98 - Ancient City

98 - Ancient City

🇹🇭 We are now full-circle here, back in Bangkok. This is the week that we arrived here last year, having abandoned the nonsense in Hong Kong. With hindsight, that seems to have been a smart move: check Newsletter 96 for our review of 2023.

Breaking pattern, V and I decided on a day-trip to see the Ancient City, a bit south of Bangkok. The Ancient City (Muang Boran) is a 200-acre open-air museum located in Samut Prakan Province. It showcases replicas of famous historical structures from all over Thailand on a site that is the shape of Thailand! You can learn about Thai history and architecture by touring the different regions.

The museum is an easy commute from Bangkok. Take the BTS to Keha station and then a taxi for 6 minutes and you are there. It is open daily from 9:00am to 7:00pm. The museum is on a vast scale and the best way to get around is to hire a Golf Cart - like that you can go everywhere at your own pace and stop wherever you like - that's what we did!

Click here to view their website and overview video will give you the feel of being there

We had a fabulous time at this park (photos below) - it really felt like taking a holiday here in Thailand! Highlight for V was feeding the elephants. We will certainly make another trip back here again before we leave, likely with some of the visitors that are coming to see us here in Bangkok - it is a must-see location.

Monologue of the week

This one has been in my queue for a while but Jason's insights on the Bolshevik revolution plus what we uncovered last week in Red Symphony on usury prompted me to check this one out this week. Just like last week, you will probably wonder why you never knew all this before and why this has been, and continues to be, suppressed by all the mainstream media and journalists.

One of the notable historians of our lifetime was Antony Sutton, a well-known and deeply despised writer, at least as far as the Globalist regime was concerned. He spilled the beans on all of the tricks the Empire had used over the decades to establish and retain power within government and big business.

Click to watch and listen to our explainer in chief, Charlie

One aspect that was difficult for people to understand was Sutton’s insistence that the “Monopoly Capitalists”, as he liked to call them, were enthusiastic supporters, especially financially, of the Socialist and Communist movements in Europe and Asia. They were of the belief that it was better to turn their enemies into Communists rather than Competitors.

You can read the books yourself: Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution was first published in 1974 and is part of a trilogy. The other volumes in this trilogy are Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler and Wall Street and FDR. It is rather obvious with hindsight and once seen it cannot be unseen.

More in this issue

  • Photo memories - around Ancient City this week
  • Project Updates - Open Sats and Aqua
  • Plenty of useful links - don't say nobody told you!
  • Closing out - Groundhog Day and The Great Deception

🛠️ Project Updates

The following are updates from some projects that I am following, supporting and collaborating with. What are you doing?

Thank you, OpenSats

OpenSats does a fantastic job to distribute funding to some of the most innovative and important projects in Bitcoin and Nostr today. Read the full review below - you can also contribute and this is 100% pass-through to the developers.

OpenSats’ 2023: Year in Review
“In the spirit of openness, let’s take some time to pause and reflect upon the announcements we made [last] year, what we did to pursue our mission, and what kinds of projects we were able to support thanks to the generous donations made by all of you.”

Click for the review - contribute to cast your vote against the madness

Scaling Bitcoin

During the week I came across this interesting and challenging article from Ben Carman. He is right that Lightning is not the solution, rather it is part of a combination of solutions that are still under development.

Rethinking Lightning \ stacker news ~bitcoin
Over the last few months it feels the bitcoin community has gotten more and more jaded on lightning. To be honest, this is for good reason, back in 2017 we were promised a decentralized payment network that would always have cheap payments and everyone would be able to run their own node. Nowadays, the average lightning user actually isn’t using lightning, they are just using a custodial wallet and the few of that do run lightning nodes often find it a burdensome task. For us at Mutiny Wallet, we are trying to make this better by creating a lightweight self-custodial wallet and in my opinion we have been executing on that dream fairly well. In this post, I’ll analyze these issues and present a new way to view lightning and what that means for bitcoin going forward. First and foremost one of the hardest UX challenges of lightning is channel liquidity. No other payment system has these problems today besides lightning so this often confuses lots of users. To make matters worse, there aren’t any practical hacks that we can do to get around this. Muun Wallet used an on-chain wallet + submarine swaps to get around the channel liquidity problem, this worked very well until fees went up and everyone realized it wasn’t actually a lightning wallet. The better solution is JIT liquidity like we do in Mutiny or splicing like that is done in Phoenix. These solutions abstract some of it away but not enough, we often get support questions confused on why some payments have fees and others do not. The fact is channel liquidity is not a usable UX for most end users. The other major pain point of lightning is the offline receive problem. Inherently, you must be online with your private keys to sign and claim a payment. There is technically an ongoing spec proposal to be able to work around this (essentially creating a notification system of when people are online to receive payments), but it doesn’t solve the fundamental problem and still has limitations. There has been a few attempts to get around this, most notably was Zeus Pay lightning addresses. These essentially worked by just creating stuck payments and waited for the user to come online to claim, this caused a ton of problems for people and even forced us at Mutiny to block users from paying them because it caused so many force closures. This is a hard problem because the entire rest of the bitcoin/crypto ecosystem works by just copy-paste an address and you can send to it whenever, there isn’t caveats around asking your friend to open their wallet. This is further exacerbated by things like lightning address that requires a webserver to even get an invoice in the first place. Channel liquidity and offline receives in my opinion are the two most obvious reasons why self-custodial lightning is not popular. When most users hear about any of these, they just think screw that and move to a custodial wallet because it is so much easier. If these were our only two problems, I think self-custodial lightning would be fine, it may never be the predominant way people use lightning, but we could get the UX good enough that we have a significant portion of people using lightning in a sovereign way. However, there are more problems under the surface. Channel liquidity is a problem, but it is also deceptive. When you have 100k sats of inbound liquidity you would think you could receive up to 100k sats, but this isn’t the case, often you can’t actually receive any. This is because of on-chain fees, when a payment is being made in lightning you are creating pre-signed transactions that have outputs for every in-flight payment, these outputs cost potential on-chain fees and the high on-chain fees go the more it eats into your liquidity. After we’ve solved most of our force close issues Mutiny this has been number one support request. Even if you do everything right, understand liquidity and have enough for your payment, sometimes it still won’t work because on-chain fees are too high. This is always really discouraging because isn’t the whole point of lightning to not have to pay on-chain fees? Fundamentally, all current lightning channels could become entirely useless if on-chain fees went high enough because a single payment would require too many reserves. Obviously this is hyperbolic, but I hope I am getting the point across that on-chain fees don’t just effect the opening and closing costs of channels, even if you are a diligent node runner that only opens channels when fees are low, that is not enough, your channels need to be large enough to pay for the on-chain fees of each HTLC at any future on-chain fee rate. As on-chain fees go up and up this problem will only get worse. The proposed solution to these reserve issues are things like anchor channels, package relay, ephemeral anchors, etc. These are all well and good but kind of just mask the problem. They do solve it so the fee reserve can be much lower and possibly zero, however with the tradeoff that you need on-chain funds available to fee-bump your force closes so they can actually get into a block. This again breaks the UX for self-custodial users because they have hold on-chain funds alongside their lightning funds so they can do those on-chain fee bumps. The size requirements for their on-chain funds is still dynamically based on how high on-chain fees can spike. Solutions for this can include having someone else bump your transaction fees but this brings basically a trusted 3rd party into the mix and isn’t ideal. When you lay out all the different tradeoffs a lightning node needs to make, especially in a high fee environment, it makes me think, what are we doing here, are we going down the wrong path? Lightning is still fundamentally a fantastic payment protocol but its limitation is that it requires scale. Basically every problem I’ve outlined goes away when you have a large lightning node with lots of liquidity and high uptime so many we should optimize for that. The market has been telling us this for years already, +90% of lightning users are using custodial wallets because it works so much better at scale. So how can we use large scale lightning nodes without custodial wallets? Combining existing large scale lightning infrastructure with self-custodial solutions sadly, isn’t totally possible. The only real way to do that as of now is Muun Wallet which as we talked about earlier, doesn’t really solve the problem because everything is just an on-chain transaction. However, Muun was onto something. The architecture of having a simpler protocol interface with lightning is genius and gives us the best of both worlds. We can make fast cheap payments and let the big boys collect fees for running the lightning node. Aqua Wallet just launched which is essentially a Muun Wallet but on top of Liquid, this is a good bandaid fix but doesn’t get to the root of the problem. Before we go further we should take a step back and break down what problems we are trying to solve. Bitcoin has a fundamental scaling limitation through the block size, if we could make infinite, then we wouldn’t necessarily need any layer 2s because we could just make on-chain payments. However, we live in the real world and have a 1mb block size limit, and this limits the number of transactions we can make on-chain. Lightning is a huge improvement to bitcoin because we don’t need to put every transaction on-chain, we just need to open a channel and can make seemingly countless payments. So why isn’t lightning the silver bullet? Lightning lets us move payments off-chain but what it doesn’t do is let us move ownership off-chain. Fundamentally lightning still relies on that, at the end of the day, a utxo goes to single user. So even if every on-chain transaction was a lightning channel, we still run into the limit of how many people can actually own those channels. What we need is another layer 2 that can scale utxo ownership and caninterop with lightning, that way we have a way to scale ownership combined with scaling payments. So how do we scale ownership? Simply put, the answer today is custody, whether that is pure custodial like a Wallet of Satoshi or in the grey area like fedimints and liquid, the only way to do it today is through custody or federated bridges. In bitcoin, the only way to delegate ownership of a utxo to multiple parties is through multisig, however, that requires every user to be online when anyone wants to transact, and when you take go down this path far enough you end up just reinventing lightning. Are we doomed then? Is there no way to scale bitcoin in a self-sovereign way? Luckily, the answer is no, but we need some soft-forks. Covenants are the way to scale bitcoin ownership. There are a bunch of covenant proposals but at their core what they propose to do is to add a way, so you can have a bitcoin address that limits where and how the coins in it can be spent. This can seem scary, but we already have these in bitcoin today, OP_CTLV (Check LockTime Verify), which was soft forked in 2016, only allows you to spend from a bitcoin address if the transaction has a given locktime, this lets you gate when a utxo can be spent. What the current covenant proposals do is let you gate where a utxo can be spent. With that simple primitive many different protocols can be built that allow for scaling ownership. There are a lot of current covenant proposals, the main ones being: OP_CTV, OP_VAULT, OP_CSFS, OP_TXHASH, OP_CAT, and APO. They all have different functionality and tradeoffs but in my opinion we should be looking towards activating a form of covenants because otherwise we will likely be moving towards a future of less sovereign bitcoin users. The future is not bleak however, even without covenants we can still scale bitcoin for the world, just not in the ideal way. At Mutiny, we are full steam ahead on implementing fedimint into the wallet, in my opinion (and the rest of the team’s) it looks like the best current scaling solution for bitcoin. Fedimints give us the ability to dynamically share ownership over a group of utxos and is able to interop with lightning through gateways. It is the pinnacle of the scaling dream for bitcoin with current technology and I can’t wait to help make it reality while we can. [117 comments]

Food for thought.... the truth (and solution) is out there - Guy will read it to you here

One such development that I think deserves to be highlighted is the Aqua Wallet by JAN3, the company that Samson Mow has set up to promote bitcoin use at Nation-State level. Click below for all the details - some highlights:

Aqua Wallet: Bitcoin, Lightning, Liquid & Tether Mobile Wallet
Aqua Wallet, developed by Jan3, is a non-custodial mobile Bitcoin, Lightning, Liquid and Tether USDT (on Liquid, Ethereum, and Tron) wallet. Available on Android (APK only for now) and iOS.
  • Send and receive regular on-chain Bitcoin
  • Full Liquid Network support for sending L-BTC, Tether USDt, and additional Liquid assets
  • Jan3's Samson Mow said that the app will be open-sourced soon
  • Send and receive Bitcoin via Lightning
  • Send or receive USDt from the main altcoin chains, such as Tron and Ethereum
  • Native swaps between Layer 2 Bitcoin and USDt
  • Swaps between Bitcoin main chain and Layer 2
  • Buying Bitcoin directly from within AQUA with a variety of payment methods
  • Importing legacy AQUA seed phrases

You can listen to an interesting interview of both Samson and Prince Filip of Serbia here.

The following are links from my NetNewswire feeds - learn, enjoy and share.

Speak now or forever hold your peace

NOW is the time to speak out about the upcoming World Health Organization deadline.

The WHO deadline is less than three weeks away
NOW is the time to speak out about the upcoming World Health Organization deadline. Please help spread the word by sharing any and all of these videos on social media.

Click to inform yourself - then inform others and instruct your MP to reject this

âť—
If you do nothing to speak up or push back ...
- you are complicit in these crimes.

In other obviously false news

I was in the UK last summer and this claim from the Met Office is so obviously false. What utter bollocks.

Thankfully Iain has taken the time to understand their methodology and when you get to the bottom of it: they are just making up the numbers to fit the model that they want you to believe. Obviously you need to dig through multiple linked and dependent obfuscating explanations to really understand this but Iain takes you step by step and you can check this yourself.

2023 was the second hottest UK year since 1884? Pull the other one, it’s got bells on it.
According to the UK Met Office, 2023 was the second hottest year in the UK since 1884. Quite obviously, this is complete nonsense. Unless they are troglodytes that never venture out in daylight, why would anyone in the UK believe such absurd drivel?

Do not fall for the propaganda

I know many of my subscribers are also in the UK - what you you think. Was there really no warmer summer in your lifetime? I can certainly remember a few from when I lived there!

Positive Mindset

I do rather agree with Richard's perspective on things - how about you?

Click and listen - what do you think?

🤔 Closing Thoughts

A couple of closing thoughts this week. First is from Howdie who is going back to writing as his communication medium rather than video. In his latest article he gives a novel (and possibly correct) interpretation of Groundhog Day

Click for the full article - it's a short read - just do it

And then click below for more on the movie, including a link to view it.

Click above for IMDB explainer - or here to view the movie

The Great Deception

Concluding this week with another important set of insights from Jason. You certainly have not read the Bible as closely as Jason - listen carefully as he explains, quoting over 100 passages that demonstrate beyond all reasonable doubt that the story of Moses was fabricated and you will learn that YWHE is not what you have been told.

You will also recognise the same justification being used in the the Bible for genocide by the same people who are doing it today.

Listen as Jason explains - you can also go back to the beginning for the full explainer

Jason quotes dozens of instances where YWHE commands extreme violence be performed on others - for example: YWHE commands Saul to completely destroy the Amalekites

Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass
- 1 Samuel 15:3

In 2 Samuel 24 David is influenced by YWHE to perform some dubious actions only for this story to be re-told in 1 Chronicles 21 with Satan being identified as the influencer - check it yourself. YWHE and Satan are one and the same.

You might recall the story of baby Moses being hidden in a basket. How interesting that in 23rd century BC (2,000 years older than the Old Testament) Sumerian myths recount that the mother of Sargon of Akkad should hide her baby in a reed basket coated with pitch, sealing it to make it waterproof. She then set the basket adrift in the Euphrates River. Miraculously, the baby Sargon was discovered and rescued by a gardener named Akki. The story of Moses demonstrably repurposes many older narratives. Jason identifies many more examples in the video above.

Consider too that the story of Moses, the burning bush and the red-sea parting are considered as some of the most important of the Old Testament. How interesting that mention should appear only in Exodus to Judges with practically no mention anywhere else except in Ezra and Nehemiah, both of which had a very specific agenda to indoctrinate the faithful in new beliefs following their exile in Babylon.

With your new insights here, you might want to check back to what we discussed in July about Caesar's Messiah. Once seen, it cannot be unseen.

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No one can be told what The Matrix is. You have to see it for yourself.
- Morpheus to Neo in The Matrix
How to escape the matrix - do you see it yet?
🤔
"99% of all subjects accepted the program if they were given a choice - even if they were only aware of the choice at an unconscious level"
- The Architect

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You can also email me at: LetterFrom@rogerprice.me

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