Global reset theories and current events

Episode Summary

He Quit Poland for the Best Job in Bitcoin - Tomek Kołodziejczuk is a Polish bitcoiner from Warsaw, where he founded the Bitcoin Film Festival, now four years old and the first of its kind in the world. A year ago he flew to Roatán to visit Próspera, the Honduran free economic zone he'd been hearing about for years. On his second day he bought a motorbike from Facebook Marketplace to lock the decision in. He hasn't been back. Timothy Allen sits down with Tomek for a wide-ranging conversation that goes from the new Hollywood sub-genre of Satoshi Nakamoto films and the quantum threat to Satoshi's million coins, through Iran and the Great Reset and why neither of them would accept the job of king of the world, to the Bitcoin District inside Próspera, Orangeville (the wooden modular Bitcoin neighborhood climbing a jungle valley), the renovated Bitcoin Arena, the quarterly BitChill retreats, and Tomek's bet that this small Caribbean island can become the most Bitcoin-dense place in the world. Tomek runs the Bitcoin District inside one of the only jurisdictions on earth where a company can pay its taxes in Bitcoin and keep its books denominated in BTC. He's 33. He's been at the front line of Poland's freedom movement for the better part of a decade. And he has a lot to say about what it actually feels like to build a city from scratch in a jungle. In this conversation: The new Hollywood sub-genre of Satoshi Nakamoto films, and why Tomek doesn't actually want anyone to figure out who Satoshi was Hal Finney cryogenics, the quantum threat to Satoshi's million coins, and the game theory of the honeypot Iran, the Great Reset, global capital as the actor moving the world, and why neither Tomek nor Tim would accept the job of king of the world The Bitcoin District inside Próspera: what it is, what it isn't, and how it's different from a nomad village Orangeville, the wooden modular Bitcoin neighborhood climbing a jungle valley, with funding secured for the first phase of over a dozen apartments The Bitcoin Arena, BitChill, Bitcoin Games (two BTC of prizes), and the Bitcoin Roatán coalition that ties them together The bet that Roatán becomes the most Bitcoin-dense island in the world, and where Madeira (with ~170 merchants) sits today Running a business on a Bitcoin standard: 1% corporate tax, books denominated in BTC, residency in months, and the only jurisdiction on earth that allows it Why Próspera's gaps (the missing coffee shop, the missing scooter rental, the missing town hall) are the real opportunity, not the problem The one-month stay strategy, the Duna Tower, and why anyone with a builder mindset should come and try a month Bitcoin Vibe Camp in August, Sovereign Engineering coming to Roatán, and what's next at the Free Cities Conference in September Enjoy the conversation. Timestamps (audio version, includes Timothy's episode introduction): 0:00:30 - Introduction to episode 0:08:38 - Start of conversation: meeting at the first Bitcoin Film Festival in Warsaw 0:10:09 - Four years of the Bitcoin Film Festival and the state of Bitcoin cinema 0:12:19 - The Mystery of Satoshi: an animated French series on national TV 0:13:02 - The new sub-genre: Finding Satoshi, Killing Satoshi, and the rest 0:13:55 - Why the search for Satoshi doesn't matter (and might cause harm) 0:16:37 - Hal Finney, cryogenics, and the quantum threat to Satoshi's coins 0:17:36 - Why touching the chain is worse than a price dip 0:19:13 - Game theory of the Satoshi coins as a honeypot 0:21:04 - Who is Satoshi: a group, Hal Finney, or Adam Back? 0:22:35 - Aliens, time travelers, and AI: who really wrote the white paper 0:25:51 - Hotel Bitcoin and the wider growth of Bitcoi
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