Bankless - NOT A DRILL! Balaji Bets the Dollar will Hyperinflate to Zero
Episode Date: March 21, 2023Balaji Srinivasan is back on Bankless with alarming takes. According to Balaji, in the next 90 days, the Dollar will hyperinflate—and the Bitcoin price will skyrocket to $1 Million. He’s backed up... these claims with a million dollar bet. With these dire predictions and a track record of strong takes, we needed to hear him out. Who should we bring on next to counter these claims? ------ 🚀 JOIN BANKLESS PREMIUM: https://www.bankless.com/join ------ BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: ⚖️ ARBITRUM | SCALING ETHEREUM https://bankless.cc/Arbitrum 🐙KRAKEN | MOST-TRUSTED CRYPTO EXCHANGE https://bankless.cc/kraken 🦄UNISWAP | ON-CHAIN MARKETPLACE https://bankless.cc/uniswap 👻 PHANTOM | FRIENDLY MULTICHAIN WALLET https://bankless.cc/phantom-waitlist 🦊METAMASK LEARN | HELPFUL WEB3 RESOURCE https://bankless.cc/MetaMask 🚁 EARNIFI | CLAIM YOUR UNCLAIMED AIRDROPS https://bankless.cc/earnifi ——— Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 7:50 Weeks when Decades Happen 9:30 $1 Million Bitcoin Bet 16:20 Balaji’s Track Record 19:00 Pandemic https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1222921758375927808 23:15 Hyperinflation https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1636797265317867520 27:50 US Banking Failure https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1636822077775941633 32:50 The Banks are Insolvent https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FrXKYKcakAAdJwe?format=jpg&name=medium https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1637671174271565825 35:38 More Failure, More Funding https://archive.is/0Jww3#selection-731.0-731.286 40:30 FDIC and the Fed https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/10874230/Jean-Claude-Juncker-profile-When-it-becomes-serious-you-have-to-lie.html https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20230312b.htm 44:18 Bank Runs https://qz.com/the-feds-discount-window-is-lending-to-banks-at-2008-le-1850237214 https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1637859435149398016 https://www.straitstimes.com/business/banking/wall-street-giants-move-to-rescue-first-republic-bank https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/other20230315a.htm 52:25 Escaping to Gold https://twitter.com/spectatorindex/status/1637544100663803904 57:50 Exporting Inflation https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2011/jul/17/bread-food-arab-spring https://www.wsj.com/graphics/red-economy-blue-economy/ https://howmuch.net/articles/rise-and-fall-dollar 1:04:30 Bitcoin in Wartime https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FrrfQuaaUAEFYev?format=jpg&name=medium 1:10:45 Capital Allocation https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1488988253411708931 1:13:30 The Only Real Banks https://twitter.com/koeppelmann/status/1637898298005626881 1:20:49 Why Now? https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1637329482687324161 https://twitter.com/balajis/status/1637868839890472960 https://twitter.com/0xfoobar/status/1637855829750628353 https://www.google.com/search? q=sivb&oq=sivb&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i10i131i433i512l2j0i10i512l2j69i64l3.1066j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 https://www.google.com/search?q=usd+btc&oq=usd+btc&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i512l4j69i64l3.1207j1j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 1:28:15 Do This Now https://twitter.com/MaxCRoser/status/1355652800588505089 1:34:52 A Year From Now https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PHe0bXAIuk0 ----- Not financial or tax advice. This channel is strictly educational and is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets or to make any financial decisions. This video is not tax advice. Talk to your accountant. Do your own research. Disclosure. From time-to-time I may add links in this newsletter to products I use. I may receive commission if you make a purchase through one of these links. Additionally, the Bankless writers hold crypto assets. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bankless Nation, we have Bologi, Stradin Fawson on.
He's talking about his prediction that within 90 days, the U.S. dollar would hyperinflate,
and one Bitcoin would be worth $1 million.
This is both a prediction he made and a bet that he has made after that prediction on Twitter.
He's been saying some alarming things over the past few days, I would say, about the U.S. banking system.
And maybe the most alarming is some of his early predictions have sort of been right.
There's more murmurings of bank closures that have passed both the United States.
We just had Credit Suisse, with First Republic Bank that just kind of go to zero.
We have central bank communications talking about coordinated efforts between them all to inject
liquidity in this market.
The prospect of unlimited coverage for all deposits and for all of these underwater assets
is now in play too.
And so I worry about some of the things coming to pass,
because his predictions, David, are quite dire.
He is sending out an alarm, he says, the bit signal, he says, people to get their money
outside of the U.S. banking system and into Bitcoin specifically, into crypto systems
and outside of the areas where the Fed has root level access.
So we brought him on to make this case, to hear the evidence for his claims, and to see
how alarmed we should really be.
One thing I'll say before you get your response to this, David, is we do.
intend to bring on a counterpoint as well. So Bologi has given his case for why we're all
basically the U.S. dollar is doomed. It's going to hyperinflate and that's going to happen
in relatively short period of time. We also want to get on somebody to make the opposite claim
so that this is balanced and so that listeners can listen to the evidence Bology comes up with
and listen to the counterpoint and make their own decision on this. But I got to say, we needed
to hear him out on this because he's been right about many things in the past.
He's been right overall about crypto and kind of the direction.
And now he's setting off this alarm bell.
It certainly gave me cause for concern and the reason for this conversation.
So, David, what are your thoughts going to this episode?
What should people keep in mind?
Yeah, I think the, Bology is just sounding the alarm that Bitcoin is going to a million dollars.
He's made that bet.
And many, many people are like, well, he owns a bunch of Bitcoin.
This is a rational thing for him to do.
It's a million-dollar marketing expense.
that's not what Bologi is here to say.
He is saying the net effect of Bitcoin reaching $1 million is as a result of the complete destruction, perhaps, of the United States banking system and the dollar system at large.
His big claim is that, you know, all of Alameda research and FTX's insolvency where they tried to prop up their accounts with some finagling of their accounting.
He is saying that that is perhaps true of the entire banking system where there is just no.
not a there there anymore. And so his, his idea that Bitcoin is won a million dollars is actually
a much bigger topic, which is more or less the complete and utter destruction of our banking system.
A few comments on the actual form factor podcasting logistics for this episode. Bologi just,
we've been talking to Bologi about doing an episode and he randomly just hit us up and said,
all right, let's do this right now. And so we kind of aped into this interview. Bollagy gave us
a ton of links to share, and we are doing our best to share them in Riverside, which is our
podcasting recording software. Recording this one was logistically challenging. Like I said,
Ryan said, I'm also in the Dominican Republic. My internet is an issue, but I think the message
will become loud and clear. And really, going back to the content, I think the takeaway
for our bankless listeners, regardless of how true Bologi is, I think there's a spectrum here.
Either Bologi is like 100% right or he's only 5% right. But I,
Either way, the patterns and things that unfold over the next perhaps 90 days of time as a result
to banking crises and inflation and liquidity, at least I think Bologi is giving us a mental
model, a map to test what events happen in one week, one month, three months, and we can test
them against Bollagy's thesis and his theories and what he's presented here today. So I think
that's really the call to action for bankless listeners to understand, see the model that Bologi
is putting forth. And as more announcements happen,
as more perhaps bank failures happen or doesn't happen,
you'll be able to test it against what Bologi is presented here today.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I don't think, David, you and I are in a place to say that he's right or he's wrong,
but certainly his argument warrants consideration.
So that's why we are putting this in front of you today.
Guys, we're going to get right to the episode with Bology.
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Bankless Nation, we have Bologi, Sri Navasan here on bankless again today, talking about something
very specific, which is a very bold call that Bologi made last week.
Bologi, welcome back to bankless.
Hey, welcome.
Thanks.
Or I guess thank you.
You're supposed to say welcome.
I'm supposed to say, welcome.
I'm supposed to say, yeah, yeah.
You've got your own podcast now, by the way, which is fantastic.
So you've probably been playing the role of host more often.
Yes.
Yeah, tell folks about that before.
read it in. It's funny because, you know, I launched a blog right before COVID. I launched a podcast
right before this. So it's a little bit of deja vu, you know, where I was just like a month into kind
of this new sort of content project and then things started getting intense on the internet,
or not just an internet, but like the world. Yeah, the podcast is called a network state podcast.
It is about what sort of comes after the 20th century order, you know, and,
And I actually think that there's, you know, the book, the networkstate.com, there's a bunch of stuff in there, which I think will potentially be actually fairly relevant to what's going to transpire. And I kind of thought it might, you know, play out over a decade or something like that, you know, like that saying by, you're the saying by Lenin. There's a, there's decades where nothing happens and there's weeks where decades happen, right? Like during Corona at the beginning of Corona, the remote work went like 30, 40, 50 points vertical. It did like a decade of adoption in, like,
like a few weeks. All these kinds of things went like vertical or horizontal or, you know, down,
you know, right? You're here because I think this is, you're claiming this is one of those
two weeks where a decades happen. And all of a sudden, uh, you have been inundated with
intention about this crazy, crazy bet that you've made where you think that Bitcoin, our beloved
asset is going to become worth one million dollars inside of the next 90 days, which, uh,
when you take that, take into account, people will call that a bold call. Uh, and so this has made
the internet all pivot their attention to this claim, which is a crazy, crazy claim that I think
people aren't totally understanding or willing to accept. So So Bolle, maybe you can kind of walk us
through your thought process here. Like, well, how is Bitcoin going to become worth a million dollars
in the next three months? So here's the thing is, I don't think I've ever made a price prediction
or something like that, just not what I do. I'm not a price guy. I'm not a chart guy.
that's you know if you look at i've been in the for what's worth that i've been in the public eye for 10 years
you know i have tens of thousands of tweets i have hundreds of pages of writing whatever hours of
podcasts including some with you guys right essays and so on and so forth and there's enough context
there where people i think you know know that i'm not like a i'm not a money motivated person i'm
an ideological person in our talks you know and so on i've never been like oh price blah blah so let me
just back up for a second, okay?
10 days-ish ago, 10, 12 days ago, Silicon Valley Bank and Silvergate and then Silicon
Valley Bank like basically just collapsed overnight.
There's no warning, right?
Just boom, done.
And then this gigantic, you know, this $200 billion bank with 40,000 tech companies,
people who had done basically nothing, you know, they're just going about their business,
suddenly found that their checking accounts, the money was gone, right?
And then they were being blamed as if, you know, wanting their checking account back was like a bailout or something like that as if they'd done something risky.
And this is this whole frantic kind of thing over the weekend.
And some people were acting tactically and they were trying to figure out, you know, how to how to like, you know, fix this situation or whatever.
But I was like, how could this possibly have happened, you know?
And I started like looking at all of the numbers that I could find online.
And just to summarize what I found, and I'll show you a zillion references on this because
it's actually kind of crazy.
The central bank, meaning the Fed, the banks and the bank regulators have all known for at least
the past year that hundreds of banks in the U.S. are insolvent, meaning Uncle Sam Bankman
freed.
they don't have assets on hand on a mark to market basis to match their liabilities.
You know, Uncle Sam Bankman-Fried is the best way of understanding this because Sam-Bakeman-Fried,
whether he lied to himself or he lied to others or whatever complicated thing.
Remember he had this balance sheet that was this crazy balance sheet, which, you know,
like in his head it added up to more than what people were asking for, you know, their money out, right?
And until the stress test actually came and people actually withdrew their money, neither he nor they knew how much money he actually had because he wasn't just holding it on like a one for one basis. He was doing these crazy conversions, exposing everybody to market risk and so on and so forth. Essentially he took people's trust. He took their deposits. He invested them in these, you know, shit coins and they, you know, or spent it on something, whatever the heck he did, marked it as if it was still there. And, um,
And then, but when they actually came for it, there was a huge hole, right?
We now know that story.
Okay.
That is basically what has happened.
And the funny thing is, you know, Amjad Mossad and I in the fall of 2022, we were like,
you know, that's kind of what fiat banking is also because of fractional reserve and so on.
If everybody actually asked for their money at the same time, they wouldn't be able to get it back.
But the situation we've got now is so much worse than even fractional reserve.
And what that is is that the banks all did something very much like Sam Bankman-Fried.
They took your deposits and they bought long-dated treasuries and other long-dated government
bonds in 2021, essentially on the guidance of the federal government, or especially the Fed,
really, that they were going to keep interest rates low for a long time.
And then the Fed raised rates in 2022 in this sort of surprise, super high hike,
crush the portfolios of every single entity that had trusted them and stuck the banks with
this giant surprise of this massive devaluation of bonds. And you can see, and I found all
these links where the bankers are basically panicking about this over 2022. And you know what they
come up with? They basically come up with an accounting trick, okay, called hold to maturity.
I call it high to maturity. We're just like Sam Bacon-Fried, they book it as having not depreciated.
it's still worth what we paid for it. We're good, right? And this time bomb just grew larger and
larger and larger across the entire industry with everybody obviously knowing about it. And again,
whether they were lying to themselves or they're lying to others, what they didn't do is they
didn't notify you, the depositor, that the money was gone for not just SVB, but for like
millions of depositors across the country and every bank that has U.S. treasuries and long-data
government bonds. This is one of those things. You know what you're saying? Like if you have a problem,
if you owe the bank a million dollars, you know, you have a problem. If you owe the bank of
billion dollars, a bank has a problem, right? If you have one bank failure, that's a bank's problem.
If you have hundreds of bank failures, that's a central bank's problem. Backing up for a second,
what is a proposed action that people should take? Get your coins, get whatever you can into
crypto. Okay. I mean, I recommend Bitcoin at this point. It is going to be the light.
boat for, you know, for a number of different reasons. Of course, if you have other cryptocurrency,
whatever, you know, obviously you guys are Ethereum guys. I'm not, you know, let's just say that all
of the crypto tribalism is going to rise to like a ideological level that we've never seen in a,
in a year or two years or whatever this crisis over. But in this crisis, there'll be three kinds of
zones, fiat only zones, where like, you know, crypto is banned or seized and only the
government can have it because it's used to back the currency. Bitcoin only zones, like maximalist
zones and then like, you know, crypto-free zones where you can use whatever cryptocurrency you want,
okay? And one of the reasons is a lot of Fiat banks are about to die. They all trusted the Fed
at the same time, the centralization at the Fed, buying the same asset at the same time, getting it
devalued by the same vendor, namely the Fed, in the same way, then all going bust at once.
That's basically what's happening. So Bologi, I just want to put kind of the timeline together
and ask how you have been piecing this together, right? So we had silver, uh,
Silvergate Bank and Silicon Valley Bank. That happens the weekend of the 11th and 12th,
let's call it, right? You put up the bit signal on March 16th. So that was Thursday after that
weekend. And the bit signal is basically like you telling people that Bitcoin was going to go up,
you said this, how do you ring the fire alarm on the internet? How do you show it's not a false
alarm. I'm putting up the bit signal. One million dollars in Bitcoin to alert us to the stealth
financial crisis. $1,000 per tweet for the best $1,000. Reply with your charts, graph, stats,
and memes. So you're clearly propagating a message. One question I have for you is to some of the
doubters, maybe like, let's just address this at the beginning. So this is previous to the bet.
So some of the people are saying, some people are saying, Bology, that this tweet and also the
bet itself is kind of like promotion. It's basically advertising.
for your bags, which are crypto-centric bags, how do you respond to that critique?
The thing is, if I didn't hold crypto, they would say, oh, you don't actually have skin
in the game, you're just doing it for attention and so on and so forth, right?
All I can say on that is hold dollars then.
Okay, if you don't believe me, hold dollars and then see what happens, right?
If you don't believe me, buy short-dated treasuries, like three months, and just say,
biology is crazy and, you know, whatever, fine, go ahead. But this is like, if you look at the full
context of everything I've said, it's impossible to prove, quote, motivation or whatever, okay?
But if you look at all the tweets and everything I've ever said, this is something where this is like
the crisis that Bitcoin was built for. Like Bitcoin was born out of crisis, the 2008 crisis,
and this is the 2023 banking crisis. And I remember Abology that,
you were very, very early to the COVID crisis.
And so I remember you were sounding the COVID alarm in January, February,
and then COVID hit in March.
And so you have a track record of doing this at least once before that I can remember,
and it being contrarian at the time.
And while this is very different from COVID,
I will have to say that you do have a good,
you have one very strong mark of sounding an alarm in a prior crisis
at least a couple months ahead of time.
So this is not a new act.
activity for you. Yeah. It's not fun. It's not fun, right? Because everybody thinks you're
crazy or you're doing it for attention. Because essentially both the virus, well, first, let me talk
about COVID for a second. Let me come back to that. People were saying it was a paranoid conspiracy
theory to say that coronavirus would ever spread out of China. Obviously, you're a racist,
blah, blah, blah, blah. But obviously, public health people had been thinking about pandemics for a while.
And at the time, that was a good way of sort of framing that this was not like a threat that a crazy
person was coming up with, but that public health people were. And I had sort of a mental model
of the world, right? Like, imagine there's like a bunch of rubber bands between countries like
Taiwan, China, right, or India, Pakistan, or Bitcoin, Ethereum, right? There's these various rubber bands
between groups, right? Stress tensions and so on. Then we have like a shock to the system where
someone goes from zero to one or one to zero, a lot of those rubber bands update and the system
moves into a new confirmation. Okay. And so that's kind of how I was thinking about this. Like I had
like, you know, this sort of chessboard in my head and I was like, okay, if this hits,
how does that move this, this, this, this, this, this and this, right? Do you see what I'm saying? Okay.
And by the way, for listeners, this was a January 30th, 2020 tweet timestamp is what we're talking about.
So well before the general U.S. public became aware.
Six or seven weeks or so.
And I'll show you how if you just scroll down a little bit, you'll see how I did it, right?
So first is I was following the raw data.
I had some background in, you know, like before I got into crypto, I was actually, you know,
basically doing computational genomics and statistics and especially microbial genomics, right?
So I had some background in the space, so I had some lenses with which I could read some
the technical literature. Viruses are exponential. And the thing about this, at the time, by the way,
that's funny, it's like, you know, total confirmed cases outside was like less than a thousand or
whatever, right? So it's like, look, it's so low. I'm like, yeah, you know, but is it like somebody
knows viruses, knows tech? It's about like rate of growth, you know, and this is like a pretty
high rate of growth. And the thing about this, by the way, and one thing I'll just back up
for a second and say, as of January 2020, three years later, people believe two things
about COVID. First, a novel virus out of China infected more than 700 million people worldwide,
killing about 1% of them, and seriously sickening another tens of millions of people,
causing significant upheaval by all kinds of governments and a huge tech shock, right? On the other
hand, they also think, yeah, it wasn't that big a deal life went on. Both of those things,
I would say the combination of both those two facts is actually what I'd say the conventional
wisdom is as of January 2023. Would you agree with that? Yeah.
roughly. But the thing about that is, while I agree life went on, and it certainly wasn't
like the end of life on earth or anything, and we're lucky that it wasn't like the Spanish flu
or something. That was certainly not, like if you had said, if I had said it in January,
700 million people will get infected, 7 million will die, but life will go on. Nobody would be
the weirdest projection ever, okay? It would sound terrifying and preposterous, but then also,
and this is important, the concept of normality of some kind being restored on the other side
would have also seemed preposterous. That is a very non-obvious frame of mind, which is a frame of
mind I'm in kind of now. Okay. We're basically in, and I'll get into details, we're basically
in the Fiat crisis. Okay, we're in the crisis where like all the centralization of Fiat, all the
opacity of fiat, all of the, you know, all the things that Satoshi talked about. All of that is now
blowing up on people in a very tangible way. And really, it's, it's kind of remarkable. And so now the
thing is, we're going to have a wrenching transition to the crypto economy where just like remote work
kind of went like vertical because people just had to, right? A lot of fiat systems are going to break
potentially over the next weeks and months and maybe years. And we're going to have to switch over to
crypto systems, and it'll be a big pain, a huge pain, of which the single most important is
a transition to Bitcoin as a global reserve currency. But there will be normality of some
kind on the other side. So Bologi, one difference between kind of the fire alarm you pulled
around COVID and the fire alarm, the Fiat crisis fire alarm that you're pulling now is you are
actually talking about numbers in a timeline, right? So you've got 90 days as a number. You've got a
a prediction or a bet now as it's turned into of $1 million in Bitcoin. And that is a fairly short
duration timeline. So you must think that this is going to happen like all at once using that
phraseology. So suddenly now this is the all at once moment. And I'm wondering why you think
that. Like why? I mean, this is almost like hyper-bitcoinization or the inflation away of
all fiat is sort of a long-term crypto prediction anyway. That's what happens.
to Fiat over 70 to 100 year time periods when, you know, nation states go on the decline in a new
monetary policy regime. But you're saying this is going to happen in 90 days. This is going to happen
in fast motion. And by the way, it's happening now. And here's your tweet warning about it.
So can you tell us why? Like, why do you feel confident enough to put numbers around this in timelines?
So, you know, the exact state of the world in 90 days, I don't know, but I think it's going to be
quite different than today. And the main thing I wanted to get people's, see, this is not really
a bet on the price of Bitcoin. It's a bet on the devaluation of the dollar. This is the Honky
Cruz hyperinflation table. First of all, hyperinflation is much more common than people think.
And second, when it happens, it's much more rapid than people think. People basically lose faith
in a currency and they go to a competing reserve currency. Okay. Now, historically, that has been
something where they escaped their local currency for the U.S. dollar. But until now, see, the big
difference versus 2008 is today the U.S. dollar is no longer too big to fail. There are two competitors
to the dollar. There's a RINBin B and there's Bitcoin. And as I'll get to what is currently
happening is all, you know how people have said that the U.S. is going to monetize the debt?
You probably heard that before, right? Yeah. So everybody knew it was going to happen, but not exactly
how. And it's happening now. When I was digging into the SVB situation, I was trying to be like,
how could a $200 billion bank be insolvent? Take a look at this graph. This is not my graph. This is from
FDIC. This is unrealized gains losses on securities. Do you see the 2008, 2009 over on the left-hand
side? Okay. And now look at the yawning losses that are there in 2022. Okay.
Right. I mean, this looks like, similar to, I guess, the San Bagman-Fried, FDX analogy.
of like you have a balance sheet with a lot of trash on it and you have a market downturn
and they've all lost like 80 to 90 percent of their value and now what's propping up your
assets. That's sort of what this graph looks like to me. And this is across not just one bank,
it's all the banks. One way of thinking about it is, you know, sometimes people are in debt and
then there's a balloon payment at the end and then they're done. They just can't pay it, right?
They just don't have the money. This is kind of like that. That's like, you know, the one of
things that the financial system is set up to be opaque, right? It's set up to, like in 2008,
if the mortgage crisis is happening on Twitter, people would say, tell me you don't know what a
CDO is without telling me you don't know what a CDO is. And the whole point is that nobody knows
what a CDO is, including the guy who's selling it and the guy who's buying it. They've all
fooled themselves and thinking they're so smart. And actually, the thing underlying is a house that
sucks because nobody's paying with a mortgage. And no amount of financial engineering can do anything
other than hide that eventual mark to market on the thing with the guy who's paying zero money.
Do you see what I'm saying?
Right?
And in the same way, what's happened today is all of this financial engineering has led to a house
of cards where the money is gone, right, underneath it.
Like the banks literally don't have, if you came to them, this gigantic hole on the right
hand side, if people came to them and actually asked for their dollars out, the banks would
not be able to liquidate their assets to get their dollars out. Okay. And so for the whole year,
they hid this. You know, with the right decoder lens from where we are now, three, four months later,
you can see, huh, wait, it's not one bank. It's not SVB. It's a lot of banks, right? And, but look at the
thing at the end, right? It's like, you know, $423 billion during the first six months of
year grew larger, right? This time bomb was growing and the bank regulators were aware of it. And they
weren't notifying you the depositors, they were just thinking they could kick the can again somehow.
We all know as part of a fractional reserve system, if there is a run on the bank, there's not
enough dollars in the bank account to meet the demands of that run on the bank. But this is somehow
worse because we have these securities propping up the assets of the bank and of depositors'
funds that have just lost massive amounts of value. And so if you mark them to market,
we are much further underwater than just the...
typical fractional reserve banking system.
You know, one of the things I learned in kind of tweeting about this is, just like
Bankman Fried had these weird self-deception tricks or taboos or whatever within the company
that stopped people from asking the right questions, all of these bankers basically do not
think of the Fed as an actor, right?
And so they think of them as a referee.
So first let me explain what the reality of the situation is, and then let me explain
what they think it is and why they haven't told you about it.
The reality of the situation is, while it's complicated, the Federal Reserve effectively gave
guidance to banks to buy certain assets that it then massively depreciated all at once
and crushed every single bank that trusted the Fed, their balance sheets all at once,
and that's responsible for this huge devaluation here.
And the thing is, though, that like a lot of finance guys, they think,
that it's like weird to blame the Fed.
Okay?
Why do I think it's weird to blame the Fed?
They think of the Fed as like a referee.
You know how people used to say, oh, you can't blame the media.
If you're a bad guy, the media will call you out.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
Like as in a referee, as in neutral, kind of an arbitrar of laws.
Yes, as in neutral, right?
Just like people used to think the media was like a neutral referee of just like
the political system or whatever.
It just calls balls and strikes.
We have, you know, we don't have any opinions on anything, right?
I mean, that's ludicrous today, right?
they're constantly attacking people. People thought that the Fed was like a neutral referee of the system
and it's just like deliberation to figure out what the right rate to set is and beyond politics
and so on and so forth, right? If you're a fund manager, you simultaneously think, okay, the Fed is
all important. Powell is more powerful than the president. You know, we listen to everything the Fed says,
our algorithms trigger on their every word. Oh, they're so, so important. But then if somebody says,
oh, this bank got decimated because the Fed hiked rates, they'll say, loll, what a loser.
You know, look, you can't take everything the Fed says at their word.
It's your responsibility to hedge.
You know, it's not the Fed's, you know, the Fed just puts out guidance.
You, you know, you just got to make your own book and so on and so forth.
Okay.
Now, think about that, right?
That's two different things.
It's first, the Fed is all powerful.
And second, the Fed is never to be held responsible.
See what I'm saying?
Okay.
And the reason that if you are a fund manager, you can't control.
the Fed, you just have to react to it. It's almost as if they're like setting the laws of the video
game that you're playing. And so you can't be a wimp. You just have to win within the laws
of the video game. Do you see what I'm saying? Okay. And people are like, you know what? Once in a while
they'll complain about a call by the ref, but fundamentally they think of the Fed is legitimate.
How could they think any other way? You know what? You're not going to have somebody setting
interest rates? Well, that would mean we can't help people. We can't have full employment.
That would be terrible, right? Oh, where you're saying they should just publish an interest rate and
stick to it? No, no, no, no. They need to have a data-dependent policy path where they go and
assimilate all the information from the world on the state of affairs and they update the interest rate.
But what that's like, by the way, and this is like a really fundamental rude and branch critique,
imagine steering a car by mail. Okay, you've got your car, all right? You drop a postcard out the window.
Okay, you wait like, you know, a week for it to come back and then you turn left or right.
What's going to happen? You're going to crash, right? Because
the time constant of steering is seconds, and this is like weeks, right? That's like what the Fed is
where it's getting in data that's this lagging data. Oh, inflation is up. That's a, that's a result of
so many millions of people doing all these things. Okay, now let's change interest rates or whatever,
and they're changing like a single parameter. Okay. And it's a highly political process.
So TLDR is a lot of this stuff is actually intentionally meant to be complicated, but the simple
version is the Fed bankrupted the banks. Okay. It bankrupted its own banks. At your end,
2021, only four community banks had tangible equity capital ratios below 5%. That number increased to
33 at June 30th, 2022, indicating less ability to sustain economic shocks. Okay, there's some
finance bro language there. Can you help us parse through what that actually means? Yeah,
it basically means there are 33 banks where the money is gone. And so I want to take a moment
and like summarize everything here and everything. Yeah. The reason why,
you're saying Uncle Sam Bankman-Fried is that, okay, so FTCS, insolvent, did some funny accounting tricks to
maintain pseudo-solvency, public solvency, and basically, Bologna, you're saying that that is now true
for the entire banking, commercial banking system of the United States of America.
And even more than that, because it's also true for all of these foreign banks, it's even
bigger than that.
Every foreign bank that bought U.S. treasuries.
And by the way, when I was saying this, people are like, oh, about.
you're so crazy, blah, blah, blah.
But did you see what they just did with the swap lines?
Okay, look at this.
So what are we looking at here?
Breaking Market News from the U.S. Federal Reserve.
This says the Fed and the central banks of the U.S., sorry,
the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, and European Central Bank,
and Switzerland announced a coordinated action to improve liquidity provision
through the standing U.S. dollar liquidity swap lines.
Doing that on the weekend, it seems like the central bankers always do
like really important things on the weekend.
like when they're in crisis mode.
And I guess that happened on a Sunday, Sunday the 19th.
So what does this mean?
What does this, these words around improve liquidity provision through standing U.S.
dollar liquidity swap lines.
What is that?
Again, the thing I want to stress over and over again is they will mock you and attack
you for not knowing every piece of their lingo because it's like, it's what camouflage
is to like a venomous sneak.
Okay.
The whole point is to sneak up on you, bite you, okay?
And one way to think about it, by the camouflage of the domestic, it's a good analogy
because the snake didn't design its camouflage.
It was just evolutionary, okay?
The finance guys, because the thing is, see, in our sector of the world, if you're investing,
if you're doing, at least in the tech sector, if you're putting money into companies,
it's a single primary investment, and they're going and building a product and selling it, right?
That's something where both parties, all parties can win, the customer, the company,
the investor and so on.
Finance, though, is a fundamentally zero-sum world often where one party is going to lose, okay?
And they have evolved a bunch of camouflage tricks to hide what they're doing from themselves
and from others.
And the whole point, I mean, there's a saying in finance, how are you going to screw me, right?
Everything is hidden in the fine print and it's like, ha, you signed that, but you didn't
think of that, you know, the whole point is it's like adversarial, all right?
And just to show you how, like, insane that gets, all right?
You know, one of the things I found that the whole, you know, how people are like, oh, you know, you tech guys, you should have known that the bank was insolvent.
It was in a public statement and so on and so.
Remember how they were saying stuff like that, right?
Well, it is something where the insolvency was intentionally hidden in a footnote.
Evidence of deception.
Okay.
Now, by the way, it wasn't just SVB that was deceiving. What happened was the Fed surprised the banks, okay, by giving them a bunch of assets and then, or selling a bunch of assets they'd then surprise devalued. The panicking banks then decide to surprise the depositors by hiding their gigantic unrealized losses. And that is the time bomb that is about to blow up the entire Fed-centered economy. Okay. They're blanking out the stuff that they used to show, to show their giant losses. And they just,
buried it in a footnote, okay, the fact that they were insolving.
What are we looking at here?
This is a SVB documents?
This is SVB's financials.
Got it.
Okay.
So the point is, look, you know, the EU makes every company put some stupid cookie
disclosure on their website.
But the regulator is allowing a $200 billion bank to bury its insolvency in a footnote.
Okay.
And let me explain, that's what I mean by like a poisonous steaks camouflage.
right? The thing is, you paid for, you know, with your tax and so, and you paid for regulators
to give you a high trust banking system. What the hell are you paying the regulators for
if they are literally covering up the insolvency of the bank? We're talking about something
where 40,000 companies and all of their employees were banking at an insolvent bank and not
notified about it by the regulator that they were paying to protect them. You see what I'm saying?
What are you alleging as the incentive here? Apology says, what am I alleging incentive? Yeah, like the
poisonous snake has an incentive.
either, you know, defense or attack or something like this. What is the incentive of central banks
and regulators? Why would they want to hide this within the system? Exactly. Well, so here's the thing.
If the entire system is going bust, okay, and you have been handed a flaming bag of dog poop,
which, you know, the only, the defense I can make is, while certainly the mismanagement of the last few years
has been historical, the debts of the U.S. have been building up for a long time. So there's always
incentive to kick the can. Okay. Now the can can can't be.
kicked. So they are just trying to hide it for as long as they can. Suddenly, it blew up with
SVB. If all the banks go bust, the regulator has a problem. So if they're going to go bust,
the regulator needs to find a scapegoat. And the scapegoat is either the tech guy or the Trump guy or
both, or the people who were getting their money out or whatever. If it was discovered that the bank
regulators and the central bank had caused a crisis and covered up the crisis, would that look good for
them? No. So this chaos that's about to unfold, essentially what I was able to discover was that the
devaluation of the dollar, the monetization of the debt that Dahlia talked about, whether intentionally or
emergently, they're doing it now. They're not calling it that. They're calling it bailouts of banks,
but this is actually the, you know, messy devaluation of the dollar, where all the debts they
couldn't print or printed at once. And if they thought that, and if they thought that, and if
they said that, because they've got this flaming bag of dog poop, how do they stick it with
somebody without getting blamed, right? If they just came up front and said, we're not going to be able to
make our bond payments. The U.S. can't pay its debts. Therefore, we're just going to print monopoly money,
wee, and your purchasing power goes away, right? Then there would be attention on what they were doing.
And by the way, this is just the most extreme version of something that's always happened, okay,
where often regulators cause a problem, and then, you know, it blows up in public. And then
What happens is more failure and more funding.
Okay?
Like every crisis powers them up because, let's say, for example, there's some drug company
and it's got an issue, right?
Bad drug.
Drug company goes to zero.
FDA is broadened and they're spanked in Congress.
Oh, you did such a bad job.
And you know what it ends with?
Okay, how much budget do you need to make sure this doesn't happen again?
Even failure mode is success in that world.
More failure, more funding.
Because people can't concede.
even alternative to FDA. So it's failures, every, you know, it's, it has an incentive to either cause
or turn something into a crisis because then it's a big deal, right? And, and again, this is
something where is it conscious? Sometimes it's like, oh, they'll exaggerate and they'll say,
oh, you crypto guys are criminals. Like what Gensler is doing, that's conscious, right? He's making
you guys out to be criminal so he can get more budget and power. Um, he, you know, but sometimes
it's like just the, you know, the emergent incentives where it's like, oh, if this thing blows up,
well, we get more budget and, you know, like, well, I guess now we have the authority to go and regulate
that thing that we screwed up. And the way of thinking about it that's outside the FDA or outside
the Fed is, do you have an alternate regulator? Right. Don't you want a regulator, which will tell
you in a trustworthy way that your deposits are still there, right? That's a blockchain.
Apology, before we get to kind of blockchain, because some of this has happened so fast.
for people, right?
So, like, I was just saying, like, it was a week and a half ago,
and we first started seeing, like, Silvergate go under,
and then the crisis with a Silicon Valley Bank.
And then just last weekend, so not the previous weekend, but one before,
it seemed like, you know, the Fed, the U.S. government, FDIC, came out and said,
look, all depositors funds are going to be made whole.
We're going to basically implicitly.
We're going to stop the banking crisis here, no more bank runs.
And then last week we started to see, oh, okay, well, maybe this has spread to Europe and Credit Suisse.
But it's just one bank, right?
And it's like you hear rumors and you hear rumblings and you hear all of these things.
And I think at every stage, the general public is like, okay, well, I don't understand finance.
And I'm not surprised that bankers did banker things.
And there's a few rogue actor bankers here and banks.
And the Fed is taking care of that.
FDIC is taking care of that.
this is not going to spread any further.
I think that's the
the general feeling of the public right now.
Why do you think this is more severe?
Why do you think they can't just issue and say,
all depositors, funds are going to be secured,
FDIC will cover them.
Don't worry.
So let me show you something.
Ready?
Yeah.
Put this up on screen.
Jean-Claude Juncker.
When it becomes serious, you have to lie.
You know who this guy is?
I've never heard that name.
Former head of the Eurozone.
Okay.
This is central banker.
And what he's basically saying is when the system is actually melting down, you have to give public statements saying everything's all right while you frantically, you know, what this is the equivalent of, okay? Remember, FTX is fine, assets are fine? Right. Yes. Like, that is literally what is happening now. The series, the fact that the Federal Reserve has put out multiple statements over the last few weeks that are like, we're still solvent. It's still there, you know, et cetera, et cetera. Like,
Everything is on fire and we're all going to die.
It's a closer translation of that.
I mean, so the whole point is for them to spend whatever trust they have and hope you don't exit the system.
So March 12, 2023, they said, we're only going to print $25 billion and it won't be necessary drawn to funds.
In four days, it was up to $2 trillion.
And really, it's going to be infinity.
Okay.
So, I mean, it's funny, but it's also bananas, right?
So this is a new era.
Okay, this is the final era where they have found they can't hike rates anymore.
They are going to, all people are looking for their money in the banks. And so rather than those
people coming up with, oh my God, the money is gone, they're printing tons of money to give it
to these banks. And if, and the banks are taking it. And if you look at, um, the way they're doing
it is this is swap lines in the BTF program. And Arthur Hayes has some good, if you, if you want
to know all the technical details of exactly how they're doing this shit, Arthur Hayes is the 150 IQ guy
who can talk to you about it. Okay. As I said, it's set up to be complicated.
and whatnot and like, oh, no, they're not actually printing money.
Ha ha, you're so naive.
But you know the 50 IQ, 100 IQ, 150 IQ guy, right?
Basically, gigantic amounts of new money is rushing in to because they believe there's
going to be a ton of bank runs, right?
And the reason is those bonds that they had in their portfolios that were marked down,
well, the Fed said, you know what?
We're going to give you money that will make them seem as if they're worth what they were worth.
So if you lost 15 cents of the dollar, we're going to pretend that it's like $100.
cents on the dollar. It's just like the market
treasures. They bought these assets at par,
right? And again, it's all this obfuscation
to cover
for the fact that basically what
Dahlia talked about, the giant print
that monetizes the debt, the digital
devaluation of the dollar is here. This is like the final
banking crisis. So Bologi,
here's a part that I think some people don't
understand, though, is like, so if the Fed
intervenes and provides all of this confidence
to the market, and they play
the act and they seem super confident,
there's no problem here. Of course, all of the assets
are backed, this is the U.S. banking system, they're always backed in a very serious tone,
and the market actually buys that, it might be a self-fulfilling prophecy in that it stops the
bank run.
Now, one thing I read in Arthur Hayes article, though, is that that won't stop the arbitrage
opportunity of things like money markets, where if you have deposits in a bank and you're
only receiving, like, you know, a fraction of a percent of interest, you're going to want to go
chase the higher interest payment on your dollars somewhere else. And so there might be a bleed
out of the banking system into like money market ETFs. And depositors aren't stupid over the long
run. And of course, they're not going to let the bank essentially make money on them.
And so they're going to withdraw. Where's the withdrawal coming from, I suppose?
It's a great question. The confidence is still there.
So what they are counting on is amidst all this chaos that you wire money from one bank to another,
you wire money to all the big banks.
Only if you turn into Bitcoin are you outside the system.
What's happening is all of the small banks, all the tech banks, all to think different banks
are getting wrecked.
And the big guys are coming in as saviors with printed money from the Fed and ability
from the Fed to just scoop up all the small banks.
And the end state is in a panic, people are like, let me wire money to the saviors.
Thank you, government, right?
Which is both arsonist and firefighter.
Okay. So they set all these small banks on fire by destroying all of their balance sheets by giving them this directive to buy these bonds that they devalued. Again, whether intentional or emergent behavior doesn't actually matter. You can describe it as if it was intentional, even if it's emergent, you know, like an ant colony. Every individual ant isn't like, you know, sketching out a blueprint, but they're responding to local incentives. Okay. So the net effect of this right now without the bit signal is all these small banks go to zero. Your
bank goes to zero and you in a panic wire your money to a big bank and that's a trap.
Now you're like, I'm with the federal government now.
I'm in the too big to fail bank.
Woo.
Crisis over.
Thank you.
Fed.
Fed's a hero.
They save the day.
Right.
And now you're in some like, you know, 5%, you know, money market thing or you're, you've locked
it up in treasuries or you're locked up just in a big bank.
And here's the thing. Now, at the end, when all the small banks are dead, all the community banks are dead, all of the tech banks are dead, all of the crypto banks are dead, okay? And you've got only the big banks at the end of the banking crisis. Do you know, the other thing that they chose to kind of like, you know, despite all of this, you know, it's a very busy time for the Federal Reserve. But they managed to get out this press release. Did you see this?
This is a press release saying Federal Reserve announces July launch for the Fed Now service, right?
Which is their...
Yeah, that's their CBDC.
Yeah, they're settlement layer.
So, again, I'm not saying, I don't know exactly, it's very hard to say how intentional versus how emergent it is.
But the plan, if you're described as a plan, looks something like this.
The U.S. has debts it can't pay.
saddle all of the banks with these giant, you know, these giant unpayable, like these giant liabilities,
have tons of them go bust, come in, swooping as a hero, printing the money so people are like,
thank you, Fed, you got me my money back.
And then also have them all centralized at the big banks in the process.
And then amidst all the chaos, you've got like four banks in the U.S.
And like one bank in Canada or whatever the number is in each place.
and now you just roll out of CBDC
and now the banks that were too big to fail
are too big to escape
because they won't allow
interconvertibility into crypto
and all of the crazy
China-style tracking
can be applied. Moreover,
everybody's probably going to be much poorer
in 90 days after,
I mean, to an extent that might be
you know, hard to describe, okay?
But like if the West actually does
effectively default on the dollar
and all of this stuff which people have thought is worth a billion goes to zero, which is happening
overnight. You saw, you know, First Republic, like equity zero. Like, you're taking a lot of billion
dollar hits very fast, right? A lot of people are much poorer than they thought. And that has huge
ripple effects, right? House payments, all kinds of payments don't go through. Huge ripple effects
with the economy that we're just going to see. So in an environment of all the small banks
are dead. All the money is at big banks. People are scared. The CBDC is rolled out. And now you're
locked in to a China-style system of massive centralization. And you know, it's too big to escape.
Okay. And then they can do those things. You know, the things that are like incentives like,
oh, spend your money today or lose it. Have you seen stuff like that? Sure. Right. All the tracking and
so on. Now, again, remember the 50 IQ, 100 IQ, 150 IQ thing?
If we don't have a lens into all of the actors that set up the bomb like this, okay?
But basically, we do know what the exit is.
Amidst all of this chaos with all of these wires flying around, all of these banks,
you can do something they didn't expect you to do.
You know what that is?
You're saying buy crypto, buy Bitcoin.
Buy Bitcoin.
And the reason I say Bitcoin is, look, obviously, you know, I like you guys and I like it.
But if there's one thing, you know, if you have some relative or you have some, you know,
French does know, they'll say, what kind of Bitcoin should I buy, right?
You know, you know, they, it just has name recognition in an emergency.
People are, you're not asking people to do portfolio optimization.
Do I think on the other side of this, I think Bitcoin is gold and I think Ethereum is the
financial system.
I think that's probably right because Ethereum can scale with, you know, lots of transactions.
But, but I think also there's going to be jurisdictions that are so tired of finance that they
will be like Bitcoin maximalist jurisdictions.
And they will just not.
want, I mean, if everything goes to zero and Bitcoin is the only thing that doesn't go to zero,
you'll have like a lot of people become essentially overnight converted to Bitcoin
maximalism. And that's why I remember a year or two ago, I said Bitcoin maximalism is the most
important ideology in the world that nobody knows about. Do you guys remember saying something
like that? Right? Like you, you're going to see what I mean, okay? Because Bitcoin has
the advantage of being, I mean, it's obviously complicated with the cryptography and so on. But now it's
relatively simple, okay? And in a time of crisis, people need something simple that they can all
rally behind. That's why the bit signal. That one thing goes vertical. Everybody in the space values it.
We get to the lifeboat, okay, and the thing about it, and here's the important thing, the big difference
with Bitcoin, as opposed to every single other action within the fiat system is it's the thing that the
Fed is not directly or indirectly a system administrator over. Okay, who has root? You see what I'm saying?
Like any entry in the Bank of Japan, if the Fed wants, they can get the Bank of Japan to just delete that, freeze that account, stop it, seize it, et cetera. They've got root over this. You know, like in the Matrix, right, the guy's got the root system administrator, they've got root. So that entire U.S. financial system, they have root access. Any stock, they can freeze. They did it to the truckers, you know, the Canadian truckers, they did to the Russians, right? Anything where you are on their server and they have root, okay, they can monkey with it. And so from their perspective, you know what? Yeah, this is a huge.
huge mess with the money flying around and whatnot. But at the end of the day, it's all just going to
end up back at banks that they control. And so, who cares? It'll be like a time of chaos, but then
we'll roll out the Fed now. We'll make sure that never happens again. We'll have total control over
everything. Okay. I don't know exactly what they're thinking, but that's the result, unless you get
to Bitcoin. So your theory. That is, that is something they don't control.
To walk this through, your theory is all of the banks are underwater by a lot. And the bankers
are lying about it effectively.
And as Jean-Clauzeunker said, when it gets very serious, you have to lie.
As a bankers lied in 2008.
And you think that...
The reason is because people are forgotten how much they lied.
And bank runs are going to continue, and they're going to be faster than ever because
we are in this new digital era.
And so we've seen, you know, First Republic, SVB, just like kind of dropped to zero
overnight.
And you think that anywhere that someone flees with their money, if you go from small,
regional community bank to larger U.S. Bank, it doesn't matter because you're still effectively
inside of the Fed's system. You're in their prison. And so they're content to let you move from
some small community bank to J.P. Morgan to a money market. They don't really care because
they have root access on all of these systems. And you're saying you're making the case that
the dollar, as a result of all of this money printing that is happening through this new form of
quantitative easing, which is not called quantitative easing. It's something else. But during the
bank run, all of this money gets printed effectively. And that sends the dollar on a hyperinflation
kind of track against all commodities, maybe, but more specifically, Bitcoin, because people are
going to flee the banking system and they're going to park their assets into the only non-route
access Fed asset class that we have, which is crypto, and predominantly Bitcoin because that has
kind of the mind space for this narrative use case anyway. Is this the summary of the thesis?
Yes. There's one thing I'd add, though, which is, it's pretty good. One thing I've had is I
expect wage and price controls and so on. So prices on anything that the Fed has, like bread or
whatever, they won't allow the price of bread to go to some crazy level. They'll impose price
controls on it. So instead you just get shortages. This is what happened in the Soviet Union. The price was
low, but the good just wasn't there. Okay. So you, you know, anything that, anything where they can kind of
hide the scarcity of it, right, and blame it on the store or whatever. Remember they were trying to say,
oh my God, you greedy corporations for raising prices. Remember they were doing that? Okay. The only signal,
the one honest signal in the world that they can't fully fake, or is basically the desire to exit from the
system. That's literally what this is. Can enough people get to the Bitcoin exit in time before they
close the exits? So you are predicting they will close the exits then to Bitcoin as well.
Because they shut down Silvergate. They shut down, you know, so Silvergate, SVB, First Republic,
gosh, what's the signature? Signature was murdered. It wasn't even, right? So it's like fog of war,
as Nick Carter talked about, right? Fog of war, banks are dying. Boom. Kill.
this one, right? And some of these banks died by bank runs that the Fed itself caused. Some of them
were just pulled from licenses, but just have it happen all at the same time so it's chaos and
people can't figure it out when they're outside, okay? You know, if they're billing out all
of the U.S. banks and all of the foreign banks who are connected to the Federal Reserve System
at the same time, it's clearly a banking crisis, right? Hopefully, I mean, that, people are no
longer denying that. That's a banking crisis. And what is the effect of that banking crisis?
Well, there's basically two possible outcomes. The first is everybody trusts the banks,
at the end of the day, they wired to the banks. What's the name of this podcast?
You know it. Bankless. Bankless. And the literal nature of that, I think, is going to actually
surprise even us. Okay? Because a lot of Fiat banks will either go to zero,
or will become like Venus flytraps.
And if you are, if you put it out, you may need some fiat to pay the bills.
I recognize that, okay?
Because who knows exactly when and how all this stuff comes about, all right?
I totally recognize that.
But having at least some of your, like a good chunk of your net worth, whatever that means to you,
in Bitcoin held locally, you will have the strongest technological and social defense
on it worldwide. Because both matter. And you know why the social defense matters?
What do you mean by social defense, by the way? Yeah, that's very important. So technological
defense is, is your jurisdiction going to allow you to hold Bitcoin? Right. So there was
in the 1930s, an executive order 6102, which was effectively a gold ban on U.S. citizens' private
ownership, right? That's what you mean by, you know, social guarantees. The hold
of gold were called things like hoarders, for example, that it was just socially uncooperative
and socially unproductive and, like, evil maybe, for people to hoard away and store their
wealth, to exit the system, if you will, and to have gold bars around your house.
You know, we don't have to talk about the U.S. if you don't want to, but could you imagine this
sort of scenario playing out in jurisdictions across the world?
Well, let's just say this, okay, in the event.
right now what we're on pace for is before the fire alarm. Before ring the fire alarm,
we were on pace for dollar holders becoming bag holders, okay? A stealth digital dollar devaluation
masked as bailouts. Whether, again, whether it's intentional or emergent, doesn't matter.
But essentially, you would get all this printed money. In your fright, you'd run to the big banks,
you'd wire all the money there. You'd be locked in and centralized and it'd be this CBDC issued with
this currency that was worthless against bread or whatever, or the prices were kept low,
but the bread wasn't there. So either it's hyper, you know, serious inflation or shortages.
And by the way, one thing to keep in mind, this is a very important thing. People are like,
well, come on, dude, like 2008, it was bad, but it wasn't the end of the world, blah, blah,
right? Well, the thing is, people know that the American taxpayer bailed out the banks, right?
But what they don't know is actually the world bailed out America. You know why? The U.S.
exported its inflation. Okay. And so the thing is, if you can, if you can, there's two ways of
robbing somebody. The first way of robbing them is gun to their face. They know they're being
robbed and so on. Okay. The second way, which is much more effective, is silent robbery,
where you're even telling them that you're doing them a favor or something. Look at this.
Egyptians have tasted the bread of liberty, right? People literally set themselves on fire because
food prices were so high. Okay. You know who.
was the end of the world for, all of those previously stable countries in like Libya and Tunisia
and so on that were just basically set on fire by inflation, okay, in the early 2000s.
The Arab Spring wasn't just some, that was just absolute pandemonium and chaos caused by
essentially, okay, those people get to pay for the financial crisis. But it was so complicated
and it was so indirect that everybody can deny that that's actually what happened. Okay.
because think about how many transactions are.
It's not on a blockchain.
You can't look at it.
You can't prove that that happened exactly in that way.
You can point at some correlational numbers and so on.
But you can look at food prices spike after this printing.
And you can ask, okay, where did the inflation go?
It got shunted.
And before 2008, okay, this is the key chart.
Before 2008, Republicans and Democrats were roughly equal.
Okay?
The real GDP, they're roughly equally matched.
Afterwards, what happens?
Somehow, all the Democrats become much richer on average than all the Republican districts.
So Republicans were taxed by inflation to pay for the financial crisis.
So cantile uneffect is who gets a printed money first wins.
In 2008, the Democrats effectively taxed the Republicans and the foreign dollar holders to pay
for the bailout. That's fundamentally what happened. Okay. And the foreign dollar holders, they got,
you know, either directly and indirectly, they had riots and chaos in the Arab Spring,
and the domestic ones were impoverished. So it is not that 2008 just was okay. It's that it was shunted,
the cost of that was shunted to the invisible. Does that make sense, right? Basically,
in a sense, the most powerless person is the one without a voice, who cannot complain or
understand what is happening to them.
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We're looking at the visualizing the purchasing power of the dollar of the last century.
So we're looking at a steep decline down from 1917 until 2019.
This is Silent Theft.
Okay. It is framed as if it's good for you to take away all of your money because, oh, a little bit of inflation is good. Okay. And fundamentally, by the way, this is where Bitcoin rejects this foundational concept. That is to say, the traditional macroeconomics view is, yeah, hyperinflation is bad, but deflation is also bad. We want prices to go down. We want a little mild inflation, 2% target or whatever each year, right? And whereas the Bitcoin view is,
hyperinflation is, of course, a catastrophe, but inflation is also just a slow-motion catastrophe.
Deflation and even hyper-deflation are good if they're caused by technology, meaning, for example, with Moore's Law, the price of transistor, I mean, it's not exactly this.
Transistor density doubles every 18 months. That's a technical difference. But let's just say the price of computing, you know, drops in half every 18 months as an approximate version, right? That's hyper-deflation. The cost of something is dropping, right?
rapidly. And the traditional macro theory would say, when deflation happens, people hoard, they don't
buy because of price, right? Except with hyperdeflation of computers, even though they keep getting
cheaper very fast, we buy a lot of them. It's a crucial part of the modern world, right? So the
macroeconomic theory that hyperdeflation is bad, they didn't even think hyperdeflation exists,
by the way. But the macroeconomic theory of deflation and hyperdeflation being bad is not actually
with the reality. The reality is when you use technology to reduce the cost of something
that's actually good. Okay. This
fundamental thing is that, you know, one of the thing about it is American Keynesianism is bad,
just like Soviet economics was bad. It's just slightly less bad, but we don't realize
that it's actually also bad. D.C. I'm saying it's also fake and what have you. It's,
go ahead. It's the lesser, lesser of two evils, right? And the way that I think that what you're
saying, Bologi is like the Bitcoin, the Bitcoin meme between Ethereum and while you're saying,
like, oh, I like you guys is because, like, obviously me and Ryan are known to be, uh,
Ethereum leaning. But I've always been of the mindset that it's Bitcoin during times of war and
Ethereum during times of peace. And I think the crisis that you are suggesting is that we are in
wartime right now. This is a crisis moment where there is a flight. And so this is not a time
to be thinking about innovation in layer two's. This is a time to be thinking about safety, simplicity,
redundancy, because this is a crisis moment. That's exactly right. That is exactly right, David.
And, you know, that's why I tweeted something like, look, I'm not a Bitcoin maximalist,
but we are all Bitcoin maximalist down.
Like, you know, in Indian mythology, like, you know, the third eye, right?
Like, imagine, like, the third laser eye, you know, kind of opening, you know?
That's literally what I'm talking about, okay?
We are truly in wartime mode, and there's a digital fire burning that not everybody can see
yet, right?
That's why I put up the fire alarm, okay?
When I did that, people are still watching TikTok or whatever.
and look at the tweets around that time. And now the entire world was talking about, wait, could the dollar hyperinflated against me? They started to actually, you know, whether they yelled at me or not, okay, before I rang the fire alarm. And by the way, I did it with the bit signal first before taking the bet. The bet was just got even more people's attention because it's very specific kind of thing, right? Bit signal got a lot of attention in its own right. The point was not to get attention for its own sake. The point was to get attention to get to the lifeboat because the final digital devaluation of the dollar is coming. And,
And did I show you the chart of the hyperinflations, how quickly that can happen, right?
And we just went through a bunch of graphs.
We're like, First Republic, it just went to zero like this, right?
Signature to zero, they just shut it down like over a weekend.
The bank printing went to $150 billion, you know, in a few days, like over the weekend.
David, I'm so glad that you get that, right?
That in wartime, Bitcoin, because Bitcoin will be protected by enough governments,
Bitcoin is well understood, and that will be a fundamental cleavage in the world, which is,
it's going to be, are they like, you know, atheists, monotheist, polytheist, right?
You know the concept?
Okay.
So in the network state book, I have this concept of God state and network, okay?
And you remember we were talking about that, you know, and the question is, what is your
mental model of the world is the most powerful force?
Is it Almighty God?
Is it the U.S. military, which is, you know, the state, right, or the Chinese military?
or is it encryption, right?
God's state network.
And then from that, you can actually have, obviously you have combinations and stuff, I talk about them in the book.
But from that, you could have like an atheist, monotheist, polytheist.
So, for example, on the god Leviathan, right, atheist doesn't believe in God.
The monotheist is like Christian, Muslim, you know, Jewish, etc.
The polytheist is like a Hindu, believes in multiple gods, right?
Okay.
Now with the state, you have the atheist doesn't believe in a state.
They're like an anarchist, okay?
Monostatist, that's like an advocate for empire, like a Chinese nationalist or, you know, like a dollar nationalist.
That's what's going to, I think, going to come.
And then the third is you have a polystatus, like a digital nomad.
They hop between states.
Okay.
And then with coins, you have a no-coiner, okay, like fiat only.
Okay, they hate coins, okay.
A monocoyner, like a maximalist, Bitcoin Maximus.
And then you have a polycoiner, which is me in normal times.
Okay.
But in wartime, we have to just focus all of our energy behind something.
And it's not a portfolio strategy thing.
It is not even – and this is very important.
It's like people just don't get it yet.
This is not the make money time because everybody's going to be a lot poorer soon, unfortunately.
Okay.
The actual devaluation of the dollar means the entire party that we lived in where things
we were all much richer than we think, right?
That's about to come to an end.
And exactly how much poorer we are, I don't know.
But like, you know, America as a new Argentina is not a bad mental model, in my view, right?
Do you know how Argentina was?
I mean, it obviously still exists, but the rich country that became poor?
Yeah.
The Argentine agricultural industry is amazing.
But then just corruption set in government mismanagement of money at all, just it broke an entire,
what was once a very rich country.
and it's just hyperinflation and government corruption just broke it all.
If you're really, really, really, really bad at capital allocation, a rich country will become poor.
You're saying the time has come where like we kicked the can down the road, but then it fell off the cliff.
Exactly.
The sidewalk ends here.
Bankruptcy happens gradually and then suddenly.
And so now the question is the dollar holder is a bag holder, right?
At the end of the day, now the fire alarm has been wrong.
It used to, it would have been without the fire alarm.
everybody would have just been hit by this digital Pearl Harbor, right?
Because the whole thing, you know, like FTCS, assets are fine, don't worry, et cetera, et cetera.
Boom, Venus flytrap, you're done, right?
Because you didn't get your money out in time, right?
So Uncle Sam Bankman-Fried is saying assets are fine, et cetera.
And if you have, and by the way, it's not just a dollar, by the way.
It's basically any fiat currency that is controlled by the U.S.
or really by China, okay, because that's the other sector.
I'll come to China, right?
Any fiat currency, if you saw that thing where it's like, I mean, I'll clarify because I think there are like the Saudis or there are countries that have fiat currencies that the U.S. does not control.
Okay.
India and whatnot.
Those may, those will probably, in my view, after this crisis, eventually be gold or digital gold backed.
Okay.
So that combination of gold plus digital gold.
Gold will be like a state to state thing where, you know, like states will be able to trade that
amongst themselves and it'll be very ritualized and infrequent.
Okay.
But it'll happen.
But then digital gold will become important.
And so literally you'll need gold and or digital gold to back your currency.
It will kind of go back to the 19th century after this fiat crisis.
And all the stuff that we've talked about kind of in crypto, it'll just like happen very, very fast.
A particularly extreme version of when I talk about like absolutely insane inability to allocate resources is this.
20 years so built a bathroom.
They held a ribbon cutting in a conference and the photo just tells it all.
That's a California state senator and a bunch of people there with a press conference
cutting a toilet paper to open a single stall bathroom.
Well, Audrey, do you subscribe to the whole fourth turning idea?
Yes.
Yeah.
This is just kind of feels very fourth turning.
It's very fourth turning.
Well, so the idea of the fourth turning is that there's like these four cycles of generations and they all relate to each other.
But the gist of it to put it very, very reductively is like the whole meme of good times make weak men and weak men make bad times.
And I think the point that you're trying to make with a bunch of just of our least.
leaders are government leaders who are mocking to cut toilet paper with their fingers to announce
the launch of a single stall public bathroom is a bunch of perhaps weak men who are about to create
some bad times because we are misallocating our funds. And then the downstream net effect
of this is that we, you know, make bad financial capital allocation choices. But then we try
and cover it up because we are weak men not taking responsibility. And we can do that for
so only so long. And this is also highly actually related to Ray Dalio's whole entire idea of
macro power cycles. And so a lot of this is all kind of like lining up. And I definitely see the
point. And this, all of this is what you're saying is like you said at the beginning,
this isn't necessarily your bet, which is how this whole thing got started, your bet that
Bitcoin hits $1 million inside of 90 days isn't a bet about Bitcoin. It's a bet about the
devaluation of the dollar.
And also you said at the very beginning is like there's only two real banks.
There's the Federal Reserve and there's Bitcoin.
And I actually also 100% take the point that like.
That's such a good quote.
That's great.
Great.
Do you trust?
And I'll also take the point that just like it's not about Ethereum and all of its smart
contracts or all that, all that cool stuff.
It's all about just like people are going to run and they're going to flee and they're
not going to think too critically about where they're going.
they're going to see collapsing banks.
And this is a function of your average Joe or your average money manager.
And like, oh, banks are collapsing.
And I kind of see the devaluation of the dollar.
What is my inert spinal reflex?
Bitcoin.
It's Bitcoin.
That's my spinal reflex.
That's where I'm going to run to.
And I think that's really the punchline that you're kind of like leading up to, right?
That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
It is the shelling point, right?
You know, basically, you know, the concept of the shelling point?
It's like coordinating without coordinating, right?
Right.
Yep.
For example, if, right, so you tell people, hey, meet me in New York City, right?
And there's various selling points people can come up with, but many people will say, okay, I'll meet in front of the Empire State Building.
Because Statue of Liberty, they might say, but that's like kind of an islandish thing or it might say the clock in Times Square.
I was going to say the Times Square.
Yeah, that's right.
So it's not a perfect example, but it is the concept, or let's say you need to meet in London.
Where's it going to be Big Ben?
Right.
So that's a better example.
And San Francisco will be Golden Gate Bridge, right? That's like the iconic landmark, you know, right? So the shelling point is how people coordinate without coordinating based on their prior information. And that's what Bitcoin is, right? It is, it is basically the thing that everybody in our space respects, every crypto exchange supports. It has social defense. It has, you know, I'm not saying, I'm not saying we will win. There's going to be some serious attacks.
but I'm saying we might be able to win, right?
The question is whether the currency of the people, by the people, for the people will not perish from this earth.
And I know that sounds crazy right now, okay?
But that's what this one is about, because the thing about Bitcoin is it can't be seized with the key press.
Right.
Okay.
It means that all of that stealth seizure that was happening there, you know, that's just like hitting button
on a key and, you know, okay, there's a billion dollars here, but all of that can't happen
anymore because it's outside the system.
It's escape the system.
It's literally exited the matrix, right?
And then some interesting things are going to happen.
And so people need to sort of be just locked on philosophically.
I mean, the interesting about this, I was going to write an article.
Actually, I'm in the middle of writing it, which is that Bitcoin maximalists are best positioned
like mentally for what's about to happen in my view.
And it's going to be fast even for them.
Okay.
Hyper-bitquinization refers to not simply the, it is the collapse of all fiat currencies against Bitcoin.
Okay.
It is a gigantic global, quote, redistribution of wealth in a sense.
But it's basically like all of the bills of all of the people that have run Keynesian macroeconomics, because they kick the can't, kick the can, kick the can.
They didn't have, you know, at least the British, they gradually handed it over to the next people.
They gradually handed it over to the Americans.
But the internet is what comes, the internet is the next America.
I would like to see how this maps into your understanding.
And so this is Martin Coppulman saying, detect the pattern.
And we've got a bunch of two different kinds of banks, United States banks and Chinese banks.
All the Chinese banks are up into the right.
All the American banks are down into the right.
Yeah.
How does this map into what you're talking about here?
So some people are probably moving deposits.
See, what the Fed has now signaled is that the – and actually, the best I can show it, do you see Moody?
Moody has downgraded the entire U.S. banking system.
Okay?
The banking system is negative.
Okay.
You know how like San Francisco, remember I used to say like the ascending world and not used to say – I still say – it's not about first world or third world.
It's the ascending world and the descending world, right?
You know, and if you've been to San Francisco, it's not an ascending world.
world place. It's a descending world place. It's a, you know, there's, it's poop in the streets and
needles and it's like worse than it was 10, 20 years ago, whereas India's ascending world, right?
The U.S. banking system outlook is negative. Here's a thing. Powell has turned America into
Argentina. The series of bank runs and currency crises and printing and so on that's about to begin
means you will obviously have to have some money in the U.S. banking system to pay your bills
for, you know, whatever, so long as this crisis goes on, okay? However,
people are going to learn that you cannot trust the state. You can't trust the U.S. state. It's like a South American, you know, corrupt government, but at massive scale, right? So a ton of people are going to lose faith in the centralized state all at once when the money is gone. And if you look at the other tweet I sent, many Fiat banks are dead, many more are going to die, all because of the Fed, because Powell ain't Satoshi. And the U.S. is run by heirs who wrecked institutions they inherited, including the accounts of dollar holders.
And after the Fed kills its own banks, will you want your money in a U.S. bank,
and a system with insane bank runs where regulators deceive depositors,
Powell made America Argentina.
So the internet is a new America.
All the next banks are crypto, where one BTC equals one BTC, the new reserve currency
of the world.
What's hard to believe about this, though, apology, is like this is quite the statement
that it happens now and that it happens so fast.
Yep.
that's the part I can't wrap my head around.
I mean, obviously from the inception of bankless and a lot of people are in this
crypto journey because we see what's going on in the background.
But the idea that all of this could happen over the next 90 days, that's the part that's
boggling to me.
Like, I always expected this to be sort of a decades-long play here.
But you're saying it's here.
And like, what is your certainty that this is the fire alarm that this is actually happening now?
Like, would you give, is it, it can't be 100% confidence.
Is it in the, in the 90% zone?
I don't know, but I'm going to show you just to read, you know, a bunch of digital graphs.
Okay.
So here's with very, relatively little forewarning.
Okay.
There is some warning.
And if you go back to December 2020, 22, they're like, you know, banks are going back
to the discount window again.
It's not something they were doing for a while.
And it's because the ones that had bought these bonds or whatever were like,
I need some money.
You guys crushed me.
you know, can you give me some money?
Or, you know, I don't know what all the reasons were, right?
But here's another one where you had some warning and then it's digital, right?
Okay.
Here's another.
Yeah, you had some warning there's decline and then it's digital at the end.
You see what I'm saying?
Right?
By digital, you mean like it's gone and it's gone.
It's analog up until the end and then you enter the digital age.
Digital death.
Right?
It's continuous.
and it's discrete. It's an analog curve and then just sudden death. It's not like a gradual
decline all the way to the end. Okay. You see my point on these? This is like these are not,
there's not a graph sign making up. I see it can happen. It's just so hard to fathom that it happens to
the Fed, that it happens to the dollar, that it happens to the United States of America.
I know. Well, I think really the point here is that this has been the long-term vision of
this has been predicted by the Bitcoiners.
And I think even Bologi is saying that like the Bitcoin is happening so fast it's
going to actually boggle the Bitcoiners minds.
And like of course, like humans aren't supposed to, we're not really used to being able
to think in these terms.
Humans don't think in exponential terms.
And so to think that if this idea about that Bology is presenting here is correct,
if that's true, like we are about to enter a phase change that is also accelerated by
technology. Like, we're already watching that with the bank runs. And so it's not only, not only is it
one of these times where, like, decades happens inside of weeks, but we've also never had one
of those moments of history where a decade happens in weeks with all of the technology that we
have. Yeah. So it's, this is like World War I or something like that. When people were
entering World War I, they were starting it. First of all, by the way, let me show you that there
is some forewarning. Okay. So take a look at the next link I sent you. So since inception, the
US dollar, the smart money has been voting against a dollar and entering Bitcoin.
This has been a joke chart, but it's actually a really important chart.
You have had forewarning that the dollar is going to zero against Bitcoin for 13 years.
It's actually just like some of those other charts where it was like continuous, you know,
and then it was discreet.
I think part of the troubling thing here is like if what you're saying is correct, though,
right?
So Bitcoin appreciates, but like isn't that the end of the United States?
States. I mean, if the dollar hyperinflates, we're in for real bad times in the U.S.
and I guess I might say Western liberal democracies as a whole. And so that is hard medicine
to swallow as well, if that's what you're describing. I know. I know. So here's the thing.
So again, I'm not sure what to say, because the problem is, if I tell you what my world model is,
So the thing is, you know, there's people who are like, oh, no, you can't ever panic people, you know, alarm.
I'm like, look, I'm not, I never actually call for, quote, panic.
I, what I call for is understanding the severity of the situation and taking, um, calm, conscious steps to ensure yourself against it, okay?
You know, I actually did a good job.
I'm very glad that Dahlio published his book, right?
right, principles. Do you remember this came out last year? Yeah, it was great. Right. So big devaluations
are abrupt and episodic rather than evolutionary. The six major currency transitions that have
happened before, I've just been like, once the alternative appears, the old one just kind of
disappears. And we've kind of felt that the U.S. has been running on reruns, right? Marvel movies
over and over again. We've got 70-year-old Fed chair and Trump and Biden and so on, where people are still
like refound the communist Chinese you know like they're still like in this kind of 1980s cold war war
even um and you know I'm just kind of make I have nothing against Southerners I like you know I'm
saying like or it's like oh my God we're we're standing up for you know this and that and people
people are just kind of running their old scripts where uh you know and they're great perhaps the best
example of this is um what Powell is doing is the 1980s formula of Paul Volcker hiking rates
and he thinks that it's that's the same move,
at the same thing that worked 40 years ago
he can just kind of do today
and they'll work in exactly the same way
and the state of the world is different, right?
So by running those old scripts that don't work anymore,
you lose.
And what we're thinking about it is,
like on the eve of World War I, right?
In like 1913, like that was a world
of kings and princes and horses and so on.
There was strained tension on this world
because of the new clanking machines and the industrialization.
All of this stuff was, you know, something which there was obviously tech pressure on it.
You had these social movements.
You had people who wanted the vote.
You had communists.
You had all these different things clanking and straining against this, right?
And then, you know, there was a catalyst of, you know, a few things.
There's World War I.
There was, and just like modernity roared into being, like,
something that's born, it's like got blood all over it and so on, right? It wasn't, I'm not saying
it's good. I'm saying, though, that like, you know, people started World War I, for example,
with horses, and they certainly didn't end it with that, right? The thing is that the future can't
actually, you know, it's saying the future is already here. It's just not evenly distributed,
right? If you go to that next photo, the other one I sent you, right? All those kings, it's kind of like
all of these heads of fiat states. And I'm not saying they all go to zero, right?
But those that trusted the Fed and that don't have either natural resources, gold, manufacturing, or digital gold, or something like that to back their fiat currency will probably be in trouble after the fiat crisis.
I know that sounds like if you take the full implications of what I'm just saying there, that's actually a pretty big thing.
But a lot of these states that trusted the Fed, after the fiat crisis, the money is gone.
This has been a lot,
and I'm sure you felt the full weight of the things that you're saying
over the last few days,
you know, also on your shoulders,
because if this does come to pass,
we will wake up in an entirely new world.
Yes.
In whatever time frame, whether that's 90 days or it takes longer.
I don't know the exact time frame.
Exactly. I don't know the exact time frame.
I'm just ringing the fire alarm to try to get people to realize
the scale of the change that's about to unfold.
And you feel the similar way,
a similar way as you felt to COVID in January of 2020 when you rang the fire alarm for COVID.
And you're saying bank crisis is imminent.
This is not just a regular bank crisis.
This is the Fiat bank crisis and the fall of the U.S. dollar.
So prepare yourselves.
Get to you hard digital assets as soon as you can.
And for you, that means Bitcoin.
That's what you're saying.
I'm saying that.
I'm also saying basically there's four options you can take.
Okay.
And people are going to choose one of these four.
options. The first is trust the U.S. banks, trust the U.S. media, just like 2008, all the other crises,
there's always a crisis. Who cares? I'm going to go back to TikTok or whatever. Okay? A lot of people
do that. Number two is, okay, I actually am seeing that there are something serious going on.
This is now something which is like user tangible, like a bank run is user tangible.
All the other stuff was just sort of like an enterprise thing, you know? What I mean by that is
it was just banks. It had liability to other banks. It was on balance sheets in the back end somewhere and
they could work it out amongst themselves.
And there wasn't an impact on you, the end user.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Right?
I don't recall at least.
I don't know if you recall.
I don't remember bank runs during the financial crisis.
Right?
Okay.
So depositors were taken care of or whatever.
Then it was just like a, you know, moving funds around.
It was all made it invisible.
Okay.
Now, so number two is if it's exploded on you, you're at SVB or something, you cannot
ignore it.
The money is gone, right?
And so actually a lot of people that did is actually wired money now.
You know where they're trusting more than the U.S.
Banking system?
A lot of people have wired money back to Indian.
India. Okay? They're getting out of the U.S. banking system. Maybe that's what that graph is on China or something
like that. Because the U.S. banking system, people were literally calling it and let me want to speak to this for a second. They're like, oh my God, it's a bailout to want your checking account back. Now, that's just actually a true inversion of what happened. And here's why. If you go to Mogadishu and, you know, like people tell you not to go and then you ask for like a helicopter airlift out, okay, that's a bailout. You took a high risk activity. It's atypical.
you're making other people risk their lives to get you out. That's a bailout, okay? If you walk down the
street and you're attacked by somebody and you're like, call for the police, that's a paid for.
That was a low risk activity you took. And this police protection is part of your budget, your subscriber
budget as a citizen. You paid for that. Okay. Similarly, if you make a high risk investment that
nobody told you to make or whatever, and you want your money, that's a bailout, okay? If you're operating a
business checking account and you're just literally just doing, you know, by law required
to keep your money in a bank and so on with a, you know, $200 billion.
You have some expectation that these federal regulators that you paid for would give you
some hint that the, not just your bank, but all the banks are insolvent, especially when
they knew it for months and years beforehand.
Okay.
And so what actually happened is you paid for all the regulation and got none of the
protection. It's an narco tyranny. It's just like in San Francisco, right? You pay for the police,
but the only thing they do is issue parking tickets. They don't stop a crazy guy from like smashing your
window. Okay. If you're like an Uber driver in San Francisco, you get the tyranny of the whatever
$100 parking ticket for being on the side of the road. Then you have the anarchy of the guy who
smashes your window and nothing happens to him. Okay. So the same way, we are going to have
an archa tyranny, but for banking, we have the tyranny of assets, froze,
funds seized, a CBDC, potentially price controls, serious inflation, and so on. But the anarchy
of the money can be gone, and it's your fault because you're supposed to read the statement
and find that it hid in a footnote their $80 billion loss that makes a bank insolvent.
That's not practically regulation. That's not consumer protection. That is a third world
country. You see what I'm saying? That is a corrupt regime that has betrayed
citizens. And the full scope of what that betrayal means, see, most people won't be able to process that,
okay? Some people will because they've got, because what it is, it's like their God has died.
Do you know what I'm saying? You know, like to truly think of the U.S. state as betraying you to
that extent, not just like making an error or something like that, but something where the banking
system has lost all the money of all the people, right? Like an error of that extent is something
which just crashes people's operating system.
And then what's going to happen is one or two things, or a few things, right?
First is they're living in, they're foreigners and they're in a place with a functional government.
Like, I hope that India, Israel can stand up to be the leaders of the free world and what is to follow.
Second is they're in a place like, you know, Russia or China.
And if like, you know, what I'm saying is actually what's happened, if the money is gone and this is like that final crisis,
Okay. Then you have to assume that all kinds of troops get pulled back. Ukraine, that just stops happening. Russia and China, which were kind of in a box before and they were getting, they were getting sanctions put on them and all this stuff. That just tense stress tension loosens. And you have this just unleashed Russian bear and, you know, the Chinese dragon are just like roar. Okay. Because they're let out of their cage. I mean, you know, could it be that like Taiwan is captured without a show?
and TSM, now the sanctions are on the West, you know, quite possible, very possible.
That if, if, and the only thing is, by the way, the fundamental premise, all of this is,
just like with Corona, right, I only had one premise.
And that premise was, this is going exponential.
We're going to have millions of people infected, and a lot of people are going to die,
and nobody understands this now because they're not actually calculating out that.
From that, and only from that, I had a rubber band tension model of the world, and
I was figuring out what things, you know, would move on that, okay?
It wasn't a perfect, you know, there are things I got wrong or whatever.
You know, I thought full face mask covering would be there.
But I do want to show you this, which is...
This is Max Rosa tweeting your original COVID tweet saying,
the world has changed so much in just the ways biology predicted.
It might be almost hard to appreciate how prescient this thread was when he wrote it
at a time and nothing had changed yet one year ago today.
Is that what you anticipate people tweeting about your original Bitcoin
bit signal tweet one year from now.
I hope not.
Yeah, I also hope not for the record.
Maybe.
But,
like, you know, I should probably tweet that.
I should say,
this is a bet I hope I won't win in a sense, right?
Yeah, I think from people who are paying attention to your tweet and your and your
gamble apology, I think that would actually go a long way because like kind of we said in the
intros. Like, some people are just thinking like, oh, he's, it's profitable for him to make this
trade by tweeting this or something like that. I think people are understanding. Or else he wants to
watch the world burn something like, something like this. Yeah. Yeah. So,
Bologi, this has been very, very scary, if not informative. Yeah. And hopefully I've given
you enough links to give you a sense of, you know, this is not just, you know, me coming up with stuff.
I don't know. There's like 50 or 60 references or what have you, right? I have a role model here,
which might be wrong, but that shows that this financial crisis is actually a very extreme one.
It, you know, I'll leave you with one last thing, which is, you know, the Ray Dalio principles for the changing world order?
Yeah, so that's right. So this, the video of it is, yeah, you're right, there are two server books.
The video of it is really good to watch. And the thing is, Dahlio did something very serious.
smart with this video. He got the concepts across with cartoons. And with the cartoons, you can
kind of process it without realizing how serious what he's talking about is. The collapse of
empires, lots of people fighting, no money, right? With the cartoons, you can process it,
but then you have to like apply it. That's a key thing, because there's something about it where
you know, history is, like, we're on like a cycle because people live and die and so on, right?
And the thing about this is here's the one thing that Dahlio doesn't get, okay?
And he's a really smart guy.
He gets politics and he gets finance, right?
And he gets history.
He doesn't get technology.
And so what he doesn't see is that there's actually another force that is as big as
China that hopefully becomes the leader of the free world of the aftermath, and that is technology.
I think Ryan and I have also shared our critiques of Ray Dalio, is that like everything that his
whole patterns and cycles throughout history is all spot on, but he just misses the next phase change
as a result to crypto. I think he started to get it, but I don't really know how complete his
understanding is about all of this. Well, he's partially, he's right about one thing, which is if we don't
have a critical mass of people in the free world get out to Bitcoin, then China is number one
after this. And they're out of their cage because the money going to China is like, well,
China is the stable system. China gives you stability, right? It doesn't give you the chaos of the
U.S. It also gives you totalitarian control of the CBDC, but at least it's a stable version.
Unfortunately, a lot of people will go for that. And, you know, the thing about this,
by the way, I talked about this in the network state book, between American anarchy and Chinese
control, right?
we want the decentralized center, right?
We want to have the free world.
And really, like, this is the moment.
So, you know, take everything you guys have said seriously over the last five years.
Everything, you've got all the concepts, okay, and help your guys go bankless.
That's it.
Balsi, we're going to end it there.
This has been very helpful to walk through your brain and to kind of understand all of the pieces that you've put together here recently.
And we'll certainly be having someone on to do the counterpoint.
to talk about reasons why this might not come to pass
or might not come to pass so soon,
but we really wanted to unpack your brain here today.
And certainly, like, if what happens comes to pass,
it will be absolutely world-changing.
The biggest event of our lifetime.
And I don't think any bankless listener
will be fully prepared for it.
So it's worth taking a moment
to understand and dissect Bologi's arguments,
to look through the references and links that we put forth in this episode and do your own research
and come to your own conclusion on this. And to do it fast, I think if things collapse in the
expedient way that Bologi is predicting, you may not have much time to put the pieces together
in the aftermath of this. Bologi, thank you so much for coming on bankless once again.
We appreciate you.
Thanks. And I'll say one last thing, which is even if what you think I'm saying is crazy,
hopefully it will be something that now you've been exposed to at least once. And as you see
events unfold, you might think, okay, some percentage of that might be correct and then take
action, if that makes any sense. It's like a retargeting of some kind, right? You have a different
frame or lens to view events, just like that original Corona thread where people might have
thought it was crazy and then they have the lens to view events. So anyway, all right, guys, get your,
get your coins, get your coins off exchanges, get to a crypto-friendly jurisdiction. If you
can't. There it is. That is the alarm. Riscing disclaimers, guys. Got to end it here. Of course,
none of this has been financial advice. Maybe just simple life advice. Life advice. That's all.
Yep. Bitcoin is risky. So is ETH. So is crypto. But my God, the banking system is more risky than
ever. You could definitely lose what you put in. But we are headed west. This is the frontier.
It's not for everyone. But we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey. Thanks a lot.
