Straight, No Chaser

Gavin

Understanding Freedom through Money, Technology, Economics and Philosophy

  1. 11H AGO

    Jabu Jakes - Bitcoin Works Because Nobody Owns It

    A government can threaten bans, taxes, and capital controls, but what happens when the thing it is trying to control is just code running on a global, decentralised network? We sit down with Jacques “Jabu Jacks” Strydom to get past the noise and talk about Bitcoin in South Africa the way business owners, engineers, and everyday people actually experience it. The conversation starts with identity and lived experience, then quickly lands on a practical question: how do you fit Bitcoin into the real world without turning it into another hype product?  We unpack why a single Lightning Network transaction often becomes the true “aha” moment, and why guaranteed settlement matters more than most people realise. From buying a cold drink to paying suppliers, moving value across borders, or avoiding proof-of-payment fraud, we explore Bitcoin as a payments rail and as digital property you can verify, not just trust. Jabu Jacks explains the technical and philosophical edge that separates Bitcoin from other crypto assets, and why self-custody is not a fringe idea but a core safety standard for anyone putting Bitcoin on a balance sheet.  Then we bring it home to South African governance: collapsing municipal service delivery, rates disputes, and the hard reality that citizens struggle to “vote with their wallet” when billing is bundled and transparency is weak. We discuss how multisig custody could help communities coordinate funds responsibly, and why the current regulatory push around capital flows runs into an enforceability problem when the network does not have a head office to serve papers to.  If you care about Bitcoin regulation, financial sovereignty, the Lightning Network, sound money, or simply keeping your savings safe in an uncertain system, this one is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend who still thinks Bitcoin is “nothing”, and leave us a review. What would need to happen for you to trust self-custody? https://x.com/jabulanijakes https://www.linkedin.com/in/strydomjacques/ Links: www.bitcoinforbusiness.io X: @gavingre X: @BTC_4_Biz Primal: GavinBGreen@primal.net NOSTR: npub12qv07tpwk8x8fy2uuqczghpappap395npuxvsx8pgksh97pezv7s8r7qta

    1h 14m
  2. APR 29

    Nick Darlington: A Freelancer Turns Bitcoin Into Everyday Money

    Owning Bitcoin is easy. Using it in the real world, without wrecking your savings plan, is where things get interesting. We chat with Nick Darlington, a South African freelancer and builder who went from travel and a self-made writing career to launching Bitcoin Friendly SA, a project focused on growing Bitcoin payments and a local Bitcoin circular economy. We get into the personal backstory first: leaving the corporate route, learning how to earn online, and the hard-won lessons that come from pitching, undercharging, finding mentors, and eventually charging what your work is worth. From there, the conversation widens into freedom, how regulation and social norms shape daily choices, and why online echo chambers on X can make you feel informed while quietly narrowing your worldview. Then we go hands-on with Bitcoin adoption in South Africa. Nick breaks down the spend-and-save approach: keep your long-term Bitcoin stack separate, load a small Lightning wallet for monthly spending, and start paying for simple things like coffee. We talk about merchant onboarding, the difference between direct Bitcoin acceptance and rand settlement, and how tools like Nostr “zaps” make Lightning tips feel as easy as a like button. We also unpack how Bitcoin Friendly SA evolved from a directory into a curated online shop for Bitcoin-friendly merchants, plus Nick’s Proof of Spend push to grow real transaction volume. Stick around for the most South African closing: turning Bitcoin miner heat into biltong. If you enjoy practical Bitcoin conversations, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. Where would you like to pay with Bitcoin next? https://x.com/NickDarlington https://x.com/BitcoinFrndlySA https://x.com/MoneyBadgerPay Links: www.bitcoinforbusiness.io X: @gavingre X: @BTC_4_Biz Primal: GavinBGreen@primal.net NOSTR: npub12qv07tpwk8x8fy2uuqczghpappap395npuxvsx8pgksh97pezv7s8r7qta

    1h 7m
  3. APR 18

    Monthly Round Up 8: When Data Becomes Oil Who Owns You

    We go deep on what “sovereign computing” looks like when you try it for real, from spinning up a Fedimint federation to self-hosting services that keep working even when platforms or politics turn against you. We then connect local AI, persistent knowledge bases, and geopolitics to one question: do we own our tools or do we rent our future? • choosing a deliberately clickbait title and what it signals about tech culture  • setting up a Fedimint federation on Start9 and what makes it “easy” in practice  • StartOS 0.40 changes, migration realities, backups, and why one-click upgrades are hard  • exposing services safely with Start Tunnels plus Tor being treated as a core service  • running local LLMs on home hardware and why it matters for privacy and control  • the LLM Wiki idea, persistent markdown knowledge, and a portable “second brain”  • why companies want private knowledge bases rather than uploading IP to big AI vendors  • open source models, uncensored variants, and the coming squeeze of AI pricing and regulation  • data centres as strategic assets, energy and cooling constraints, and geopolitical risk  • South Africa’s solar overbuild as an advantage for decentralised AI and Bitcoin tooling  • why AI adoption can be slower than expected in grassroots communities  • Iran, internet shutdown mechanics, Starlink as a signal, and propaganda as a tech weapon  • Atlas Pool shout-out and Tribe of 21 road trips built around Bitcoin circular economies  • travel friction, visas, and how geopolitics hits ordinary people https://gist.github.com/karpathy/442a6bf555914893e9891c11519de94f https://docs.start9.com/ https://x.com/abcptza https://x.com/BitcoinEkasi https://x.com/OKIN_17 https://x.com/OrangeSaaS https://bitcoinonly.io/ https://www.useorange.com/ https://btcpayserver.org/ https://btcpay386617.lndyn.com/login?ReturnUrl=%2F Links: www.bitcoinforbusiness.io X: @gavingre X: @BTC_4_Biz Primal: GavinBGreen@primal.net NOSTR: npub12qv07tpwk8x8fy2uuqczghpappap395npuxvsx8pgksh97pezv7s8r7qta

    1h 13m
  4. MAR 29

    David Ansara: The only problem with Orania, is that there aren't more of them.

    When the lights go out and the basics stop working, most people either rage at politics or retreat into cynicism. We chose a third option: talk honestly about what freedom requires when the state centralises power, fails at delivery, and still asks for more control. David Ansara from the Free Market Foundation joins us for a wide-ranging, South Africa grounded conversation on classical liberalism, individual rights, and why the rule of law is supposed to restrain whoever holds office. We dig into decentralisation as more than a slogan. From the economic calculation problem to the simple “shoe test”, we explore why central planners cannot reliably allocate resources, and why decision-making closer to communities improves accountability. We compare models like Switzerland’s cantons, America’s drift towards bigger federal government and debt, and the way supranational bureaucracy can collide with local legal traditions. Then we go further into the messy reality of international law, sovereignty, and why enforcement often depends on power rather than principle. Democracy also gets a hard look. We talk about majoritarian reflexes, constitutional limits, and the “skin in the game” problem, using South African flashpoints like National Health Insurance and expropriation without compensation to ask what counts as legitimate government action versus coerced taking. We close on the most practical thread of all: state-proofing. Bitcoin, permissionless innovation, and local problem-solving such as solar, boreholes, security, and skills training point to a way forward that does not wait for Pretoria to change. If you got value from this, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more South Africans can find the conversation. https://x.com/DavidAnsara https://freemarketfoundation.com/ Links: www.bitcoinforbusiness.io X: @gavingre X: @BTC_4_Biz Primal: GavinBGreen@primal.net NOSTR: npub12qv07tpwk8x8fy2uuqczghpappap395npuxvsx8pgksh97pezv7s8r7qta

    1h 1m
  5. MAR 14

    Monthly Round Up 7: It's Tamagochi For Grown-Ups

    AI agents are starting to feel less like chatbots and more like little workers you have to raise. We talk about OpenClaw, Start9, and what it actually takes to run self-hosted AI on real-world hardware, from a Raspberry Pi to an old laptop that should have been retired years ago. The “grown-up Tamagotchi” idea sticks because these agents only become useful when you feed them context, tools, and boundaries and when you keep them away from anything that can wreck your life, like Bitcoin keys. From there we push into the fun part: what happens when AI agents can pay. With Lightning Network primitives like L402, you can paywall API calls, charge per read for data, and let software procure services in real time with instant settlement. We connect that to a practical builder story: an agent that turns voice prompts into clean dev tickets, then gets packaged behind WhatsApp with Lightning payments so small teams can ship faster without hiring extra layers. We also go straight at the uncomfortable topics: AI-driven layoffs, the split between people who use these tools well and people who never start, and the risk of outsourcing your thinking to centralised models. Then we zoom out to money and power: CBDCs pushed through “free” perks, stablecoin freezes as a warning, and why Bitcoin still matters as censorship-resistant, spendable money especially as war and energy shocks reshape incentives around the world. If you get value from this kind of grounded Bitcoin and AI talk, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What’s one thing you want an AI agent to handle for you without giving up your sovereignty? https://x.com/i/status/2025234388137468387 https://bitchat.free/ https://x.com/abcptza https://x.com/BitcoinEkasi https://x.com/OKIN_17 https://x.com/OrangeSaaS https://bitcoinonly.io/ https://www.useorange.com/ https://btcpayserver.org/ https://btcpay386617.lndyn.com/login?ReturnUrl=%2F Links: www.bitcoinforbusiness.io X: @gavingre X: @BTC_4_Biz Primal: GavinBGreen@primal.net NOSTR: npub12qv07tpwk8x8fy2uuqczghpappap395npuxvsx8pgksh97pezv7s8r7qta

    1h 29m
  6. MAR 2

    Jordan - Build Tech That Can’t Be Tread On

    Imagine telling a stranger your most personal message so they can walk it across the room to your partner—then watching them copy it into a company database. That’s how most digital communication works today. We unpack why privacy is not secrecy, why “I have nothing to hide” is a trap, and how to build a tech life that works in your interest rather than mining it. We dive into sovereign computing—the practice of choosing tools that resist surveillance and censorship. From the Cypherpunk framing to the hard lessons of the COVID era, we explore how speech without reach is no speech at all, and why Overton window shifts make privacy essential even for people whose views never change. We cover concrete progress: GrapheneOS moving beyond Pixel-only support, Signal’s minimal data posture, and the rise of end-to-end encrypted, local-first design that denies gatekeepers your data by default. AI takes centre stage as both superpower and risk. We break down how to use LLMs without handing over your crown jewels: running open models locally if you can, or using privacy-forward layers and trusted execution environments when you can’t. We also get real about agentic AI—tools like OpenClaw that can act on your machine—and the security playbook you need: separate accounts, least privilege, and the assumption that anything an agent can read might leave the box. Along the way, we highlight freedom tech you can use right now: Nostr for decentralised social, Bitcoin for uncensorable value, BitChat and mesh-friendly comms, plus self-hosting with Nextcloud and the joy of a Linux laptop. If you want a simple starting point, we’ve got you: adopt a password manager like Bitwarden, then move your primary email to Proton and route sensitive chats through Signal. Small steps add up to real autonomy. Subscribe, share this with a friend who still says “nothing to hide,” and leave a review telling us the first tool you’re switching to this week. https://open.spotify.com/show/6H32tyRFOuBFY8wN91lxQW https://fountain.fm/show/mQSGg47zU5qNwjgkDJAL Links: www.bitcoinforbusiness.io X: @gavingre X: @BTC_4_Biz Primal: GavinBGreen@primal.net NOSTR: npub12qv07tpwk8x8fy2uuqczghpappap395npuxvsx8pgksh97pezv7s8r7qta

    57 min

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Understanding Freedom through Money, Technology, Economics and Philosophy