Nick Stevens (@nick_j_stevens) 's Twitter Profile
Nick Stevens

@nick_j_stevens

Writing at the intersection of health, philosophy and systems thinking. Libertarian. #bitcoin $MSTR

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linkhttps://nickjstevens.com/ calendar_today08-05-2009 19:02:07

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Nick Stevens (@nick_j_stevens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Follow these to upgrade your timeline: Finance: Bitcoin Philosophy: Bitcoin Morality: Bitcoin Fitness: Bitcoin Tech: Bitcoin Relationships: Bitcoin Productivity: Bitcoin Memes: Bitcoin Travel: Bitcoin Self-Help: Bitcoin Crypto: Bitcoin (obvs) #BitcoinFixesEverything

Jeff Walton (@punterjeff) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The S&P 500 is valued at 500,460,800 Bitcoin The companies in the S&P 500 hold 20,776 Bitcoin The Bitcoin mNAV of the S&P 500 is 24,088 The market valuation systems are nowhere near equilibrium Fiat as Unit of Account is clashing with Bitcoin as Unit of Account

Jordan Walker (@jayw132) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The British Pound has lost 95% of its purchasing power since 1970📉 I'm updating our "Every Business Needs A Bitcoin Strategy Deck", and wanted to share this slide...

The British Pound has lost 95% of its purchasing power since 1970📉

I'm updating our "Every Business Needs A Bitcoin Strategy Deck", and wanted to share this slide...
Bram Kanstein (@bramk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Yo Grok please compare the (global) debt based fiat monetary system and BITCOIN, and analyze which of the two is more likely to be a ponzi scheme, based on its characteristics. Include reasoning as to why or why not, and a probability percentage.

Nick Stevens (@nick_j_stevens) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Ironically, attempts by nation-states to wage “information wars” to dominate or thwart access to cyberspace would probably only accelerate their own demise.” — a quote from The Sovereign Individual, first published in 1997.

Proton VPN (@protonvpn) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The UK government could soon be asking its citizens to provide ID to access Wikipedia. Wikipedia has argued in court that the Online Safety Act’s “Category 1” duties mean that it would be forced to verify users’ identities. The High Court has rejected this challenge. 1/3

The UK government could soon be asking its citizens to provide ID to access Wikipedia.

Wikipedia has argued in court that the Online Safety Act’s “Category 1” duties mean that it would be forced to verify users’ identities.

The High Court has rejected this challenge.

1/3