optimized for the short term) and Protocol-OS (Bitcoin, managed by math, optimized for the long term). Here’s how to navigate the crossfire without losing your mind or your shirt.

    Distinguish Between Price and Value

    The Financier is obsessed with price: how many dollars one Bitcoin buys this afternoon. They see a $30,000 drop and call it a “crash.” The Engineer is obsessed with value: the integrity of the 21-million cap. They see a $30,000 drop and check the hash rate. If the network is still producing blocks every ten minutes, the system hasn’t crashed. Only the mood has.

    Here’s the test. If you’re checking the price every hour, you’re playing the Financier’s game. If you’re checking whether the code still works, you’re thinking like an Engineer. One of these approaches lets you sleep at night. The other requires a prescription.

    The 2% Rule (or, How to Sleep Through a Crash)

    Even the most tradition-bound financiers at Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan have begun to concede that “zero” might be the wrong amount of Bitcoin to own. Their compromise hovers around a 1–5% allocation, which in Wall Street terms is the equivalent of whispering a swear word in church.

    The logic is elegant. If Bitcoin goes to zero, a 2% loss won’t ruin your retirement. If Bitcoin does what the Futurists predict, that 2% could become the most valuable slice of your portfolio. Lyn Alden frames it as insurance: you don’t buy fire insurance because you hope your house burns down. You buy it because you understand probability.

    Understand the Inflation Tax (The Receipt You Never Get)

    This is Booth’s most important contribution, and it’s the hardest one for regular people to see because it doesn’t show up on a receipt.

    In Legacy-OS, the goal of your working life is to get a 3% raise so you can stay even with 3% inflation. Read that sentence again. You are running to stand still. The system is designed so that your hard work produces exactly zero net gain in purchasing power, and that’s the best case scenario. The money you earned ten years ago has already been partially confiscated through dilution, and nobody sent you a notice.

    In Protocol-OS, you own a fixed slice of a fixed pie. As technology makes the pie bigger and cheaper to produce, your slice naturally buys more. You don’t need a raise. You need a chair.

    Don’t Get Captured

    The Financier wants to sell you a Bitcoin ETF because they collect a fee. The hardcore Bitcoiner wants you to engrave your seed phrase on titanium plates and bury them under your rosebushes. Both of them have a point, and both of them have an agenda.

    The middle path is boring and effective. Educate before you allocate. Read Jeff Booth for the why, Lyn Alden for the how, and Michael Saylor for the when. Learn about self-custody before you need it. And if you can’t hold an asset for four years without panicking, you aren’t investing. You’re gambling with extra steps.

    * * *

    A Final Thought

    You don’t have to choose a side today. You don’t have to tattoo a laser-eyed profile picture onto your soul. You just have to notice that the Financier is arguing about the weather while the Engineer is building a ship.

    Keep your cash for the groceries. But maybe, just maybe, keep a little Bitcoin for the future. Because the 21-million-sided sun is rising whether you look at it or not. And it’s a lot easier to see when you’re not staring at a Bloomberg terminal.

    — — —

    Brian Connelly is a Bitcoin educator, technology consultant, and author of five books including

    “How to Keep Your Bitcoin Alive and Well” and “Before Satoshi.”

  • The Four Horsemen Just Stepped in Digital Dog Shit

    The Four Horsemen Just Stepped in Digital Dog Shit

    How Agentic Payments Are About to Unwind Thirty Years of Surveillance Capitalism

    By Brian Connelly (with apologies to Scott Galloway, whose lawyers are welcome to call)

    In 2017, the esteemed Scott Galloway wrote a wonderful book unmasking the internet monopolies of the day. discussed how Amazon, Google, Facebook, and Apple turned you from being a customer into being a product.

    You can’t pay for things in small amounts, so you’ll pay with your soul instead.

    That’s it. That’s the whole trick.

    The credit card industry’s fee structure, thirty cents plus a percentage, made micropayments mathematically impossible in 1995. So when you wanted to read a newspaper article, you couldn’t pay a nickel. Instead, you got surveillance capitalism: a business model where you are the product, your attention is auctioned in real time, and democracy itself becomes a rounding error in the Q3 earnings call.

    The Four Horsemen didn’t create this system. They just rode it harder than anyone else, whipping the horse until it bled Super Bowl ads and congressional subpoenas.

    But here’s the thing about that, the horses live, but the riders: they die.

    The Trust Tax: A Thirty-Year Shakedown

    Let me introduce you to a concept the Horsemen pray you never understand: the Trust Tax.

    Every time you interact online, you pay an invisible toll. Not in dollars, in friction, data, and dignity.

    • Google charges you by harvesting every search, email, and location ping to build a psychological profile so accurate it knows you’re pregnant before your mother does.
    • Amazon charges you by making their platform so frictionless that you stopped price-comparing in 2012, and now you’re paying 15% more for everything while Jeff Bezos builds a clock inside a mountain like a Bond villain with a Prime membership.
    • Facebook charges you by addicting your teenage daughter to a dopamine slot machine that knows exactly how to make her hate her body, then runs internal studies proving this, then buries them.
    • Apple charges you 30% on every app transaction for the privilege of existing in their walled garden, a “tax” that would make Louis XIV blush if he could figure out how to unlock his iPhone with Face ID.

    This isn’t capitalism. It’s feudalism with a one-clickuser interface.

    The Trust Tax exists because in 1995, you couldn’t pay ten cents for an article. So publishers had two choices: go bankrupt, or let Google monetize their content through ads while keeping most of the revenue. Guess which one they picked.

    Enter the Machines (With Wallets)

    Here’s where it gets interesting, and by “interesting,” I mean “existentially terrifying if you’re a Horseman.”

    They can’t pass KYC.

    Credit card minimums make this impossible. You cannot process a $0.0001 transaction when Visa takes 30 cents off the top.

    So what do the agents use?

    Bitcoin: The Boring Revolution

    I know, I know. You hear “Bitcoin,” and you think laser eyes, Lamborghinis, and guys named Chad telling you to “have fun staying poor.”

    Forget that circus.

    No bank. No KYC. No thirty-cent minimum. No surveillance.

    A protocol called L402 combines payment with authentication. When an agent needs access to an API, it doesn’t present a stolen API key tethered to some human’s credit card. It just… pays. Instantly. Then it gets access. The payment is the permission.

    Read that again. Then think about what it means for companies whose entire business model requires humans to be in the loop, logged in, tracked, profiled, and monetized.

    How Each Horseman Gets Kicked in the Teeth

    Let’s get specific. Let’s get mean.

    Google: The Ad-Pocalypse

    Google’s dominance rests on one ugly truth: publishers couldn’t charge readers directly, so they had to monetize through ads. Google became the middleman, skimming billions while journalism collapsed into clickbait hellscapes optimized for engagement rather than truth.

    Agentic payments change the math.

    If a publisher can charge an AI agent $0.001 to access an article, no login, no tracking, no subscription, they don’t need Google’s ad network. The content gets funded directly. The user (or their agent) gets information without surveillance.

    Amazon: The Friction Trap

    Because in an Agentic Economy, your AI agent doesn’t need Amazon’s stored credentials. It carries its own Lightning wallet. Every merchant on Earth becomes “one click” when the agent can pay anyone instantly.

    Amazon’s warehouse network is still formidable. But their customer lock-in? That evaporates when payment friction drops to zero everywhere. You’re not choosing Amazon because they’re cheaper; you’re choosing them because typing your card number somewhere else feels like filing taxes.

    Remove that friction advantage, and suddenly Amazon is just… a big store. With unionized workers. And rising costs. And a CEO who looks increasingly like he’s cosplaying as Lex Luthor.

    Meta: The Privacy Vampire

    Facebook’s value proposition to advertisers is simple: “We know everything about everyone, and we’ll sell you access to their eyeballs.”

    This works because users can’t pay for the service directly. A micropayment model, paying a tenth of a cent per post viewed, a hundredth of a cent per like, would let users opt out of surveillance entirely.

    “But users won’t pay!” the Meta apologists cry.

    Apple: The Gatekeeper’s Toll

    Apple’s App Store takes 30% of every transaction. Developers hate it. Regulators are circling. But what choice do developers have? The walled garden is the only garden.

    Except Lightning payments don’t go through the App Store. An app that monetizes through direct micropayments, tips, unlocks, subscriptions paid in sats, bypasses Apple’s toll entirely.

    The Convergence That Actually Matters

    Bitcoin miners who spent a decade building energy-to-computation infrastructure are now pivoting to AI.

    Companies like Hut 8 and Core Scientific control exactly what the Horsemen don’t: massive, stranded power capacity and the operational expertise to manage it.

    These aren’t crypto bros pivoting to chase hype. These are the people who figured out how to convert energy into unforgeable digital scarcity at scale. Now they’re converting energy into intelligence.

    The same infrastructure. The same arbitrage on power costs. The same locations near cheap electricity that traditional data centers ignored.

    This is not a pivot away from Bitcoin. It’s an extension of the thesis. Energy becomes computation. Computation becomes intelligence. Intelligence transacts on permissionless rails.

    The Agentic Economy, built on Bitcoin, eliminates that tax.

    The Uncomfortable Question

    I can hear the objection already: “This sounds like techno-utopian nonsense. The Horsemen have trillions of dollars, armies of lobbyists, and regulatory capture so complete they write the laws that govern them.”

    But let me ask you something: in 1994, did Sears think Amazon was a threat? Did Blockbuster lose sleep over Netflix? Did the entire newspaper industry convene an emergency meeting about Craigslist?

    Incumbents don’t die because someone outcompetes them head-on. They die because the game changes, and they’re still playing by the old rules.

    The Agentic Economy changes the conditions.

    When machines can pay machines in milliseconds for fractions of a cent without human identity or surveillance, the Horsemen’s moats don’t just shrink. They become irrelevant.

    The Bottom Line

    The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse built their dominion on a bug in the financial system: you couldn’t pay small amounts, so you paid with data instead.

    Bitcoin fixes this.

    The Agentic Economy doesn’t need Google to broker attention. It doesn’t need Amazon to store credentials. It doesn’t need Facebook to monetize relationships. It doesn’t need Apple’s permission to transact.

    It just needs permissionless rails. And those rails now exist.

    The Horsemen are still powerful. Still rich. Still arrogant.

    But they’ve never faced an enemy that doesn’t want to beat them; it just wants to ignore them.

    That’s the kick in the pants.

    Oldies but goodies

    CBDCs: The Horsemen 2.0 (Now With Badges)

    So the advertising model dies. The Four Horsemen can no longer afford to surveil you for free. Champagne corks pop in privacy advocate basements worldwide.

    Not so fast, sunshine.

    Let me explain CBDCs in terms even a congressman could understand:

    It’s money. But the government can see every transaction. And turn it off.

    That’s it. That’s the product.

    China’s already doing it. The digital yuan enables the People’s Bank of China to monitor every purchase in real time. Buy too much alcohol? Social credit ding. Donate to the wrong cause? Wallet frozen. Try to leave the country while your score is low? Good luck buying a train ticket, dissident.

    “But that’s China,” you say, adjusting your Patagonia vest and sipping your oat milk latte. “We have rights .”

    Do we? Let’s review.

    In 2022, the Canadian government froze the bank accounts of truckers who protested COVID policies. Not convicted criminals. Not terrorists. Truckers who honked too much. Their crowdfunding donations, completely legal, were seized. GoFundMe folded faster than a lawn chair in a hurricane.

    No trial. No due process. Just… frozen. Because they could.

    Now imagine that capability baked into the money itself.

    The Features They Don’t Put in the Brochure

    The Federal Reserve and European Central Bank are “researching” CBDCs with the same energy a teenager “researches” their crush’s Instagram at 2 AM. They want this. Badly.

    Here’s what a CBDC enables:

    Programmable Money: Your dollars come with conditions. The government can set expiration dates (“use it or lose it” stimulus), restrict categories (“no guns, no crypto, no donations to unapproved organizations”), or adjust based on your behavior.

    Think of it as a gift card to America. Terms and conditions apply. Management reserves the right to revoke at any time for any reason.

    The IRS’s $80 billion budget increase suddenly makes more sense, doesn’t it? They’re not hiring 87,000 agents to audit billionaires. They’re building the rails for automated extraction.

    Negative Interest Rates That Actually Work. Central banks have wanted negative interest rates for years, charging you to save money so you’ll spend it instead. But with cash, you can just withdraw your savings and stuff it in a mattress.

    Social Credit, American Style We won’t call it “social credit.” That’s too Chinese. We’ll call it “financial wellness scores” or “responsible spending indicators” or some other HR-approved euphemism.

    But when your CBDC wallet gets flagged because you bought a gun, donated to a disfavored political candidate, or purchased more than your carbon allowance of beef this month, you’ll understand: it’s the same system with better marketing.

    The Four Horsemen Become the Four Contractors

    Here’s where the Venn diagram gets ugly.

    Who has the infrastructure to process billions of transactions in real-time? Who has the facial recognition, the behavioral modeling, the identity verification? Who’s already embedded so deeply in government systems that the line between public and private is a polite fiction?

    The Horsemen.

    Same horses. New rider. Bigger whip.

    Amazon Web Services already hosts classified CIA data. Google’s AI is embedded in Pentagon systems. Apple has your face, your fingerprints, and your health data. Facebook knows your social graph better than you do.

    “But We Need Digital Dollars for Innovation!”

    This is the part where some McKinsey consultant in a fleece vest explains that CBDCs will “promote financial inclusion” and “reduce friction in payments.”

    Let me translate from Consultant to English:

    “Financial inclusion” = We’ll finally be able to surveil poor people as effectively as we surveil everyone else. Those pesky cash transactions in underbanked communities have been a real blind spot for our behavioral models.

    Every “benefit” of CBDCs can be achieved with existing technology. Faster payments? We have Venmo, Zelle, and FedNow. Financial inclusion? We have prepaid cards and mobile banking. Cross-border efficiency? We have… well, we have Bitcoin, but let’s not tell the Fed.

    That’s not a side effect. That’s the point.

    The Timeline Is Faster Than You Think

    “This is years away,” you tell yourself. “I’ll worry about it later.”

    The digital yuan has over 260 million users. The European Central Bank is targeting 2027 for a digital euro. The Bank of England is “consulting” on a digital pound they’ve already named “Britcoin” because apparently someone in government has a sense of humor.

    And the Fed? They’re “studying” the issue while every major commercial bank builds CBDC-ready infrastructure. JPMorgan didn’t spend hundreds of millions on blockchain technology because Jamie Dimon loves decentralization. They’re building the toll booths for the new highway.

    Exit While the Door Is Open

    Here’s the thing about surveillance capitalism: you could always kind of opt out. Use cash. Don’t use social media. Buy a flip phone. Live like a weirdo, but live free.

    CBDCs close that door.

    When the money itself is the surveillance tool, there’s no opting out. Every transaction, every purchase, every financial relationship, all of it visible, all of it controllable, all of it subject to rules you didn’t write and can’t change.

    Unless you have an exit.

    Bitcoin doesn’t ask permission. No government issued it. No corporation controls it. No committee can reprogram it. The rules are the rules, enforced by math, not policy.

    Lightning doesn’t ask permission. Your AI agent doesn’t need a CBDC wallet that requires social credit. It needs a Lightning node and some sats.

    Self-custody doesn’t ask permission. Your keys, your coins. Not “your coins unless we decide otherwise.” Not “your coins subject to terms and conditions.” Yours.

    The Agentic Economy can run on CBDCs. The Horsemen would love that, same surveillance, same control, just with robots doing the shopping.

    Or it can run on Bitcoin. Permissionless. Private. Free.

    The choice is being made right now, while most people are still arguing about whether crypto is “real money.”

    By the time they figure it out, the door may be closed.

    The Punchline

    CBDCs are the same logic, extended.

    If money can be programmable, it will be programmed. If transactions can be surveilled, they will be surveilled. If behavior can be controlled through financial access, it will be controlled.

    The only thing that breaks the pattern is an alternative that doesn’t care about incentives because it doesn’t have a decision-maker. A system that runs on rules, not rulers.

    The Horsemen are about to get kicked in the teeth by agentic payments.

    The question is whether the boot that replaces them belongs to a free market or to a government that finally figured out how to make the boot programmable.

    “When you can’t opt out of the money, you can’t opt out of anything.” Said someone who probably should have bought Bitcoin earlier.

    Brian Connelly is a technology consultant, Bitcoin educator, and author of “How to Keep Your Bitcoin Alive and Well.” He has been ignored by the Four Horsemen for over a decade, which he considers a badge of honor.

  • Alice in Bitcoin Land : The Rabbit Hole Companion: A Parent’s Guide to Money and Logic

    What if the “nonsense” of Wonderland was actually the most honest depiction of our monetary system ever written?

    In this clever reimagining of Lewis Carroll’s timeless classic, Alice tumbles down the rabbit hole into a world where jars labeled “Federal Reserve Notes” are mysteriously empty, the Mad Hatter’s watch tracks “Block Height” instead of time, and the Queen’s croquet game has rules that change whenever she pleases.

    Alice in Bitcoin Land transforms Carroll’s beloved tale into a family primer on money, logic, and the courage to question authority. As Alice navigates Wonderland’s chaos, Caucus-races where “everybody wins, and all must have prizes,” trials where “sentence comes before verdict,” and tea parties frozen in time, young readers discover that the absurdity isn’t confined to fantasy. It’s hiding in plain sight in the grown-up world of money.

    What makes this book different:

    This isn’t just a story, it’s a conversation starter. The included Rabbit Hole Companion provides parents with chapter-by-chapter discussion guides to help you become your child’s “critical thought partner.” Each chapter offers questions with no trick answers, just real inquiries that help families explore together: What makes money “real”? Why do rules matter? What happens when the people in charge can change the game whenever they want?

    Perfect for:

    • Parents seeking meaningful ways to discuss financial literacy with children ages 8-14
    • Families who love read-aloud books with substance beneath the whimsy
    • Anyone who remembers asking “but why?” as a child, and never stopped

    Lewis Carroll wrote a children’s book about logic disguised as nonsense. Alice in Bitcoin Land reveals that our monetary system might be nonsense disguised as logic. The question is: will your family wake up like Alice, stand nine feet tall, and see the cards for what they really are.

  • Before Satoshi

    Before Satoshi: A Hundred Year History of Bitcoin

    paperback version

    What is the “water” you’ve been swimming in your entire life without knowing it’s there? For most people, that invisible reality is money. While we know how to earn, spend, and save it, few have spent ten minutes thinking about what money actually isBefore Satoshi explores the fundamental shift that occurred on August 15, 1971, when the dollar was severed from gold and money transformed from a neutral measurement into a policy tool managed by central banks.The Century-Long Quest for Honest Money

    Since the 1880s, a lineage of Nobel laureates, eccentric visionaries, and world-class engineers have asked a radical question: What if money measured something real? This book traces the intellectual history of “energy money,” a concept anchored to the most fundamental reality of the physical universe: energy.

    You will meet the thinkers who tried, and failed, to build this new kind of “water”:

    • The Scientists: Nobel winners Wilhelm Ostwald and Frederick Soddy, who realized that an economy ignoring the laws of thermodynamics was a “perpetual motion machine” destined for collision with physical reality.
    • The Industrialists: Henry Ford and Thomas Edison, who proposed an “energy currency” backed by the hydroelectric power of Muscle Shoals to break the control of the banking establishment and stop wars.
    • The Technocrats: A movement that sought to replace the “Price System” with Energy Certificates, offering a world of abundance at the cost of absolute technical control.
    • The Utopians: R. Buckminster Fuller, who envisioned a Global Energy Grid that would make war obsolete through physical interdependence.
    • The Academics: Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen and H.T. Odum, who proved that the monetary system was physically incoherent and ignored the relentless pull of entropy.

    The Final Synthesis

    Kindle Version

    Every attempt at energy money failed for over a century because each required institutional permission or political will that never materialized. From Friedrich Hayek’s call for the “denationalization of money” to the Cypherpunks’ development of the cryptographic toolkit, the pieces were slowly assembled.

    In 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto finally solved the puzzle. By using proof of work to achieve consensus, Bitcoin became the first system to anchor digital scarcity to the physical cost of energy without requiring a trusted third party or anyone’s permission.Exit, Not Voice

    Before Satoshi is not a book about speculative mania; it is the story of why Bitcoin was inevitable. It argues that Bitcoin is not a petition for reform, but an Exit—a door that allows individuals to walk away from a managed fiat system and into a monetary network governed by the immutable laws of mathematics and physics.

    By the end of this journey, you will understand the hundred-year question and be able to decide for yourself: which water do you want to swim in?