S Tominaga Profile picture
Nov 26 3 tweets 4 min read Read on X
You don’t fight because the odds are stacked in your favour. You fight because it’s what needs to be done. Yeah, BTC has more money, more people, more noise to drown out the truth. That’s no revelation. The scales have been tipped from the start, and everyone knows it. But knowing the game is rigged doesn’t stop the game from being played. It doesn’t make the fight any less necessary.

The point isn’t about walking into battle expecting a victory parade. The point is about standing your ground, holding the line, even when you know the machine is bigger, louder, more polished. You fight because someone has to. Because letting them steamroll the truth means you lose more than a case—you lose the principle. And principle, once surrendered, doesn’t come back.

This isn’t about winning easy. It’s about doing what’s right, even when the deck is stacked, even when the crowd is against you. You’ve always known the weight of what you’re up against. But the weight of knowing isn’t what breaks you—it’s what sharpens you. That’s why you fight. Not for the odds. Not for the glory. But because it’s the right thing to do. And that’s enough.
The battle isn’t just about me. It’s not about a courtroom or a verdict. It’s about what BTC is trying to do—what they’re turning Bitcoin into. A system that wasn’t built for anonymity but for honesty. A system that was supposed to bring accountability and transparency. And yet, here they are, twisting it, warping it into something dark. A tool for laundering money. A marketplace for child pornography. A pipeline for funding corruption, violence, and the ugliest corners of human existence.

Imagine it. A system where the truth dies in shadows. Where a politician takes a bribe, and it vanishes without a trace. Where the wealthiest can fund assassinations on those who stand against them, and no one ever knows. That’s what they’re building. That’s what they’re calling "freedom." But it’s not freedom. It’s chaos wrapped in marxist/anarchist lies.

BTC doesn’t want responsibility. It doesn’t want integrity. It wants the rich and the corrupt to have their playground, where every dirty deed can be hidden under the guise of "privacy." But that’s not privacy. That’s rot. That’s a world where the rules don’t matter anymore, where morality is just a relic, where power operates unchecked.

And this? This is why we fight. Not because it’s easy, not because the odds favour us, but because it’s the battle that needs to be fought. If we don’t stand up now, what’s left? A system that lets power run wild, that shields the guilty, that dismantles the very idea of justice. This isn’t just about Bitcoin. It’s about the future. About whether technology serves the people—or enslaves them.

BTC is the front line of this war. They want to burn the original vision, turn it to ash, and replace it with their twisted version of progress. But we’re here. We’re standing. And we’re fighting, not because we think we’ll win, but because letting them win without a fight is worse than losing. This is the battle. And we won’t walk away.
The real battle isn't just against BTC; it’s against the puppet masters behind it—BlackRock, Square, and the faceless giants funding this circus. These entities, these hollow empires, care about one thing and one thing only: money. Not innovation. Not progress. Not fairness. Just money. Their mission isn’t to build a better system but to break the one that keeps them in check. They’re not after freedom; they’re after invisibility, a world where they can shuffle billions under the table without anyone noticing.

What they want is an underground highway for their wealth, a system that dodges every tax, every regulation, every form of accountability. No oversight. No transparency. Just power moving silently, corruptly, without resistance. These aren’t innovators; they’re the architects of evasion. The rich staying rich and unaccountable, while the world burns around them.

They fund BTC not for its promise but for its potential to erase their tracks. To dismantle the safeguards that make society work. They want to avoid paying their share while making sure their failures stay buried. They want to gamble with no consequences, to shift the blame, to control the narrative, and to rig the game even further in their favour. And they’re selling it as "liberty," as "innovation," but it’s nothing more than a smokescreen for greed.

These are the same people who fund systems that protect the powerful while exploiting the powerless. They talk about decentralisation, but what they really mean is deregulation. They want to dismantle the controls that keep them honest, the rules that force them to answer for their actions. They’re not here to build—they’re here to tear down anything that holds them accountable. This is their endgame: a system where they can move money, fund corruption, and avoid detection, all while hiding behind the false flag of technology.

And we’re here to call it out. To stand against this machine of greed and deception. To fight for a system that doesn’t bow to their interests. Because if we don’t, they’ll get what they want—a world where their failures don’t matter, where their crimes go unseen, and where they control everything while pretending to offer us freedom.

But we know better.

And we won’t let them get away with it.

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More from @CsTominaga

Nov 18
BTC Core stands as the crooked embodiment of betrayal—a clumsy caricature of what Bitcoin was meant to be. Satoshi Nakamoto didn’t hand the world a tool for centralised elites to choke. He gave us a system that promised freedom, one grounded in immutability, scalability, and decentralisation. And here comes BTC Core, with its tech priests and gatekeepers, dismantling those promises brick by brick, pissing on the foundation while pretending it’s an improvement.
First, immutability. “Set in stone,” Satoshi wrote. Not a polite suggestion, not a flexible roadmap, but a bedrock principle. Yet BTC Core treats the protocol like it’s some playground experiment, carving it up and tinkering like mad scientists drunk on their own arrogance. Consensus? Broad consensus? They spit on it. They’ve swapped out Bitcoin’s backbone for something malleable, fragile, a Frankenstein monster subject to the whims of a select few devs playing gods. Each fork, each so-called improvement, is a hammer blow to trust. If users can’t rely on the system being what it claims to be, what the hell is left? Faith in a handful of coders? Satoshi designed Bitcoin to eliminate trust, not to shift it from one centralised power to another.
And scalability. This is the most grotesque part of the farce. Bitcoin was meant to be electronic cash—a system for the masses, from the smallest street vendor to the largest multinational. High transaction volumes, low fees, seamless global payments: that was the dream. BTC Core murdered that dream with its artificial constraints. Block size limits? Segregated Witness? A convoluted web of second-layer solutions? It’s like telling someone to build a skyscraper and handing them a child’s toy blocks. BTC Core doesn’t want scalability. They want control. Their model, riddled with delays and high fees, isn’t about enabling direct, peer-to-peer transactions. It’s about forcing dependence on third parties, pushing people into custodial systems that siphon away the power Satoshi sought to return to individuals.
Read 6 tweets
Nov 16
The vision of #Bitcoin was never to cater to a select few lounging in the penthouses of financial privilege.

It was built for the billions, not the billionaires.

This statement is not merely a slogan but a clarion call to the masses, an assertion of the individual’s rightful power over their own financial existence. Beneath the layers of misinformation propagated by those who fear losing their monopolies lies the truth: a system designed to scale infinitely, capable of handling the smallest micropayments and the grandest commercial transactions alike, with efficiency unmatched by any fiat-based competitor.
This creation stands as a testament to the power of technology guided by rational self-interest. It provides a platform where value can flow without interference, bypassing the gatekeepers who have long siphoned wealth under the guise of 'security' and 'stability.' Bitcoin's original protocol, like the industrial revolution itself, empowers those who produce, trade, and innovate, offering a framework for growth that recognises the individual as the fundamental unit of economic progress.
The billionaires, those who thrive on the exploitation of opaque financial systems and centralised control, have twisted this narrative.

They seek to reduce #Bitcoin to a mere speculative asset, a tool for hoarding rather than creating. But their machinations are ultimately futile. The essence of this system—its capacity to empower billions through accessible, low-cost transactions—is its invincible core. It is a system designed to reward value creation, not value hoarding. It is, fundamentally, the engine of capitalism in its purest form.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 15
The greatest discovery of Columbus wasn’t gold, spices, or the imagined fountains of youth. It was something far more profound, far more simple, and yet infinitely more powerful: rubber.

Yes, rubber.

Not a chest of treasures but the black gold of progress. It wasn’t merely a material; it was a tool of transformation, the very sinew of industry.

Without it, the Roman Empire, the great architects of civilisation, could never transition from their stone gears to the mechanisms of steel.

Without it, the early Chinese, masters of gunpowder and paper, were doomed to stagnate, lacking the pliability that bridges invention to mass production.

Rubber isn’t just a commodity—it’s the lifeblood of motion, of machines, of endless potential. The Romans had the genius to build aqueducts, roads, and war machines, but they lacked the ability to cushion their carts or power their devices. Their wheels shattered on cobblestones because they were brittle. Their gears ground down because they couldn’t absorb the friction of their own brilliance.

Rubber could have changed that. It is flexibility incarnate—resilience made tangible. It is the bridge between imagination and reality.

And the Chinese, those early masters of invention, stagnated under the weight of rigid progress. They had paper but no typewriters, gunpowder but no reliable wheels for transport.

They were trapped, like the Romans, in a world where the inflexible crushed innovation under its unyielding weight. Rubber is not just a thing—it is the principle of adaptation. It is reason made elastic.

The Americas, with their rubber trees, held the secret. But the truth, like all truths, waited for the right time, the right minds. Columbus stumbled upon it like a drunk discovering fire, unaware that what he found wasn’t a resource but a revolution. It is the quiet material that whispers progress through the spokes of bicycles, the belts of engines, the boots of armies, and the seals of submarines. It gave the industrial age its breath, its movement, its heartbeat.

Rubber isn’t just the answer to why the ancients stagnated—it is the embodiment of why progress is born not from force but from flexibility, not from conquest but from discovery. It is the lesson of the Americas, the legacy of the world’s second wind. It’s rubber, and it’s everything.
Without rubber, the industrial revolution would have been an impossible dream, a spark that never found its fuel.

Engines, motors, and the entire framework of modern industry depend on this singular material, not just as a convenience but as a necessity.

Rubber is not merely a component; it is the enabler. It is the unsung hero of motion, sealing the gaps, absorbing the shocks, and carrying the weight of human ambition.

Consider the steam engine, the early marvel that powered the industrial revolution. Without rubber, it would have been a clanking monstrosity of inefficiency. Steam engines rely on gaskets and seals to contain high-pressure steam, preventing leaks and maintaining efficiency. These seals, pliable and heat-resistant, cannot function without rubber or an equivalent. Without rubber, the engine is no longer a marvel of precision but a sputtering mess, incapable of sustained operation.

Now think of the combustion engine, the next leap in industrial evolution.

Fuel must flow, and air must breathe into the heart of the engine, but how does it get there?

Rubberized tubes.

Flexible, durable, and airtight, they direct fuel and air precisely where they need to go. Without them, the engine chokes, splutters, and dies. Rubber belts transfer power, insulating vibration and ensuring smooth operation. It is the silent workhorse of mechanical innovation, without which the roaring beast of industry falls silent.

And then, there are tires—the unsung champions of movement. The industrial age brought the train and the automobile, but without rubber tires, the car and trucks would never have conquered the world.

Tires absorb shock, provide traction, and enable speed. Even now, the tires of 747s, the giants of the sky, are made from natural rubber because synthetic substitutes cannot match its strength, elasticity, and resilience. Without rubber, there are no cars, no planes, no global economy. The world grinds to a halt.

Rubber didn’t just make industrial machinery more efficient; it made it possible. The Romans could carve their gears, the Chinese could ignite their gunpowder, but without rubber, they couldn’t build machines that could flex, move, and sustain. Rubber brought resilience to rigidity, mobility to invention. It turned the theories of steam and combustion into practical, unstoppable forces.

The industrial revolution wasn’t just about steel and steam; it was about sealing the gaps in the machinery of progress. It was about making engines that didn’t leak, wheels that didn’t splinter, and machines that didn’t grind themselves into oblivion. Rubber didn’t just aid the industrial revolution—it was its lifeblood. It remains so today, the unsung cornerstone of every motor, every wheel, every engine that powers our world. Without rubber, there is no modernity. There is no revolution. There is only stillness.
Even today, natural rubber remains irreplaceable in countless critical applications. While synthetic rubber has made strides in some areas, it falls short in elasticity, resilience, and performance under demanding conditions.

Natural rubber’s unique molecular structure provides unparalleled flexibility, tensile strength, and durability that no synthetic substitute can fully replicate. This is why industries ranging from aviation to medicine still depend on natural rubber.

Consider the tires of an airplane—747s, cargo planes, and military jets. These tires endure extreme stresses: high speeds, immense weight, and rapid temperature fluctuations during takeoff and landing. Synthetic rubber cannot match the natural rubber’s ability to absorb these stresses without cracking or failing.

This is why even the most advanced aircraft in the world rely on natural rubber for their tires.

In the medical field, natural rubber plays a crucial role in products like surgical gloves and catheters. Its biocompatibility, flexibility, and resistance to wear make it indispensable. Synthetic materials often cause allergic reactions or lack the delicate precision required in critical procedures. Natural rubber ensures safety, comfort, and reliability in ways synthetics simply cannot.

Even industrial applications, like conveyor belts in mining or heavy-duty seals in hydraulic systems, demand the resilience of natural rubber. Synthetic alternatives often degrade faster under extreme pressures, reducing the efficiency and longevity of equipment. Natural rubber’s ability to withstand these conditions makes it the backbone of heavy industry.

Furthermore, natural rubber remains vital in applications requiring extreme elasticity. Elastic bands, shock absorbers, and vibration dampeners depend on its ability to return to its original shape after repeated stretching or compression. Synthetics may mimic this behavior to some extent, but they lack the endurance and reliability of natural rubber in high-stress environments.

Rubber’s versatility stems from its unique composition—long polymer chains that allow it to stretch and flex without losing integrity. While synthetic rubber can be engineered for specific uses, its production relies on petrochemicals and lacks the renewable, sustainable qualities of natural rubber. This is particularly important in a world increasingly focused on sustainability.

Natural rubber isn’t just a relic of the industrial revolution; it’s an enduring cornerstone of modern innovation. From airplanes to surgical tools, it continues to underpin technologies and industries that demand the highest performance. Its unparalleled properties make it irreplaceable, a testament to its importance in both history and the present day.

Synthetic alternatives may fill gaps, but they cannot displace the role of natural rubber in driving progress.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 12
The reality is simple—no one’s going to chase down small amounts of Bitcoin under $50,000.

The costs alone—court fees, legal filings, recovery processes—make it practically impossible. Even governments, with all their resources, won’t waste time on peanuts. But this doesn’t mean the system fails; it means it works where it matters.

Recovery isn’t for every minor loss. It’s for the cases tied to something bigger—property, deeds, or major disputes where the stakes justify the effort.
Imagine a house deed locked to a few satoshis. That’s where recovery makes sense. The number of coins might be small, but the value of the asset they represent isn’t. This system ensures that even though the cryptocurrency amount is minimal, its connection to something real and tangible keeps it worth pursuing.
Now, some will scream this isn’t Bitcoin. They’ll argue the white paper’s purity, that ownership means you lose your keys, you lose everything. Sure, that sounds good in theory, but reality isn’t as clean. Cash is irrecoverable in small amounts, too.

You drop a $10 bill, it’s gone. But in larger cases, there are safeguards—laws, contracts, systems that allow recovery.

Bitcoin, when tied to real-world assets, can offer the same.
Read 4 tweets
Nov 10
White Rabbit's Journey to Wonderland

The White Rabbit was late. Late, as always, because he’d been trying to confirm his BTC transaction for hours. He clutched his phone, staring at the spinning circle of doom on his screen, muttering, “Oh dear! Oh dear! I shall be too late!” Late for what? No one really knew. Perhaps for his coffee, now cold, purchased with BTC at a trendy café where they charged him more in fees than the drink’s actual cost.

As he bolted down the blockchain rabbit hole, he stumbled into Wonderland—a strange, decentralised place that claimed to be free of kings and queens, but where a cabal of shadowy developers seemed to pull the strings. “Welcome!” said the Cheshire Miner, his grin flashing like a block reward. “You’re just in time to pay your exorbitant fees and contribute to our mining lottery!”Image
The Queen of Nodes

The White Rabbit soon found himself in the court of the Queen of Nodes. She sat atop a pile of raspberry pi devices, declaring loudly, “Decentralisation or death!” The crowd of sycophantic followers cheered. “But what do you do, exactly?” asked the White Rabbit.

“We validate! We don’t mine, we don’t process transactions, but we validate!” the Queen bellowed, as if repeating the word would add meaning.

Confused, the Rabbit asked, “So, you don’t help confirm my transaction? Why did I pay a fee?”

The Queen cackled, “Fee? Oh, dear Rabbit, the fee is merely the price of admission to our exclusive decentralised utopia. It has nothing to do with your transaction!”Image
The Mad Dev Party

Wandering further, the White Rabbit stumbled into the Mad Dev Party. Around the table sat the Core Devs: the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, and the Dormouse, furiously debating how small they could make the blocks.

“It’s not about transactions!” the Mad Hatter shouted, slamming his teacup. “Bitcoin is digital gold! Who cares if no one can use it?”

The March Hare nodded, “Yes, yes! No one spends gold! It’s meant to be hoarded forever!”

The Dormouse mumbled in his sleep, “Use Lightning… if it works…”

The White Rabbit piped up, “But what if I actually want to use Bitcoin to pay for something?”

The Devs laughed uproariously. “Pay for something? Silly rabbit, BTC isn’t for use. It’s for holding and dreaming of Lambos you’ll never afford!”Image
Read 7 tweets
Nov 8
The sheer absurdity of the COPA case lies in its deliberate erasure of the very writings that form the foundation of Bitcoin—those authored by Satoshi Nakamoto. Imagine a case purportedly centred on the identity of Satoshi, yet it excludes any reference to the creator's own words, works, or publications prior to 2014.

This is not merely a procedural oversight; it is an intentional strategy to suppress the core ideas that define both the identity and philosophy behind Bitcoin.
Think about the implications.

The writings of Satoshi Nakamoto are pivotal, not just for understanding Bitcoin’s technical architecture but for grasping the conceptual framework that Satoshi sought to establish. By barring these writings, the court effectively stripped the case of its most relevant evidence.

How can one litigate over the identity of Satoshi while simultaneously silencing Satoshi’s voice?

The irony here is profound—this isn’t a pursuit of truth but an exercise in obfuscation.
What’s particularly galling is the broader consequence: the deliberate suppression of ideas.

This case wasn’t just about who Satoshi is; it was about silencing the principles and truths embedded in those early communications.

These ideas challenge the narrative COPA and its partners wish to propagate, and by excluding them, the court turned a case about intellectual and historical truth into a hollow procedural exercise.
Read 4 tweets

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