# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Epstein

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Epstein", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Escape the Leviathan: Epstein, Silicon Valley, and the Sovereign Individual

For over a century, the ultra-wealthy have sought to place their wealth beyond the reach of sovereign nations. This pursuit has evolved from Swiss bank accounts, which offered secrecy for 70 years, to Caribbean offshore havens, which lasted about 50 years before increased transparency eroded their appeal. The article uses the case of Jeffrey Epstein as a lens to examine the latest iteration of this quest: cryptocurrency. It details how Epstein, a convicted sex offender, strategically funded key players in the crypto space to gain influence. He donated to the MIT Media Lab, which used his money to hire core Bitcoin developers, effectively buying control over the technology's direction. He also invested in Bitcoin infrastructure company Blockstream. This financial influence helped morph Bitcoin's narrative from a purely technical, decentralized innovation into a radical ideological tool for challenging state power, an idea championed by Silicon Valley figures like Peter Thiel. Thiel, a vocal adherent of the book "The Sovereign Individual," views crypto as a means for a cognitive elite to escape the constraints of nation-states and democratic accountability. The piece argues that this pursuit of "freedom" is not for the common good but for the absolute liberation of a tiny elite from social responsibility and wealth redistribution. It describes a powerful network of tech elites, connected through organizations like the Edge Foundation, who operate in private to align interests and positions. Ultimately, the attempt to create a permanent digital haven is meeting a regulatory wall. The recent implementation of the global Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) represents a coordinated international effort to impose transparency on crypto transactions, closing another loophole. The article concludes that the underlying ideology of escape persists, now manifesting in even more ambitious projects like life-extension technology and Mars colonization, funded by the same elite. It leaves the reader with a critical question: when a small, unaccountable group defines the future of money, society, and life itself in private, what does that mean for the rest of us?

marsbit02/03 04:50

Escape the Leviathan: Epstein, Silicon Valley, and the Sovereign Individual

marsbit02/03 04:50

The Bustle Belongs to the 'Epsteins', Saylor Just Wants to Hoard Coins

The article discusses Michael Saylor, founder of MicroStrategy (now Strategy), in the context of the recently released Epstein documents. Saylor was mentioned in a 2010 email from Epstein's PR agent, Peggy Siegal, who described him as a socially awkward "zombie-like" figure who was difficult to engage with at a high-society dinner party. This perceived social ineptitude, a liability in elite circles, is presented as a key strength in his role as a Bitcoin maximalist. Saylor’s company is the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, with 712,647 BTC purchased at an average cost of $76,037. Despite recent market volatility pushing Bitcoin below his average buy price and causing a 60% drop in his company's stock, Saylor remains unwavering. His strategy is simple and relentless: buy Bitcoin consistently and never sell, a philosophy he summarizes as "More Orange." The piece argues that the very traits that made him an outsider in social settings—being "boring," unemotional, and immune to external noise—are the same traits that make him uniquely suited to his long-term, single-minded accumulation strategy. While cautioning that his corporate financial tools are not available to the average investor, the article concludes that in a noisy market, a "boring" and disciplined approach is often the most profitable, contrasting Saylor's current success with the downfall of many involved in the Epstein scandal.

比推02/02 14:18

The Bustle Belongs to the 'Epsteins', Saylor Just Wants to Hoard Coins

比推02/02 14:18

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