BenJustman on Nostr: Hearing "you were right about Bitcoin" from friends hits differently. It’s not an ...
Hearing "you were right about Bitcoin" from friends hits differently. It’s not an admission—it’s a defeatist shrug.
It means, "You were right, but it’s too late now. I missed it." That attitude is the hardest to hear because it’s not true.
A lot of people think Bitcoin is too good to be true. And when you describe it without thinking, yeah—it does sound that way. A future of sound money, fairness, and freedom? It’s hard to imagine because we’ve been trained to expect disappointment, not hope.
People have been conditioned to be nihilistic about the future. So when Bitcoin offers a way out, it’s easier to dismiss it as "too late" or "not real" than to accept it’s already here.
They think it’s over. They don’t see that it’s barely begun.
You weren’t right then. You’re right now. And you’ll keep being right. It’s not about the past—it’s about waking up to the future.
It means, "You were right, but it’s too late now. I missed it." That attitude is the hardest to hear because it’s not true.
A lot of people think Bitcoin is too good to be true. And when you describe it without thinking, yeah—it does sound that way. A future of sound money, fairness, and freedom? It’s hard to imagine because we’ve been trained to expect disappointment, not hope.
People have been conditioned to be nihilistic about the future. So when Bitcoin offers a way out, it’s easier to dismiss it as "too late" or "not real" than to accept it’s already here.
They think it’s over. They don’t see that it’s barely begun.
You weren’t right then. You’re right now. And you’ll keep being right. It’s not about the past—it’s about waking up to the future.