(1/🧵) Is David Schwartz… Satoshi Nakamoto? Or at least one of Bitcoin’s original architects?
The timing, the patents, the silence, it all lines up.
This thread might flip your entire view of crypto history and you might fall into a deep rabbit hole.
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(2/🧵) The Patent That Predates Bitcoin
In 1991, David Schwartz filed a patent for a “Distributed Computer Network” that sounds eerily like a blockchain.
US Patent No. 20090119384
Years before the Bitcoin whitepaper.
Same structure. Same logic.
The same obsession with decentralization.
(3/🧵) The Language Overlaps
People have run stylometric analysis on Satoshi’s forum posts.
Guess whose writing style it closely resembles?
David Schwartz.
Even the use of terms like:
•“censorship-resistant”
•“trustless system”
•“consensus”
It’s almost like he never changed tone… just platforms.
(4/🧵) The Quiet Background
Schwartz worked on classified NSA contracts as a cryptographer.
So did other suspected Satoshi candidates like Hal Finney.
But Schwartz kept a much lower profile right until Ripple appeared, with XRP launching shortly after Bitcoin.
Too convenient? Or too perfect?
(5/🧵) The XRP Angle
Satoshi wanted Bitcoin to be “peer-to-peer digital cash.”
But over time, it became a store of value, not a payment system.
Enter XRP:
•Built for payments
•Real-time settlement
•Low energy use
What if XRP was Plan B?
A more efficient evolution built by the same mind?
(6/🧵) Satoshi’s Disappearance in 2011 = Ripple’s Emergence
Satoshi went silent in late 2010.
Ripple began forming quietly in 2011.
Not a coincidence but a handoff.
The Bitcoin experiment had proved the concept.
XRP was designed to scale it to the real financial system.
(7/🧵) Schwartz Never Confidently Denied It
In multiple interviews, when asked about the Satoshi theory, David Schwartz never gave a direct “no.”
Instead, he leans on:
•“I was around back then…”
•“I had thoughts about proof-of-work early on…”
•And always that cryptic grin when the question comes up.
Almost like someone who knows… but can’t say.
(8/🧵) The Theory?
Satoshi Nakamoto was never just one person.
It was a team or a rotating identityof cryptographers, engineers, and forward-thinking rebels.
Bitcoin was the revolution.
XRP was the blueprint for integration.
And David Schwartz?
He wasn’t Satoshi.
He was part of the mission.
(9/9) This isn’t just about whether David Schwartz is Satoshi.
It’s about how close we might be to the truth:
That the man who created Bitcoin…
May now be leading the asset the world will actually use.
And most people are too distracted to notice.
Comment your thoughts if you wanna go deeper in this Rabbit Hole.
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And when it does apply and get a banking license, everything changes.
This isn’t just a tech company anymore.
This is the future Fed wrapped in blockchain.
Bookmark this thread.
Here’s what happens next:
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(2/🧵) Most people think Ripple is just a cross-border payments company.
Wrong.
Ripple is building the infrastructure layer for the next financial system and acquiring a banking license is the final piece.
With one license, they can unlock unfiltered access to global money.
(3/🧵) What happens when a tech company becomes a bank?
•Direct access to central bank systems
•Ability to issue loans, credit, and even custody assets
•Legal power to handle both fiat and crypto
•Seamless integration with CBDCs and stablecoins
•Elimination of intermediaries
Ripple isn’t trying to partner with banks.
It’s trying to replace the need for them.
(1/🧵) Why would Ripple, which is launching its own stablecoin ($RLUSD), try to acquire a direct competitor?
Because it’s not about competition — it’s about consolidation.
Let’s break down what no one’s saying:
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(2/🧵) Ripple reportedly made a $4–5 billion offer to acquire Circle, the issuer of USDC.
This isn’t just a headline.
It’s a major signal about where the stablecoin wars and global financial rails are heading.
(3/🧵) Let’s connect the timeline:
•May 2024: Ripple announces plans to launch RLUSD
•Mid 2024: USDC expands to more chains, deepens U.S. partnerships
•Late 2024: Rumors begin of tensions around Circle’s valuation
•2025: Ripple makes a reported $4–5B acquisition attempt
(1/🧵) The letter ‘X’ is everywhere.
But it was never just a letter.
Ancient tombs. Freemason rituals. Black ops files.
Every empire used it before a collapse.
Now it’s back — on satellites, AI, governments, & crypto.
This isn’t branding.
It’s a signal.
Let me show you why:
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(2/🧵) The Pharaoh’s Crossed Arms (X):
In ancient Egypt, pharaohs were buried with their arms crossed — symbolizing control over the realms of life and death.
The X = divine authority.
(3/🧵) The Templars’ Lost Mark:
The Knights Templar carried seals with crossed swords, used in letters that vanished from history.