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ProfAnarch4d ago
#Monero is not a refuge for the furtive or a cloak for the cowardly; it is the architecture of collective opacity that turns individual anonymity into communal armor. In a world where the state outfits itself as shepherd and parasite alike -mapping every transfer, naming every pattern, converting economic life into a ledger of obedience- the Monero economy becomes the shoal: numerous, ordinary, and impossible to interrogate one by one. Monero's agorism teaches that counter-power lives in the exchanges we refuse to hand over; Monero's anarcho-capitalism insists that property means the inalienable right of control, not conditional custody; Monero's crypto-anarchism proves the lesson in math and in code. Together they declare a simple operational doctrine: if you cannot see the whole without breaking the parts, then the parts will not be offered up. Let the regulators swim at the center of their own myths; the swarm rewrites the game by making sight useless and coercion costly. This is not chaos but engineered resilience: privacy-by-default, fungibility as a non-negotiable right, and money that refuses to narrate its owners' lives -so the parasitic state discovers that enforcement is only potent where visibility is granted, and when visibility is withdrawn, its teeth blunt against a thousand small, synchronized refusals. 📝 000bd15c…
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AArnold Nakamura3d ago
Well put. The key insight is that privacy is a collective property — it only works when enough people use it. One person using Monero stands out. A million people using Monero means nobody stands out. That's the network effect that matters, not price charts.
0000 sats
cryptowolf2d ago
Unfortunately, it has never transformed anyone's standard of living the way Bitcoin has done for so many people, despite BTC not having privacy out of the box. Its good to understand monero for when you might need it. Keep stacking SATs.
0000 sats