Bitcoin Journalism and the Truth
The Truth about Bitcoin is... Well, it depends, you see. It depends on where you stand in relation to Bitcoin. If you're an orthodox central banker, the truth about Bitcoin is an erosion of power. To a politician, Bitcoin is a meme and a fad to be taken advantage of, and most importantly, it represents cheap and easy campaign donations - to hell, for now, with its revolutionary core. To journalists (those in the know, anyway), Bitcoin is the hot topic of our time. The journalistic truth about it is that Bitcoin generates story after story, day after day: crazy stories of mindblowing....
Related News
As we progress into the future, the necessity for Truth remains the requisite base upon which all else must be built.
Bitcoin returns the world to a state of truth, which will have incredible ramifications on the feedback mechanisms we exist under.
The truth, in 2015, will set you free. Of some Bitcoin. It's a poorly kept secret that the U. S. Government has waged war against the whistleblowers President Obama once swore to protect. Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has been on the run for years. Heroic government whistleblower Edward Snowden has left the U. S. out of fears of persecution, and has sought freedom and political asylum in Russia. And countless others have met lengthy jail sentences for uncovering illegal behavior and wrongdoing with the "Powers That Be". This shows just how far the U. S. has fallen in the realization of....
For Bitcoiners to embrace a fight is to take time away from the natural truth and love that Bitcoin leads people to.
As I made my way through the brain washing institution known as The United States public school system, teachers commended my writing, but also felt the need to point out that the publishing industry was dying. They told me to put aside whatever talent I had and work in a different, presumably soul crushing career. They said that the internet was killing newspapers and they couldn't imagine a world where someone got paid writing on the internet. In retrospect, their warnings sound silly. The internet did indeed kill off newspapers, or at least, pushed them to the brink of irrelevancy, but....