Am I A Social Justice Warrior?
What if the most powerful tool for human dignity in our lifetime isn't a policy or a protest movement — but a money the state can't reach?
Brian takes the values of the social justice movement seriously — lifting up the marginalized, protecting the vulnerable, resisting tyranny — and runs them through John Rawls's "veil of ignorance." If you didn't know who you'd be born as — a Manhattan banker or a single mother in Lagos, a Connecticut homeowner or an Afghan coder in Herat — which monetary system would you choose?
The answer, Brian argues, isn't the one being defended by people who use the language of justice. It's Bitcoin.
What We Cover
* Rawls's veil of ignorance applied to money
* 1.4 billion unbanked adults, and reserve currency as an 11% global privilege
* Roya Mahboob paying Afghan women in Bitcoin in 2013
* Fereshteh Forough and Code to Inspire feeding 100 families via Bitcoin after Western Union pulled out of Afghanistan
* Argentina, Zimbabwe, Lebanon — inflation as a regressive tax
* Lightning at the till in 1,500 South African Pick n Pay stores
* Fadey's two-hour escape from Kyiv with everything on a USB drive
* The Canadian truckers and why self-custody is the right to financial speech
* Gridless electrifying Bondo, Malawi where charity has failed
* Bitcoin Beach / El Zonte and the remittance problem
Key Quotes
> "The worst-off don't need a more powerful state — they need a money the state can't reach.""A memorized seed phrase doesn't ask permission.""Self-custody is the right to financial speech.""Bitcoin isn't a financial product. It's a piece of human rights infrastructure that happens to also be a financial product."
People & Projects Mentioned
Alex Gladstein (Check Your Financial Privilege), Jason Maier, John Rawls (A Theory of Justice), Roya Mahboob, Fereshteh Forough (Code to Inspire), Anita Posch (Bitcoin for Fairness), Mike Peterson and the Bitcoin Beach team, Gridless, and circular economies in South Africa, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Costa Rica.
Behind the Veil — Who You Might Be
A Filipino fisherman. A network manager in Kabul. A Zimbabwean teacher who's watched her pension die three times. A 20-year-old two hours from a closed border. A Canadian who donated $50 to the wrong cause. A kid in Bondo doing homework under a light bulb. A grandmother in El Zonte.
Or a guy on an island with chickens and Bitcoin.
You don't know yet. That's the point.
www.satoshigeneral.com
linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529 [https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529]