reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @pooL_rM311_7221

Saved - March 16, 2026 at 10:51 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I want blockchain for the federal government—full transparency, every dime tracked in real time on a public ledger. If we are sovereign and own the money, taxpayers deserve to see where every dollar goes, department by department, day by day. Bitcoin proves a tamper-proof ledger works globally; apply it to federal spending and waste won’t survive with an audience. The issue isn’t if we can do it, but if the spenders want you to see it.

@pooL_rM311_7221 - Mr Pool

Charlie Kirk wanted blockchain technology applied to the federal government. Full transparency. Every dime of spending tracked in real time on a public ledger. His framing was simple: "It is not the government's money. We are the sovereign. We earn the money and the government extracts it from us with our consent." If that's the relationship, then taxpayers have a right to see where every dollar goes. Day by day. Department by department. The technology already exists. Bitcoin proved a public, tamper-proof ledger works at global scale. Nobody can edit it after the fact. Nobody can hide a transaction. Apply that same infrastructure to federal spending and waste doesn't survive long. Nobody overspends when the ledger has an audience. The question was never whether we could do it. It's whether the people spending the money want you to see it.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 expresses a vision to transform government transparency and control over spending. The core goal is to blockchain the entire federal government, and to have every dime of federal spending online in real time, so there is day-by-day, month-by-month visibility into what the Department of Interior and Veterans Affairs (and other agencies) are spending money on. The speaker suggests there could be national security risks with such transparency, noting that some aspects could be “black box” or restricted, but asserts the ideal is real-time visibility into government spending. The speaker argues that the public should know exactly how money is spent, asking concrete questions like what the Department of Interior is spending money on, and whether they are buying items such as “$50 hammers” or “$200 bandages.” The overarching point is that this is “our money” and “we are the sovereign,” because “we create the government,” we earn the money, and “the government extract it from us with our consent.” Therefore, there is a right to know where the money goes.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The goal would be, we need to blockchain the entire federal government, put the entire federal government on blockchain. Then number two, every dime of federal spending online in real time. We should know what everybody is spending in real time, no different than a transparent federal database. Could that be a national security risk in any way? There are certain things you could black box for sure. But like, I think that people deserve to know on a day by day, month by month basis, like, what is the Department of Interior spending? Like, are they go like, what is the depart what are the Veterans Affairs spending money on? We should know. Like, are they buying $50 hammers? Like, are they buying $200 bandages? Like, is I think we it's our money. This is our money. It is you watching money. We are the ones that earn the money. It is not the government's money. They we are the sovereign. We create the government. We earn the money, and then the government extract it from us with our consent. Right? So we have a right to know where that money goes.
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