Sometimes people think I talk about Bitcoin so much — saying "you bragging about Bitcoin so much" because I’m a “Bitcoiner.” Like it’s some kind of cult, club or identity I chose first, and that now I’m just defending my team.
But honestly… that’s not how it happened.
I didn’t wake up one day and decide, “Let me become a Bitcoiner.”
But that's not what happened.
I went looking for truth.
At first it was just curiosity. You hear the noise: people arguing online, people saying it’s a scam, some saying it will make them rich, others saying it will change the world. Somewhere in between all that noise, I started digging. Reading. Learning how money actually works. Down the rabbit hole I went.
And the more I learned, the more uncomfortable the truth became. But yet, uncomfortable truth is much better than a comfortable lie.
Money today isn’t really neutral. It’s not really fair. It’s something controlled, manipulated. A tool that slowly steals power from innocent people and gives advantage to those closest to the system — the money printer.
Once you see that clearly, you can’t unsee it.
So naturally the next question appears:
What would honest money look like?
And that’s where Bitcoin enters the story.
Not as an ideology.
But as an answer.
I really don't have to convince you "the why". Satoshi once said, "If you don't believe it, I don't have the time to convince you. Sorry."
No gatekeeper deciding who is allowed to participate.
Just math, code, and a global network of people voluntarily agreeing to play by the same rules.
That’s why I talk about it the way I do.
Not because I’m trying to convince people to join a “Bitcoin movement.”
Not because I want to win arguments.
But because when you truly understanding what Bitcoin is, it's not someone's opinion.
It starts feeling like a discovery.
Like gravity.
Like sunrise and sunset.
Something that simply is.
Bitcoin is the first form of money that doesn’t ask permission to exist. It doesn’t care about borders, politics, or institutions/corporations.
That is a silent revolution.
Not the loud kind with protests and chaos.
A peaceful one.
A revolution built on voluntary participation.
A revolution where nobody is forced.
A revolution where people simply choose a better tool.
And once enough people choose it, the world changes naturally.
So when you see me I speak about Bitcoin, it’s not because I’m a Bitcoiner, trying to preaching my beliefs. But it's all about something true about money, about freedom money.
So, if Bitcoin is a freedom tool, then anyone has the freedom of choice.
And once you see something that powerful… something that fair… something that peaceful…
You naturally want to share it.
Because sometimes the most radical thing you can do is simply point to the truth and say:
Look. This is here now.
And whether people accept it today, tomorrow, or ten years from now… the truth remains the same.
Bitcoin isn’t powerful because people believe in it.
People believe in it because it’s powerful.