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One of the reasons I really don't like Bitcoin is because Bitcoin has become the currency of choice for espionage around the world. If you're a North Korean trying to recruit an American scientist, you're you're gonna pay them in Bitcoin. Well, if you're a Chinese person trying to report to American intelligence, you're probably also getting paid in Bitcoin.

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John McAfee explains that using Gmail for email provides privacy, or rather a lack of it, despite people believing in encrypted systems like ProtonMail or encrypted messaging like Signal. He argues that encryption was designed thirty-five years ago to prevent a man-in-the-middle attack between transmission and receipt, but there is no longer a need for such protection because there is no man in the middle anymore. He states that smartphones are the surveillance devices preferred by governments worldwide and that malware installation is easy to accomplish. McAfee claims that visiting Pornhub can result in someone listening to you, because a drive-by of a website can set the download of unauthorized applications as a flag. He asserts that with the first click, malware can be installed, and this malware can both watch inputs before they are encrypted and read outputs after they are encrypted. He concludes that encryption is a worthless piece of shit and old technology marketed as a safe system. He emphasizes that there is no safety and no privacy anymore. He explains his personal choice of Gmail for one reason: Gmail is the last company that requires a government subpoena to provide information, and their lawyers have thirty days to review the subpoena. He says that thirty days is enough for him, and that he changes his email every fifteen days. He urges the audience to wake up, stating that there is no more privacy and that people are being sold a useless bill of goods with encryption. Thank you for listening.

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I want to share my experience of being tortured in federal prison. Roger Ver has been arrested, and it's crucial to support him. I ended up in prison for expressing views like "taxation is theft." Roger is a true pioneer, advocating for individual empowerment globally. Despite paying a million dollars to the government, they claim it's not enough. His lawyers argue he complied with the law, yet he's being targeted. This case reflects a broader trend of the government silencing dissidents. Roger has significantly contributed to Bitcoin, which has the potential to challenge oppressive systems. It's alarming that the only person prosecuted for an exit tax interpretation is someone exposing government attempts to infiltrate Bitcoin. We can't change the past, but we can unite to shape the future. Free Roger.

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I'm being extradited from Spain to the US to face 109 years in prison for tax evasion, even though I'm not a US citizen during the period in question. I believe this isn't about taxes; it's about my defiance. I was the first to invest in Bitcoin and promote its use globally as an alternative to government-controlled currencies. This threatened governments, and I knew it was dangerous. I renounced my US citizenship in 2014 and became a citizen of Saint Kitts, believing this would protect me. Despite meticulously following tax laws, I was arrested shortly after publishing a book exposing the hijacking of Bitcoin. My arrest is retaliation for promoting cryptocurrency as a competitor to the US dollar and other established currencies. Effectively, they want me dead in prison. As the founder of several major cryptocurrency companies, I seeded the first generation of cryptocurrency firms, and my actions directly challenge the status quo.

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Bitcoin was created by John McCarthy to catch criminals. It is centralized and every transaction can be seen. McCarthy also reveals that Moderna is involved in criminal activities. He emphasizes that Bitcoin is worthless and that Monero is the only currency that is actually used. He dismisses the idea of adding privacy features to Bitcoin, stating that it is old, slow, and cannot support smart contracts. He challenges anyone who believes Bitcoin is worth more than 5¢ to explain their reasoning.

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The speaker claims the alleged creator of Bitcoin, Santoshi, denied inventing the technology in an interview. The speaker suggests three-letter agencies are involved and gave Bitcoin a rebellious persona. The speaker questions how Santoshi obtained the technology and infrastructure, arguing that anyone opposing the system is "taken out," referencing JFK, Gaddafi, Jackson, and Lincoln. They propose Bitcoin may have a backdoor and that Google possesses technology to decrypt the 256-bit encryption used by cryptocurrencies. The speaker notes Google's technology emerged in 2012, before the cryptocurrency boom.

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I've always been against crypto, especially Bitcoin, because it is mainly used by criminals for activities like drug trafficking, money laundering, and tax evasion. Its anonymity and instant money transfers allow it to bypass systems like know your customers, sanctions, and OFAC. If I were in power, I would shut it down. On September 12th, Jamie Dimon called Bitcoin a fraud and threatened to fire any trader buying it. This caused a 24% drop in Bitcoin's value. Interestingly, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan, companies led by Dimon, were the largest buyers of a Bitcoin fund in Europe. It's unethical for Dimon to criticize Bitcoin while his own company is investing in it.

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Speaker 0 expresses opposition to cryptocurrency. Speaker 1 mentions that Jamie, who supports blockchain, helped launch JPMorganCoin. They explain that JPMorgan created its own blockchain protocol based on Ethereum, allowing private transactions. Speaker 0 suggests that the only use case for blockchain is criminal activity. Speaker 2 states that JPMorgan was involved in Ethereum from the beginning and played a major role in the Enterprise Ethereum Alliance. Speaker 0 comments on shutting down blockchain if they were the government. Speaker 3 compares the Mt. Gox scandal to Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme, where JPMorgan was involved. JPMorgan account holders sued the bank and recovered over $2 billion, but no executives went to jail.

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The speaker asked for evidence of Steve's innocence, and a call between two individuals was provided. In the call, one person thanks the other for their support and expresses excitement for the future. The second person mentions a request for tokens and ETH worth a certain amount, but offers to give even more. The first person apologizes for being on their first cup of coffee. The speaker explains that this call is the alleged extortion incident, where the government claims Steve extorted the other person despite being offered more than he asked for.

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Edgar Barja runs Kioskos, the El Salvador chain selling Bitcoin wallets, with Grupo Barja’s old money from energy and real estate now funneling into crypto kiosks. Brock Pierce, Tether’s cofounder, didn’t just move HQ to Bukele’s El Salvador; he bought Barja’s silence with 30,000,000 through a Maltese shell, then defaulted on a hotel deal the same week. The Knights of Malta act as the glue: Pierce was knighted in 2019; Barja’s uncle was a lifelong member, and they knighted Bukele quietly in 2021 right after he greenlit Tether’s license. The bottom line given is that it’s a human trafficking pipeline disguised as fintech. Kiosks scan IDs for onboarding, but half those scans end up in Barja’s databases, sold to traffickers who ship kids through El Salvador’s ports. Tether cash is said to grease the bribes. Knights pray over it like it’s holy work. Bukele gets his Bitcoin headline, Pierce pockets laundering fees, and Edgar keeps the kiosks rolling. All legal on paper, all filthy underneath. Expanding on the DEN trafficking network: the DEN ring is not a back-alley hustle but a polished pipeline built on crypto and fake charity. Edgar Borges’ kiosks aren’t just Bitcoin ATMs; they’re ID harvesters. Every poor Salvadoran scanning a wallet uploads their passport, photo, even fingerprints. That data is sold straight to traffickers in Tegucigalpa or Mexico City. One case cited: a 16-year-old girl from San Miguel scammed last month, vanished two days later in a container truck headed north. Price tag cited as $8, paid in tether. Brock Pierce ties it tight as the money man. After Disney kicked him out for an underage party scandal, he pivoted to crypto freedom in Bukele’s Bitcoin Utopia. Tether’s reserves are described as half backed by sketchy bonds, the rest by dark pools; he wired 20,000,000 to Barja’s shell last year for kiosk upgrades. It’s framed as kickbacks; Knights of Malta sanctify it. Their El Salvador chapter runs orphanages that recruit volunteers, but half those kids end up as mules or worse; Bukele knows, with his brother’s cousin running the chapter, and the scheme funnels cash to his reelection machine. Victims are mostly migrants, Ecuadorians hopping flights, Indians with tourist visas. Kiosks flag them; Pierce’s bots wash the coins; Borges taxis drive them to the border. US arrests? A six-person bust last month; 45k seized. But the bosses are untouched. It’s described as Epstein’s old playbooks, but digital now. It’s framed as engineered, not random. Names are said to be ghosts, yet tether wallets are urged as the path to follow.

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My name is Roger Veer, and I'm a former American citizen now facing a possible life sentence for crimes I didn't commit. Growing up in Silicon Valley, I became fascinated with free market economics and libertarian ideals. I even ran for office as a Libertarian. My criticism of the ATF led to politically motivated charges related to selling firecrackers. After serving time, I left the U.S. Later, I became an early advocate for Bitcoin, recognizing its power to promote economic freedom and undermine government control. Now, I'm arrested in Spain on tax evasion and mail fraud charges that I believe are politically motivated, and a form of lawfare. I had sought legal counsel to ensure compliance with the law. This isn't about taxes; it's about suppressing freedom.

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One of the reasons I really don't like Bitcoin is because Bitcoin has become the currency of choice for espionage around the world. If you're a North Korean trying to recruit an American scientist, you're gonna pay them in Bitcoin. Well, if you're a Chinese person trying to report to American intelligence, you're probably also getting paid in Bitcoin.

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The speaker claims the individual credited with inventing Bitcoin, Santoshi, denied creating the technology in an interview. The speaker suggests three-letter agencies are actually behind Bitcoin and cryptocurrency, giving it a false origin story of a rebel fighting the system. They question how Santoshi would have acquired the necessary technology and infrastructure, given the fate of historical figures who opposed the system. The speaker implies Bitcoin may have a backdoor and notes Google possesses decryption technology developed before the cryptocurrency boom, suggesting this is not coincidental.

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Speaker 0 argues that you must get your wealth out of the system and downsize all of your assets and resources, especially if you are a public figure and you have any presence on social media. The guidance is that if you’re fighting this “good fight” and you have a public presence online, you need to be downsizing your wealth and assets. The speaker stresses moving as much of your wealth into Bitcoin as possible, so that nobody knows you have it and there is no way to prove you possess it. Once it’s moved into Bitcoin, it’s described as “gone,” in the sense that it cannot be easily traced or proven in the same way as traditional holdings. The warning continues that you should avoid having Bitcoin on any centralized exchanges in a way that makes it obvious whose name is tied to the holdings. The explicit instruction is to get the money into Bitcoin and keep it off centralized exchanges where it can be seen in your name. After acquiring Bitcoin, the recommended setup is a cold storage air-gap multisig wallet. The speaker emphasizes that you should not leave Bitcoin in a system that can be easily accessed or monitored; instead, use cold storage that is air-gapped and protected by a multisignature scheme. The speaker describes the consequences of losing access to private keys: if you lose your private keys, you lose all your Bitcoin. The phrasing used is that you should “go on a boat ride and you fucking lose your private keys and it sucks,” underscoring the irreversible loss associated with losing keys. Overall, the message centers on aggressively relocating wealth into Bitcoin, prioritizing anonymity and security through cold storage and multisig setups, and recognizing the high risk of permanent loss if private keys are lost or compromised. The repeated emphasis is that you must get your wealth out of the system, stay light on your feet, and move assets into Bitcoin to maintain anonymity and reduce traceability.

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We discussed the tension between being open and transparent while also protecting ourselves. We agreed to be open and transparent for everything that happened 90 days ago and before, as it's all gone. It's similar to how cryptocurrencies work, where there is no trail if you don't want it.

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The old content from ten years ago is being conflated with the current charges from 2021, but anything before 2021 has nothing to do with the case. Here's context for a video circulating of me talking about the "Lover Boy method." You can't just ask a girl to work for you doing webcam. My recruitment process is like a PhD course; I message them on Instagram. I don't mention webcam until after I've had sex with the girl. After that, she takes the PhD test. If she passes and wants to be with you, then you can suggest she works for you. Approaching girls directly about webcam doesn't work. Also, tax is important for controlling your woman. Tell her you're paying the tax, even if you aren't because you are being paid in Bitcoin. This makes her think her taxes are taken care of, so you can pay her less.

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Speaker explains that "the space ... wasn't held correctly" and admits, "I screwed up because I should have agreed to get our teams up immediately," opting to "let him have his day in court" and remain neutral. He says, "They know all these coins are Ponzi schemes" and notes that "Stu always had an answer immediately." He calls it "the kill shot" and presents a "cash out wallet, AGBZ. 8GBZB" where "three people on the team [are] cashing out to this wallet." He claims "Here's Stu Peters from the main wallet that he would never sell a penny goes to the side wallet here, AGZB," and identifies "the donation wallet" as "JCJE" while saying "donation wallet" again. He reports "$77,249.76 withdrawn" and says "drain liquidity from J Proof." He asserts "three different team members are using that wallet" and calls it "irrefutable proof" and ends with "Spread the word."

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Do my family and friends know I'm in this business? Yes, they do. You think I'm stealing? How? It's not stealing, it's legal. The tokens are real, people buy them. You say the tokens are worth nothing? No, they're worth something. You can still sell. People investing don't know their money will disappear? It's a gamble and they lost. It's a legal way of making money, a legal way of stealing. We wear masks because I'm recognizable. I'm connected with celebrities. It would put a stop to my lifestyle. Do I feel bad about people losing money, like their retirement? I'm just trying to get it. So, no, I don't care.

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The speaker urges rapid downsizing of wealth and assets, especially for anyone who will have a public presence or an active social media profile. The core instruction is to get wealth out of the traditional system and keep it on a minimal, flexible footing so a person can stay “light on your feet” as they fight this good fight. The emphasis is placed on anonymity and mobility: if you have public visibility and your assets are traceable, you are vulnerable. A central recommendation is to move wealth into Bitcoin and to do so in a way that makes it effectively invisible to others. The speaker asserts that once wealth is converted into Bitcoin, “it's in Bitcoin. Right? So nobody knows you have it. Nobody can fucking prove that you got it.” The concern is exposure through centralized avenues: “it's on a centralized exchange in an area where they can obviously see that it's in your name.” The implication is that public names and on-chain records can reveal ownership and make one a target. To protect anonymity, the speaker prescribes using cold storage, an air-gapped multisig wallet setup. The process involves transferring funds into a secure Bitcoin storage solution that is not connected to the internet or any easily traceable accounts. The description suggests creating a robust, private system that resists easy attribution or retrieval by others. The narrative uses a stark metaphor about risk and loss: you might “go on a boat ride and you fucking lose your private keys and it sucks. You lost all your Bitcoin. Oh, well.” This underscores the consequence of losing access credentials in a highly secure storage arrangement—the assets could be irretrievable. Overall, the message centers on two intertwined ideas: (1) reduce and compartmentalize wealth to maintain mobility and privacy, especially for public figures, and (2) use Bitcoin and advanced storage methods (cold storage, air-gapped multisig) to keep wealth hidden from prying eyes, with the acknowledgement that missteps (like losing private keys) result in total loss. The speaker repeats the imperative: “Gotta get your fucking wealth out of the system,” reinforcing the urgency of downscaling and re-holding wealth in a way that minimizes exposure.

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The speaker questions the meaning of security in a decentralized system like Bitcoin. They express frustration in understanding the differences between Bitcoin, Ethereum, Cardano, and others. They criticize the lack of accountability in the industry and highlight the potential for a 51% attack on Bitcoin. The speaker laments the wasted legal fees and compares it to past events where no accountability was achieved. They praise libertarians for challenging the government's lack of accountability. The speaker emphasizes that cryptocurrencies exist to fix the broken social contract and criticize the unelected and unaccountable leaders who face no consequences for their actions. They argue that this goes against the principles on which the country was founded.

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Do you remember Sam Bankman-Fried? He was seen as a genius, so powerful and wealthy that he attended meetings with prominent figures like Bill Clinton and Tony Blair while looking disheveled. Where is he now? I believe he is in prison, as noted in a Netflix series. That's right, he’s a crook. And who was responsible for his downfall? The Department of Justice.

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The speaker claims that the NSA created SHA-256, the algorithmic procedure behind Bitcoin. While browsing Twitter, they found a 1996 paper titled “How to Make a Mint, the Cryptography of Anonymous Electronic Cash,” which they state was written in 1996 by the NSA. They note that the author of that 1996 paper about electronic cash was Tasoki Akamoto, which they say sounds like Satoshi Nakamoto, the credited author for the Bitcoin paper in 2008.

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Joby Weeks, also referred to as Jobadiah Weeks, discusses his six-year house arrest and the controversy surrounding his involvement with BitClub Network, a cryptocurrency mining venture he helped launch and promote. Investigators describe BitClub as a Ponzi scheme that bilked victims of hundreds of millions of dollars, while Weeks frames the operation as a legitimate data-center mining business that paid members daily and built what he calls the largest Bitcoin mining pool in the world. Weeks describes his early life as a hustler who started small businesses at a young age to support his family, then became an entrepreneur who traveled to about 100 countries and founded and financed technologies in the United States. He explains that he joined BitClub as a member and vendor, selling mining hardware, computer equipment, and related services. BitClub promoted high-growth crypto opportunities and mining operations, asserting that mining hardware could generate profits and that their data centers—established in Iceland, Georgia, Norway, with power sourced from Canada and a facility in Montana—could scale to enormous output, with the Montana project described as 300 megawatts and the largest Bitcoin mine in the world. The government charged Weeks on 12/05/2019 with selling unregistered securities and wire fraud, and labeled BitClub a Ponzi scheme. Weeks insists BitClub sold physical mining hardware and not securities, providing invoices, tracking numbers, duties and tariffs paid, and descriptions of data centers and payments to participants. He claims the government raided BitClub’s data centers and seized assets, including miners and cryptocurrency, after weeks of cooperation and meetings with federal agents, including a controversial encounter at a Tony Robbins event. Weeks recounts being shuffled through jail and jail-to-jail transfers for eleven months, denied bail and a trial, with his attorney offering two choices: five years in jail innocent or one year in jail guilty. He ultimately signed a plea to secure his release, but maintains that the charges were misapplied and that there were no verified victims, citing a pre-plea assertion that “there is no victim, no crime.” He describes ongoing legal battles involving twelve prosecutors, repeated delays, and the absence of victims testifying or restitution measures. Supporters perspective includes claims that BitClub was a startup in the Wild West rather than a fraud, and that the government’s asset seizures harmed victims. A white paper with Attorney Alan Dershowitz alleges multiple constitutional and process failings: retroactive charging, selective prosecution, indiscriminate conspiracy liability, asset seizures without safeguards, discovery violations, absence of victims and restitution, unsettled regulatory backdrop, and erosion of speedy-trial protections. The white paper argues that under current standards the case would not go forward today. Weeks also references post-incident developments, including the Biden administration’s crypto actions and the Genius Act, noting the SEC’s stance that proof-of-work mining (as with Bitcoin) does not fall under its securities definition. He contends that early crypto pioneers faced punitive measures, while others who were early investors or promoters avoided similar consequences. Weeks emphasizes his belief that the government seized assets rather than seeking restitution, and he advocates for the return of miners and Bitcoin to make victims whole. Throughout, Weeks and supporters stress his intent to advance disruptive technologies and financial freedom, arguing that his actions were mischaracterized as fraudulent. They frame his six-year confinement as an injustice and call for the dismissal of charges and the return of belongings so he can continue contributing to pioneering crypto initiatives.

Coldfusion

FTX Founder Faces 115 Years in Prison
reSee.it Podcast Summary
On October 16, 2023, Sam Bankman-Fried faced trial for fraud after the collapse of his cryptocurrency exchange, FTX, which was once valued at $32 billion. His ex-girlfriend, Caroline Ellison, testified against him, revealing that he misused customer funds to cover losses at Alameda Research. Bankman-Fried is charged with multiple counts of wire fraud and money laundering, facing up to 115 years in prison. He was found guilty on all counts, with sentencing set for March 28, 2024.

Tucker Carlson

Why the Intel Agencies Want to Track Your Every Transaction and Throw Roger Ver in Jail for Life
Guests: Roger Ver
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Roger Ver discusses his extradition from Spain to the U.S. for tax evasion, claiming the charges are politically motivated rather than about taxes. He argues that the U.S. government is threatened by his promotion of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, which empower individuals to control their finances without government oversight. Ver, a pioneer in the Bitcoin ecosystem, renounced his U.S. citizenship in 2014 to avoid persecution and has since advocated for Bitcoin as a means of economic freedom. He believes that the original promise of Bitcoin as a peer-to-peer cash system has been hijacked by interests that promote it as a speculative asset instead. Ver highlights the censorship of discussions around Bitcoin's use as money, particularly on platforms like Reddit and Bitcointalk, where dissenting voices were banned. He expresses concern over the lack of privacy in current cryptocurrency transactions and promotes alternatives like Monero and Xano for greater anonymity. Ver emphasizes the need for public support to combat what he sees as a politically motivated attack on his advocacy for cryptocurrency, urging people to recognize the potential of cryptocurrencies to enhance individual freedom and economic growth.
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