<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>LynAlden wrote</title><author_name>LynAlden (npub1a2…cw83a)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1a2cww4kn9wqte4ry70vyfwqyqvpswksna27rtxd8vty6c74era8sdcw83a</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>I know physicians in Egypt that, after their shift, go home and stack physical dollar bills. They earn no interest. If a thief or a fire takes their home, they&#39;re done.&#xA;&#xA;They have looked around at the monetary technologies available to them, and decided that this was the best one: stacks of paper claims issued by the global hegemon that they&#39;re not particularly fond of, stored in their own home rather than trust the banks. What a sad state of affairs.&#xA;&#xA;They put as much of their illiquid net worth as possible into buying a condo, and the rest of their liquid net worth goes into paper dollars with no interest. So, for starters, they have to sacrifice liquidity for savings.&#xA;&#xA;Egypt is not a very tech-savvy market; bitcoin, stablecoins, and other similar tech are all on the fringes. Many Muslims believe that bitcoin is speculation and thus bad, and so I appreciate the work that Saifedean and others do to show that no, bitcoin is interest-free sound money and good. If anything it&#39;s fiat money that doesn&#39;t conform to Muslim ideals. But more importantly, most Egyptians haven&#39;t actually spent time to understand the tech, unlike Nigeria or other countries. It&#39;s just not a &#34;thing&#34; there yet.&#xA;&#xA;The only time I encountered someone in person who had not yet heard of bitcoin, was in Egypt. I was speaking to a friend, and we were talking about the Iranian protests; she was happy that many women had taken off their head coverings if they wanted to (she herself was someone who did so in Egypt, where it&#39;s permissible). I was like, &#34;yeah, but it&#39;s rough for them. They risk getting bank accounts shut off. That&#39;s why some of them have promoted bitcoin. but I think it&#39;s still way too small yet.&#34;&#xA;&#xA;And she was like, &#34;what&#39;s bitcoin?&#34;&#xA;&#xA;And I was surprised. Many people haven&#39;t understood bitcoin, but most have heard the name. She hadn&#39;t heard the name even in 2022.&#xA;&#xA;What we have today is clearly a local maximum. This is clearly not the height of monetary technology.&#xA;&#xA;nostr:note1thet3ggupzn9rmll84u4s2zunhah9a6l2ucjkvr95xlcp0h36tqqsg9eqc </html></oembed>