BitBoy Crypto Talks About the Future of Crypto | Digital Social Hour #108

1h 2m
On today's episode of the Digital Social Hour, we sit down with Bitboy Crypto to talk about the future of crypto and potentially moving to Dubai BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com APPLY TO BE ON THE POD: https://forms.gle/qXvENTeurx7Xn8Ci9 SPONSORS: Opus Pro: https://www.opus.pro/?via=DSH LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/
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Transcript

I want to get into uh

Bin Coin.

Yeah, for sure.

I've always thought about kind of doing a coin, but I haven't been able to do one.

This other guy launches a coin, calls it Bincoin, asks me to retweet it.

I retweet it:

20x is overnight.

So I tweeted about it and I went to sleep.

I was in Amsterdam, actually.

And I woke up

and I looked at my MetaMask wallet, and I hadn't, I didn't have very much, it was less than Ethereum's worth than I had.

And I opened it up and I was like, what do I have?

It's 20 in here.

All right, welcome back to the Digital Social Hour, guys.

I'm your host, Sean Kelly.

You're my co-host, Wayne Lewis.

What up, what up?

And our guest today, crypto expert BitBoy.

What's up?

Bitboy in the building.

Building.

That's right, man.

Barely made it here.

A little little late, guys.

It's my bad.

But, yeah, man, we're excited to be here and talk about everything going on in my world.

And we've got Bincoin.

We've got the channel.

We've got crypto.

You know, we've got a lot of crazy stuff going on with the economy and the government.

And, you know, let's get into it.

So start where you want to start.

Where do you want to start, man?

Shoot it.

I guess, you know, for most people that are watching this, I don't know how well-versed people are in crypto, but it's one of these things where right now, it seems like everybody's against crypto right now.

Do you think so?

Well,

from a government perspective.

From a government perspective.

And what you're seeing is like, you know, one of my favorite, one of my favorite lines from a book ever.

I'm not a huge reader.

I read a lot when I was a kid, you know?

Yeah.

But it was from Tale of Two Cities.

Someone misquoted it as Ernest Hemingway.

It's not just Charles Dickens.

You know, it was the best of times.

It was the worst of times.

And it's from the book Tale of Two Cities.

And the whole point is, is getting ready to move into the French Revolution.

You've got the elite, the people that have money, they're so high above everybody else.

But the people that are downtrodden, the people that don't have money, they're way down at the floor.

And so what it did, it's created this dynamic where it's like an us versus them dynamic on both sides.

And that's what led to the French Revolution and then, you know, led to a lot of other stuff outside of that.

What people don't realize is we're going through the same thing in America right now.

Like the gap between who has and who has not, it's never been wider than it is right now.

I can't remember the exact stat, what they based it off of, but I was in, I was getting my hair cut the other day and the, the yeah you know it was a fresh cut you know but the uh the lady that was cut my hair you know i was listening to her conversation with some other people and you know when you're when you're like an expert in something or you you know you're you're super well versed and you hear just normal people talking about the subject it's hard to kind of bite your tongue

you know

they were talking about do you think the people in the great depression knew they were in the great depression that's that was the question they asked and they're like oh yeah definitely definitely oh they knew it was really bad and uh you know they knew they were in the great depression and they may not have known exactly what it was called but you know oh yeah they were very poor they're doing do you know today the stats of income inequality are worse than they were during the great depression really the average salary compared to the average um you know sustainable amount of salary that someone would need to you know have a family and and get all their needs taken care of it's less than it's ever been like We're technically in a worse spot salary-wise for the average American than we were during the Great Depression.

And people don't realize that.

But you see it, though.

You see it in, you know, when you watch TV, we see like, you know, real housewives, you see the lives that a lot of these really super rich people live.

And, you know, I can't, I live a super rich life, but just three years ago, I was poor, you know?

So yeah, oh, yeah.

So three years ago, you were poor?

Four years ago.

Four years ago.

Yeah, 2019.

Yeah, yeah.

We can talk about that in a minute.

But,

you know, the whole thing was, is that

you see the lavish lifestyle people are living.

Come here to Vegas, you know, and you see what people are doing out here and, you know, staying in the suites and all this.

And then you go like do you have a ton of long form content that you want to turn into short form or are you looking to make short form out of other people's content well opus pro has you covered it's a website i've used since i've started the podcast and some of the clips have gone on to generate millions of views they make it very easy for you all you got to do is put in a youtube link it spits out 20 to 30 clips ranks them by a score on how well they'll think they'll do on social media and some of these have the potential go viral and these all came back within 20 minutes and it even lets you edit a lot of stuff you can edit the text the text color the font comes with subtitles to make your life easy it uses ai technology to spit out these clips and it's always exciting to see what clips it's going to produce now you don't have to spend hours finding a good video editor or a good short form editor you can use opus pro let its ai do its job and you just do your job it saved me so much time so much money you can see here in this video that it's spitting out all these clips i'll probably end up posting some of these on my social media channels check out the link down below to get a discount on your order, and I'll see you guys soon.

Just to a normal neighborhood, and you see kind of how things are working.

People are struggling to pay for groceries.

People are looking at gas, like, oh my gosh, how am I going to get from here to there?

And that's a concern that's on a lot of people's minds.

The inflation is absolutely people.

And our government, they set us up on a tee and they just hit us with the bat.

Right.

Said, oh, there's no inflation.

It's not coming.

It's, you know, a famous Jerome Powell, the Fed share, said it's transitory, meaning like it's going to pass really quick.

And now we see where we're at with the interest rates.

And that's not to mention all the other stuff going on in the world,

including, do you guys know what the BRICS nations are?

I know what the BRICS was.

I've heard of it.

Yeah,

Brazil, Russia.

Brazil, Russia,

India, China, South Africa.

So this is basically a dual economy that's popping up in the world right now to where they're saying, we're not going to use dollars.

We're going to use our own currency.

And so Janet Yellen, who's the treasury of the secretary or secretary of the treasury, she came out and said, oh, yeah, we already kind of know, like, yeah, we think we are losing the power of the dollar as the world reserve currency.

And when I went to Dubai recently, everybody in Dubai, that's what they're talking about, the Deep Bricks Nations.

Guys, our economy in America is dead.

Like, I hate to just say it outright like that, but when we lose the world reserve currency, we're toast.

That's the only thing that gives us power.

Wow.

That's what gives America power.

It's not, you know, look at our technology ranks.

Look at our, you know, production and our manufacturing ranks.

Like, we're not very high.

Look at our education ranks.

We're not very high.

Women don't do anything well in America anymore.

But the thing, be independent, you know, that's one thing people still do here compared to other places in the world.

But when you really break that down and you really try to look at what makes America the superpower, it's just a world reserve currency.

It means that every country in the world has to have dollars on hand.

So they're constantly buying dollars from our supply.

And that is, you know, what makes every country in the world be able to transact between each other because

just to kind of explain the way international transfers work if let's say i'm in germany and i have euros and i want to send them to mexico i got a buddy in mexico so i i go to my bank in germany and i say hey here's uh you know 1 million euros i want to send these over to to mexico what the bank is going to do is the bank is going to take that 1 million euros and they're going to convert it to dollars and then they're going to transfer the dollars over to mexico mexico is going to receive the dollars and then

transact that into pesos.

I guess that's what they used.

At least when I was a kid, you know, that's what they used.

And then the person on the other end is going to receive the pesos.

So every transaction in the world that goes across the border involves dollars.

When we lose that, and there's no reason for the rest of the world to kind of prop up our currency anymore.

Because we should have, because of our inflation rates, we should have already like faced much bigger problems.

But we haven't because the rest of the world props up our dollar.

Because if the dollar fails, all the currencies of the world fail the way it's currently set up.

But now we have the Brickstations rising up.

They have something to fall back on to, which is another currency.

And the Bricks Nations where he said, like, hey, we're even interested in looking at Bitcoin backing our currency.

Wow.

So, you know, that was kind of a big deal for Bitcoin.

But like, you know, I've really been weighing out.

We were talking about Dubai a little bit before we went live here.

And

I've been weighing out, should I move my family out to Dubai?

And it's like, you have all this government pressure

and, you know, where people like me feel like we could be facing the Salem witch trials on crypto.

It's like, we didn't do anything wrong, but it doesn't matter.

We're in crypto.

The government doesn't like crypto, so they may come after us.

So I'm trying to decide, like, is that the best thing for me and my family is to move to a place like Dubai where we're free and we don't have to worry about that?

Is he free out there, though?

Yeah.

They love crypto there.

Let me tell you this.

No, what I'm saying is it free in the sense of like

is any nation free?

Is any country free?

like are you free it feels more free it feels more it feels more free

you felt free oh yeah especially from someone from the the crypto world now it's a lot different out there i i went out there in um october of last year

and i went to the pool and i came back in from the pool and you know i didn't have my shirt on i walked inside let me tell you you do not walk inside a place without a shirt on in in dubai or any middle eastern country like all of a sudden these guys come out of every corner running like no sir this is a muslim country you are not allowed to be without a shirt on And I'm just like, I'm looking at the glass door, and all the people without shirts on, and I'm looking at them, and I'm looking at me, and they try to cover me with a sheet.

And I was like, nah, guys, uh, the elevator's right there.

I'll go to my hotel room and I'll get a shirt on.

It won't happen again.

So, like, there are definitely some things, you know, you don't want to get in trouble over there.

Like, you don't, you don't, you know, people over in other countries, not just the United States, or excuse me, not just Dubai, but anywhere outside of the United States, the people pretty much follow the law.

Like, you'll be sitting there at an intersection, walking across the street, and it's red.

You know, you shouldn't walk.

There's not a car coming anywhere.

What are you going to do?

You're going to walk.

Other people in other countries don't do that.

Really?

They wait.

Wow.

They will sit there and they will wait until it turns green and then they will go, even if there's not a car inside.

And so in Dubai, you really get that sense too.

Like a lot of people there,

they have all these supercars and people don't really speed.

It's like Carl from the moon.

I saw he passed me in a Bugatti one day.

But

he'll speed.

But outside of him, you see all these Lamborghinis are just on the speed limit.

And it's pretty interesting.

But just to answer the question,

is it free over there?

Here's my one concern about Dubai, which is my concern is not their leadership because I don't even know who the Sheikh is over there right now.

But what I do know is that the way their government and infrastructure is set up is that if one day they just want to come in and change all the laws, they could do it.

Here in America, you know, faulty system or not, we have a process that you have to go through.

And then some countries,

I can't remember which one it was i want to say it's it's sweden maybe it's a

norwegian country to where like it takes them 10 years to change the law geez once they put the law in it takes 10 years for it to go into effect that way they don't make any any rash decisions that's that's that's the thought process but like you got all this money flowing into dubai from all around the world you got russian oligarchs moving there you got crypto billionaires moving there you got people from you know all other countries that are feeling like they're they're being squeezed in terms of crypto moving over there it's not just crypto i mean there's ai all kinds of stuff is blowing up over there.

But you've never been there.

Never been?

Yeah.

I never been until October.

Now I'm in Twitter.

I'm getting ready to go in a few weeks.

So I hosted a big yacht party out there.

Oh, wow.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

It's supposed to be the biggest yacht in Dubai.

We'll see what happens.

Are we invited?

Yeah, yeah.

Yeah, yeah.

Yeah, sure.

I want to get on the biggest yacht in the world.

Yeah, yeah.

Yeah.

Well, I think Jeff Bezos may be the biggest one in the world.

Biggest one in Dubai, I think.

The biggest one in Dubai.

Why do you think the U.S.

government hates crypto so much?

Well, you know, it's kind of like,

you know, I've said this before.

It's not just the government, it's the banking system as well.

You can't untie the two.

They're the same.

The banking system and the government are the same.

The banking system runs the government.

And these are things I always told you were conspiracies.

Like before I got into crypto, like 10 years, or, you know, I've been in crypto for 11 years, but before I really started diving into all this, I said, banking system, you know, they got money, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

But they don't run stuff.

No, the banks run the country.

The banks have the money.

And we all know with any industry, right?

Follow the money.

When they're in control of the money, they're in control of everything.

That's why you had that video, the hidden camera video from the guy who was meeting on behalf of BlackRock who said, oh, yeah, we buy the center.

It's $10,000 center.

I got you.

It's like,

what?

You know?

So it's kind of thing where, you know, this is a comparison I made on my show.

It's kind of like an intervention.

Like, you ever watch that show, Intervention?

Yeah.

So I've actually taken part in some interventions.

They're very intense.

And,

you know, the thing is, is the addict comes in and sits in the room and first is like, oh, man, what's going on here?

Like, I know something's up, you know?

And then, like, you just watch them go through all these emotions, right?

And

there's a part in the intervention where they're blaming everybody for all the problems.

You know, they're like, no,

you did this when I was little.

Or no, like, I was late to work, but you were supposed to wake me up and you didn't.

That's what we're seeing the government and the banking system do right now.

No, it's crypto's fault.

No, it's

AI's fault.

No, it's this person's fault.

The system is failing because the system was always going to fail.

A fiat currency system.

And so just so everybody understands, like in the world of economics, we throw these words out.

Like everybody knows what they mean.

Fiat does not mean paper money, right?

When you hear the word fiat, a lot of people think like, oh, that's government money.

Well,

money is actually something that has value, right?

So like we go back to, you know, when our currency was backed by gold.

It was backed by gold, right?

And so then the French came over and like I think it's the 60s or 70s, one dollar gold and then Nixon had to take us off the gold standard because we didn't have it.

That's how we ended up off the gold standard.

Once nothing backs your currency, you become fiat currency.

So paper money that has no backing or it could be

metal coin money, same difference, that's fiat currency.

And so when we got removed off the gold standard, 1971 is actually when it was, we got removed off of the gold standard, the only thing that gives our money value now is

the power of the government that's it that's the only thing the power of the government and how do you quantify that how you make that tangible you can't really right you can't it's not really a thing so um our currency now is that's the reason why they just print it right like they haven't been printing in a couple years for the most part during covet they printed out of control we printed uh i think it was like i want to say it was like 60 of the money supply in like a few years yeah yeah

Yeah.

And now you see it when you go buy milk or eggs or whatever the case may be.

And so

the fact that you have this currency that isn't backed by anything, that you can just press a button and print more of,

that's the entire problem.

It's always good.

And you can look back in history.

It's just like anything else.

It's like communism, right?

How many times have people tried communism in the history of the world, right?

And you had Marx who came out in the, I guess it would have been in the, I don't know, 1700s or 1800s when he wrote the manifesto.

I don't know exactly when when I wrote it, but there are other versions of this that were tried even before him.

And you can't, because at the end of the day, like people are selfish, right?

People are selfish, and that's why a system like communism will never work, right?

Well, we've tried this fiat currency thing forever, for the history of the world.

We've seen different iterations of this, just like communism.

It always ends the same way.

And if you go back, you look at the Greeks and you look at the Romans, those are two great examples.

A lot of people compare the American Empire to those two empires, mainly.

The Roman Empire, the most successful empire in the history of the world.

And a lot of people will point to all kinds of different reasons why it collapsed.

You know, they say it's sexual liberality, like, you know,

they push the border of like, you get to a place, you can see this in America too, where there's no truth, right?

Like, there's no definitive, like, this is right, this is wrong.

Everything is kind of in the middle, and that's you don't really, you're not grounded in anything.

So there's definitely some truth to that that we've seen in these other empires and their falls, right?

But just like with anything else, follow the money.

The money is why they fell, Okay.

Because inflation, this was so cool when I learned this.

Inflation, I didn't know anything about economics before I got into crypto.

Like literally zero.

It was the most boring subject in the world to me.

And doing all these videos on all these different subjects, I've learned so much.

One of the coolest things is that if you look back at the Greeks and you look back at the Romans, with their currency, right, what was their currency?

They were gold coins.

So as long as they were gold, they had value.

They were backed by the gold that was in the coin.

But what happened?

Well, population starts getting up.

The government starts kind of of hoarding some money.

And then they're like, oh man, we don't have enough money.

What are we going to do?

I got an idea.

Let's take some silver and let's put 10% silver in the gold coin.

So I ain't got 90% gold, you got 10% silver.

You keep going 100 years, 100 years, 100 years.

By the end, you have bronze coins with like 1% gold in them, right?

There's no more gold left.

That's inflation.

Like, that was the version of inflation

back in those empire days.

And eventually they got to where their currencies were worthless the same way that ours is.

And so we've seen the story before.

We just don't know how and when it ends.

But the last year has sped this up dramatically.

A lot of people would say, and I'd agree with it, Joe Biden single-handedly has caused the downfall of America.

Now, I'm not saying this from a political perspective, like I'm going to talk trash about Joe Biden.

One decision that Joe Biden made.

is going to go down as the worst decision in American history, and it's going to destroy the future of economics in this country.

Russian sanctions.

When he said, we are going to sanction the Russians, and they're not going to be able to use dollars.

You can't do that with the World Reserve Currency.

It's the baseline for all trading.

So when you tell this country, we're going to freeze all your dollars, we're going to freeze all your assets, yes, that country's punished.

Great, you punish the country.

But what about the people?

What are all the countries that do business with that country?

They're friends.

They're friends.

You've effectively punished an entire like 25% of the world population, approximately, I'm just making a guess there, by that one decision.

And people at the time said, that's crazy.

Why are you doing that?

Then the Bricks nations start rising up.

Why are they doing it?

Because of the Russian sanctions.

Those are all friends with Russia.

They all do trade with Russia.

Joe Biden single-handedly caused this, and people warned him against it.

And so, like, we could talk about all the ways he's a bad president, but

that doesn't matter.

Like, this is not about him being a good president or being a bad president.

This is literally about one decision that one man or people behind him made and he said

that literally is going to cause the downfall of our entire economy.

And in one year, how fast have we seen this thing fall?

A year ago, are we having conversations about bricks, nations, and maybe losing world reserve currency?

Absolutely not.

That's insane.

So you think the fix to fiat is crypto?

Oh, for sure.

Yeah.

It's a system that we've never had before in the world.

Because

in the history of the world,

we've gone through several iterations of currency.

We've gone through bartering, which is, you know, where people just trade goods and services.

Then we have currency, you have gold, then we had fiat.

You've got a lot of different things that people have used over the years.

Well, this is the first thing we've ever seen in the history of the world that's a technology that's currency.

So it's a different system than we've ever seen before.

Like, you know, communism, oh, we've seen that many times.

We've seen it many times.

And it doesn't discriminate.

It doesn't discriminate.

That's the beauty of the system.

And that's

transactions are faster.

You don't have to go

21 or 27 institutions in order to complete one transaction.

Is that how many it is?

It's up there.

It's more than one.

Oh, yeah, definitely more than one.

I think, you know, one thing I talk a lot about is when I try to compare crypto to

what the difference is.

The easiest way to break it down is

to say that like a SWIFT, like SWIFT is the international bank transfer system right so earlier when i explained like how you go into the bank you transfer from germany to mexico and the currencies like that whole process it takes five to seven days it's not just like you go in there and do that now they're going to get the transfer done in about one to two days for the customer to get the funds but the funds aren't actually rolling into that bank for five to seven days So the Swift is basically the network that we use right now to do those international transfers.

But like I said, it takes five to seven days because they're literally just punching in numbers.

They're not actually sending anything.

That's going to be sent on the back end by other people in other departments, right?

So what that means is Swift, for instance, or you could look at PayPal, you could look at Venmode, these are all the same.

They're networks of information.

Information is moved.

And then on the back end, money is moved because of that information.

Money is not moved when you make an action on PayPal, right?

Or you go to your bank and do a transfer.

See, Bitcoin, and also XRP, XRP is a coin I really like for a lot of different reasons, and

it also fits this category.

And it's the competitor to Swift, is the long and short of it.

But we'll talk about Bitcoin for now.

It's a network of value.

It's not a network of information.

So if I use PayPal, and this example I use, I don't know about the 2127, that probably sounds accurate.

But just if we were to think about it on the simplest terms, if I want to send you a PayPal transaction, okay, I'm going to go to PayPal.

So PayPal's involved, right?

I'm involved.

You're involved.

So we have those three people right off the bat.

I'm going to go to PayPal.

I'm going to go to send you money, and I have to select how I want that money to be sent.

Whether I want it for my bank account, let's say I want it from my debit card.

So I sent it from my debit card.

Okay.

So that means my bank is now involved.

Now, what logo is on that bank, that bank card?

A VZ MasterCard, right?

Credit card processing.

Now that person's involved or that entity.

Then the money, I send the money.

Now you have to receive the money, so it's got to go through your credit card processing company and your bank.

That's seven people, seven entities on the simplest possible way that that can be done.

Seven, the simplest way.

Bitcoin.

Okay, I want to send you Bitcoin.

I get your address.

Send.

You send.

Nothing happens on the back end.

Instant.

Now, there is a third party involved.

It's miners, right?

Bitcoin miners.

So the Bitcoin miners, but it's instantaneous.

And it's, you know, the government wants to keep track of the transactions with with

Bitcoin.

They're so decoded in a sense of like who is this person and why it's really like they can't really keep the ledger on who's sending what and how to use it.

You know what I'm saying?

They can.

That's false.

They can?

Yeah, that's false.

That's a common misconception about Bitcoin.

Okay.

So I'm just saying with the blockchain though.

Yeah.

So they can keep track of the transactions.

Uh-huh.

They can.

Since when?

Okay.

So this is a great question.

Great question because when Bitcoin started, that was the whole idea.

That was a concept.

That was a concept.

Well, but it was also started as a currency.

And what have we seen it become more of?

Digital gold, right?

It's where the value is the appreciating asset.

So there's a lot of things about Bitcoin that have changed since the beginning of it, but it's all been cool stuff.

It's not like it's gone, you know, like, oh, it's not what we want it to be now.

It's great at what it is.

But when you look at

over time,

more and more people got on the network.

More and more people started sending transactions.

Then you start bringing in these big centralized entities like Coinbase and Binance, right?

And they do what's called KYC on their customers.

So let's say the government wanted to figure out who

did a hack.

Let's say there was a hack and the money got sent to Coinbase and Coinbase cashed it out.

Well, there's an account with information that's attached to that address now.

It's called Chain Analysis.

There's a company called Chainalysis, and there's also a company called,

I cannot remember the other big one, but their whole entire job is on-chain analytics and tracking every transaction.

And it's kind of like, so I was, I don't know what flex.

So you can't hide them anymore.

Yeah.

I don't want to flex.

If you cash out on a centralized exchange.

Well,

it's bigger than that, though.

Oh, yeah.

I was in the gifts at program when I was a kid.

I don't want to flex my

in the fourth grade.

Every Wednesday, we had this class called Target.

And there were, you know, those of us in the class that, you know, had certain test scores, we would go in there.

And the first thing we would do in every single class is we would do a brain teaser.

And what it was, is it would be like, it would be a list of names and then a list of like

teachers.

And you had to figure out which kid was in which class.

And they gave you these clues that like didn't even make sense.

You know, it was like,

little Bobby only goes to school on Tuesdays.

And so you keep reading the clues, reading the clues, and then you figure out like, oh, there's only one teacher.

that only teaches on Tuesdays, right?

You got to map it out and figure it out.

You have such limited information, but there's exactly enough information in there for you to figure out who's who, right?

That's kind of what they do with change analysis, right?

So, if you cash on a centralized exchange, sure, like they can get your information, but now if they have one person's information that was with a centralized exchange, they can backtrack every address that person has ever transacted with, and they can slowly build this gigantic web of addresses and names.

And that's how they figure out who people are that are making these transactions.

Now, there are specific coins called privacy coins, right?

Monero is the oldest by far the best one it's the only one that i would feel safe putting my money into and monero is a privacy coin meaning that you cannot there's no chain analysis with monero you absolutely cannot the government has actually offered i want to say it was i want to say it was seven figures the government has offered is a bounty like seven figures i believe to anyone who can crack the monero code wow that can figure out a transaction because they can't figure out one so monero works through these things called ring signatures that are pretty cool which is um

that 20 of us want to do transactions with each other, right?

I want to buy something from you, you want to buy something from him, and we just use the three of us here, right?

Let's say you got two people out there, two producers out there, they come in here too.

We got five people, we've got like five items we want to send back and forth between each other, okay?

What happens is the blockchain

will show all the way up to that door.

We open the door, we come to the door, close the door, we all trade between each other, and we all walk out.

Who has what item?

Yeah, there's no way to know, there's no way to know.

Um, and so that's the way a ring signature works with uh with Monero: is that there's no way to track the address because it does these things in these tiny little groups to where I mean, it's not tiny, you know, it's not 20, it's a lot more than that transactions.

But um, so there are things to prevent that, but people that use Bitcoin, and this is why, if you go back to this, was it the Liberty Pipeline?

Do you guys remember that thing?

No, no, I don't remember that Liberty Pipeline.

Um, I think that was what it was called.

It was about it was near the peak of the bull run, I think.

It might have been like the summer of 2021, maybe.

And there was a hack on this pipeline in somewhere in America.

And then it caused a bunch of gas problems across the country.

And the hackers wanted Bitcoin to release the pipeline back to the government.

Government ends up paying it.

And, you know, they get the pipeline back on and all this stuff.

And they said they paid it in Bitcoin.

I'm just like,

if you're a hacker and you literally were able to hack into the government, steal a gas pipeline,

pause it,

and you're taking Bitcoin that can be tracked, you're an idiot.

Like, Monero would have made a lot more sense.

There was a lot more sketchy stuff that came out about that story.

I want to get into

Bincoin.

Yeah, for sure.

What's up with Bincoin?

Yeah, so we have our Bitcoin now.

So we have a non-profit.

How's that come about?

Interesting story.

What's up with Bincoin?

Interesting story.

So

I'm an influencer in America, right?

Some people don't like the word influencer.

I think it's kind of silly to be against the word.

People don't like to be considered Kim Kardashian, I think, for whatever reason.

But,

you know, an influencer in America, in the world of crypto, like, I can't launch my own coin.

I can't do a sale.

If I did a sale, like, that's going to be, I mean, government hot water.

You know, now, if I moved to Dubai, I could do it, no problem.

But so I've always thought about kind of doing a coin, but I haven't been able to do one because of that.

Well, this other guy launches a coin, calls it Bincoin, asks me to retweet it.

I retweet it.

20x is overnight.

It might have been 40.

It went from like a 40 million.

It might have been 40.

It went from 400 market cap to $20 million, whatever that is.

I could do that math,

but

it was insane.

I went to sleep, so I tweeted about it, and then I went to sleep.

I was in Amsterdam, actually.

And I woke up

and I looked at my MetaMask wallet, and I didn't have very much.

It was less than Ethereum's worth than I had.

And I opened it up.

I was like, what do I have?

It's 20 Ethereum in here.

So weird.

And when I clicked on it, and I was like, what have I done?

That was my first reaction, you know?

I was like, I knew that my tweet had done something.

I didn't think, I didn't do it for that reason.

So I didn't even think about it.

I woke up and just checked it.

I was like, oh, no.

So I go to Twitter.

This whole thing happened where all these people thought I was launching the coin.

It was my coin because I tweeted about it.

And this is the way the news industry works, not just in crypto, but everywhere.

All of a sudden, all these articles get written about I want my own coin you know and that not true no one true at all like I just tweeted about it you know and so what happens is is the community ends up getting really attached to it and I'm very attached to it at this point because I feel responsibility right because I tweeted about it and now the market cap goes way up yeah not unintended and now I've got all these people that are like kind of you know in this coin because of me and like now if I say it's not mine I pull out of it they're gonna get hurt you know and so like the money didn't matter to me like I could could have sold the 20, not sold the 20, whatever.

Like, I wouldn't have, I wouldn't have sold the 20 at that point because I would have been wrong.

But, like, the money wasn't important, it was the community I'm thinking about at this point.

Yeah, so what happens is we go through this thing for about a week and uh, with the guy that created it.

And basically, I ended up just saying, Look, I got to take this thing over.

Like, I need to take it over.

People know me, I'm not the face of this thing.

And so, um, you know, we got with a nonprofit overseas and, you know, made it happen.

Coins are under our possession.

Now, started as a meme meme coin.

So just so people know, like a meme coin, the whole point is it's community-driven.

It doesn't do anything.

Dogecoin, Shiba, don't really do anything, right?

So with a meme coin, it only has so many legs, right?

Like, I guess it's four because those are both dog coins.

That's a joke, guys.

Oh, gotcha, gotcha, gotcha, gotcha.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Yeah, but

the meme coins don't have a lot of legs

for the most part.

Like, those two are the most successful ever.

You got Pepe that's doing pretty well, but outside of that, like, they're pretty much one-hitter quitters.

They pop, they go, they're done.

I didn't want this coin to be like that.

I wanted to build it for the long term.

And so I don't, I'm, you've got kind of three different groups of people that are in crypto.

You have your meme coin people, which are not your regular crypto people.

Like they're just, they're playing it like a casino.

Then you have your NFT people, right?

Your NFT people.

And those people are like, they're flipping non-fungible tokens, which, you know, a lot of people know what those are.

They're just, you know, digital ownership of an asset that kind of like collectibles or art something like that so you got those people and then you have what like what i consider myself to be is like we're crypto utility people like we want coins that do things that change i gave you the whole outline earlier why our system's broken yeah things that change that broken system right and so i i don't want to be known for a meme coin i'll be known for something that's going to disrupt the system and so came up with this plan to basically turn Bincoin into a utility coin that causes crypto adoption.

So we've all been been talking about crypto adoption forever in crypto, right?

I mean, crypto has been around for 14 years, but it feels like forever.

When's adoption?

When's adoption?

It's kind of thing where the longer you're in it, the further away you feel like adoption is, right?

Like you told me in 2017, like, how many think crypto is going to be fully adopted?

Oh, four or five years for sure.

Now, four or five years later, you ask me the same question, or six years later, you ask me the same question, like, 10 to 15 years, maybe.

You know, you learn how far, how far behind we are.

And so

instead of us just sitting around thinking about when is crypto adoption going to be here, what if we actively worked on it?

What if we actively focused on it?

What if we had a crypto project that the whole point is

to bring people on board?

We've never seen anything like that before.

And so what we call it is a community, a community coin with a purpose.

And so the mission statement of Bincoin is cultivating crypto adoption through a focused community effort.

And so what we built here is we built these things called the four pillars.

These are the four pillars we believe of crypto adoption.

What's the coin coin back by.

It's Ethereum.

Yes, it's on the Ethereum blockchain.

Correct, correct.

So we look at these four pillars,

and I think these are the four most pivotal areas that we have to attack in crypto adoption.

Number one is public awareness.

Like, we're going to raid any day now, we're launching a big campaign in Times Square,

a big

billboard.

Well, we've actually got four billboards going up.

They're going to run for a month, you know, every, I think, 24 hours.

You know, they're on a, it's like 15 seconds every 10 minutes.

That's kind of how it works up there with Times Square.

But it's not just about Bincoin.

Certainly we're promoting Bincoin, but like one of the messages on the billboard is short the banks if they let you long on crypto.

Like we want things that are going to like put things in the public mind that are like, what does that mean?

And so what that means, if someone ever looked that up, is the government's talking about preventing people from shorting bank stocks because of all the bank collapses this year.

So that's the idea is let's put things out there and make people look things that are kind of provocative and be like, what does that mean?

They go start looking it up.

They go to the Bincoin website.

We have the Bincoin website on there.

Joinbincoin.com.

And so

the public awareness and getting it in the mind of people, because so many people will say this.

They'll say, oh, you know, I try to talk to my grandma about crypto.

I try to talk to my brother, my co-worker, my girlfriend.

They don't get it.

They don't get it.

I'm telling you guys, what I'm about to tell you is 100% true.

I've not sat down with one person in the last two years.

And by the time I got done with the conversation, they were not in on crypto.

Not one person.

Wow.

Every single person I've talked to, by the time I get out, don't I'm talking about in real life.

I'm not talking about a debate on YouTube.

I'm talking about in real life, a person that wants to know about it, whether it's somebody I'm sitting next to you on a plane or somebody that I'm, you know, an Uber driver, whatever the case may be, because I understand all the arguments.

Like, I see all the arguments.

I see all the negative arguments, and we're on the right side of history.

So it's very easy to break down those flawed arguments, you know, that, oh, only criminals use it, or,

you know, oh, it's bad for the environment, Or, you know, any of the other, you know, the other millions of narratives that are wrong about crypto that people have out there.

I'm able to go in and bust those down and explain why what they believe about crypto is wrong.

How actually this fixes that problem.

And so

the public awareness and getting people to understand the right message, like so important.

So the second pillar is crypto.

policies and regulations.

So we're working, we have a lobbyist we work with in Washington.

You know, we had a bill we were trying to get before Congress last year before the FTX

happened,

which

long story.

You know, FTX tried to sabotage our bill and all this stuff.

But the point is, is that

we've got to get some like Coinbase, right?

Coinbase is always talking about regulation.

You know what Coinbase cares about?

Coinbase.

You know what they care about?

Centralized exchanges in America.

They don't care about you.

They don't care about the user.

I know I've been in the Capitol.

I've talked to people in Congress.

And I can tell you this.

Coinbase doesn't care about the retail investor.

And I'm not saying they're a bad company.

And I'm not saying they're evil.

What I'm saying is there's nobody out there representing you.

Like, there's nobody in Washington representing the investor.

Everybody's representing the industry.

And so that's what we're trying to become.

We're trying to be the representative for the retail investor, for the trader in crypto.

So getting those policies and regulations correct based on that is something I'm very passionate about.

The third pillar is crypto education.

So one thing we're going to be doing is we're we're going to be getting a copy of my book, Catching Up to Crypto.

I also have a new book coming out, Catching Up to FTX, which will be out here in a few months.

We're going to get a copy of Catching Up to Crypto, which is based on my 11 years of experience, two decades in crypto,

like shortcutting the system for you.

So you kind of understand from it's great for beginners and it's great for intermediates for experts in crypto.

Like you're going to get some

hints of nostalgia as you look back at some of the stories from the early days of crypto.

But we're going to get a copy of that book in every library in America.

And then we're also creating a blockchain accreditation accreditation organization to where we can have accredited blockchain education materials that can go into schools because it's accredited.

So we're working on that stuff.

So that's the third pillar.

Because if people can't get educated, right?

Like, we can't get a simple financial education in schools.

Like,

that's why it feels like crypto education is like a really hard road.

Like, this may actually be our

toughest area.

And then the fourth one is fair crypto news because the crypto news today is garbage.

You have

CoinDesk and Cointelegies, I call them Cointelegraph.

Both of these companies that they do consistent paid promotions and paid press releases.

And new people coming to crypto can't tell the difference because they put them in little tiny disclaimers.

It's like, oh, look at this, a great website.

Or it's a great project because they're writing an article about it.

No, they actually paid him $20,000 to write that article.

Then you have number three, the block, which was the number three, I believe the number three biggest crypto news publication.

And Sam Bankman Freed from FTX and Alameda, that they paid them $27 million

in a bribe last year.

So So you can't trust the crypto news.

And so what we're trying to do is create a fair, I want to say fair and balanced, but that's Fox News tagline, you know.

Like, I want to create a fair system for crypto news to where, like, a lot of the things that are factual-based, they're just, we're using AI to write those articles.

And so people are just getting the information.

And then for the things that are more investigative or more in-depth, bring in real journalists.

And when they write an article, they're also going to be linked to their profile.

So you're going to be able to see like what coins this person invests in kind of you know i don't know how many different parameters we're going to have for this but maybe like 10 to 20 different things where they just survey where they answer a question like you know do you only believe in bitcoin yes okay well that gives you a perspective into what they're writing if you if they're writing something that's pro bitcoin but you know

they only like bitcoin they don't like any other coins then of course it's going to be a pro bitcoin article and you can read it through that lens so that that's kind of the idea what we want to do behind the news side

And so we think with this like four-pillar, like plan of action here, that we can actually make a difference in crypto adoption and get to where people understand a lot more about crypto and know why it's a better system.

That's sick.

I saw your Twitter just get hacked.

What happened?

A couple weeks ago?

Yeah.

Yeah, it was bad, man.

That's so bad.

You had a two-factor on your cell phone?

So, you know, the thing about 2FA is

it makes a lot of sense for a lot of different reasons.

But when you have a whole social media team and different people have to jump in and do different things,

it makes it hard.

And the Twitter 2FA is garbage, by the way.

I don't know if you've, do you do 2FA?

I did the authenticator app.

Okay.

So the authenticator route for Twitter?

I don't know if it's on my Twitter, though.

No, they don't use the authenticator.

Oh, they don't?

Okay.

No, they have their own internal 2FA system.

Yeah,

I haven't read it.

Well, I think Twitter does has a two-phase authentication.

They have 2FA, but it's not a regular 2FA.

It's not through the authenticator or the Authy app.

It's weird the way you've got to do it.

And like we tried doing it at work, and we're still trying to figure out the perfect solution for it.

We got 2FA turned on now, obviously, but it's made things very difficult for us to operate as a business.

95% of Twitter is me.

Like 95% of my tweets are me.

People don't jump on and like tweet stuff for me.

What we do, though, is we have some things like

my biggest sponsor, steak.com.

We absolutely love Steak.

They're phenomenal.

We have to do some posts every week for them.

And so I have somebody from my social media media team who jumps in and makes those posts.

Like, I do posts about them too, but the mandatory requirements we have with them for our partnership, make sure it gets done.

When I'm on vacation, somebody's got to jump in and do it.

Right.

Um, when we have um a video that posts, somebody will jump in, post a little thing about the video, post a link, whatever.

Yeah, so, so, doing 2FA where only I can do it on my phone, it makes that process like very, very, very difficult.

Annoying, yeah, to where somebody's got to be in the office, they can't be on their phone.

And, and so I did not have 2FA turned on for those reasons.

Turned out to be a big mistake.

Um, I got SIM card swapped.

Oh, Yeah.

So I didn't know I had SIM card swapped at first.

At first, I thought...

How did they do that?

Oh, bro.

I've been SimHock too.

Yeah.

I'll get into it, bro.

I'll bring the whole thing down.

I'm actually an expert on SIM card swapping because

I did a video back in 2018 on this guy, Michael Turpin, who had been SIM card swapped, lost $12 million.

And he sued ATT for like $220 million.

They lost the first part of it just now, but I think they're in appeals or whatever.

He's going to come on my show here pretty soon.

But I did this video.

I did did a huge deep dive into SIM card swapping.

And I was just, my eyes were open.

And it was that video that I made back in 2018 that while, yes, my Twitter got hacked, not one dollar of my crypto was touched.

Wow.

And that's because of what I learned in this video, which is that SIM card swapping.

So, so if you think about this, right?

Like, you know, generally people don't change numbers that much anymore.

But back in the day,

if you got a new phone, you had a new phone number.

You couldn't put the number over, right?

Well, that changed somewhere probably like, you know, 2005, somewhere around there.

Maybe it was later, maybe it's 2010, where you could actually now port your number over very easily.

And maybe that was way off, maybe do it back in like 2001.

I don't know.

Whatever it was.

There was a time you couldn't do it, and then you could.

So what this means is, is that now it opened it up for people to call into a phone company and say, hey, I'm this person.

Here's all their information.

or here's all my information.

I need you to go ahead and send my phone number over to my new phone.

And so once your phone number is sent to that new phone, then you get access to anything your phone number has access to.

So Twitter.

Try to log into Twitter.

Forgot password.

Put in your phone number.

Oh, here's my phone number.

Oh, forgot.

Wow, so you can just call and just transfer somebody's number to you?

No, not actually.

So it gets a little more in-depth than that.

That's what happened at first.

That's how it happened at first.

And that kind of is a

good representation for people to understand why you need a phone ported, number ported, and how it kind of happens.

Well, the thing is, is that at some point the phone companies realize, like, oh man, people are scamming this system.

Like, we need to put entire controls.

So, they started putting entire, entire controls to where now you got to have a pin number, you got to have this, you got to do this, you got to do this.

You can even call into your phone company, which I've done, and say, Hey, like, here's all, like, I'm a high-profile individual.

I'm very susceptible to these target hacks.

Like, make sure that it's me, but put a put a 48-hour notice before you actually switch a number, blah, blah, blah.

None of that means anything, by the way.

But when they pull up my account, they see all those notes.

And so

it's organized crime.

So what happens is the mafia pays off people inside the phone company.

And people inside the phone company port the numbers over for them.

About $500 a number, I think, is the going rate.

And you get a guy that's making $9 an hour in there, shoot, make an extra, you know, two, three grand a day, porting a few numbers over here and there.

Sure.

And so,

so, so, what happens is, is that once that occurs, and the organized crime gives them their phone number, you're able to get access to the Twitter.

Well,

here is the biggest piece of advice that I can give to anyone about SIM card swapping.

The way you get your life destroyed in a SIM card swap

is have your phone number attached to your email address.

If your phone number is attached to your Gmail address, And they're able to get into your phone number, they can go to Google, go to Gmail, say forgot password

oh how do you i need to verify this verify you're who you say you are oh sure here's my phone number they send them a text message

confirmed now they're in your email

and when they're in your email that's how they get everything yeah and they also started this new thing called um

called called text bombing and email bombing which they did to me which like

so don't attach your phone number to your email right do not google will make you think you have to

There's about, if you go through a regular signup process and you will find that there's always somewhere on the screen that you can click to say, no, I don't want to do this.

Yeah.

But they try to force you to do it.

They make you think you have to put it in there, but you absolutely do not.

Wow.

And so anyone who's had your phone number attached to your email account, you need to go delete it now for sure.

Because that's the way that they were not able to get into my crypto.com account.

They weren't able to get my Coinbase account.

They weren't able to get into my Gemini account.

They were able to get into anything because they couldn't get into into my email address.

And so this text, this text bombing, this email bombing, what they would do is they send me

hundreds of thousands of emails in a 24-hour period.

In about a two-hour period, I got about 10,000 text messages to my phone.

Jeez.

That's more than normal.

What they're doing is they're signing you up for everything under the sun.

It's just you sign up for this, sign up for this newsletter, sign up for this.

I'm getting like, like, you know,

you know, tampon emails.

I signed up for some cool tampon, you know, newsletter.

But they do this all through some kind of software, right?

Yes, they do it with their software.

And so what they do, they do that so that when they SIM card swap you, you miss the email.

Ooh.

And you miss the text message.

You don't see the password resets.

Right.

Because they're just coming in that quick.

So you didn't even know you got SIM swap.

You didn't even know I got SIM card swap.

So

what happens is

somebody calls me and says, hey, you know, your Twitter's down.

They caught it in my COO, Cassie, she caught it in Bincoin.

She caught it in three seconds.

She was just on Twitter.

She saw it.

She said, oh my God, you've been hacked.

So she calls me.

Wow.

And I didn't realize she called me on my regular phone twice.

I wasn't getting the call.

She called me through an app, and that's the call I got.

So I picked it up.

She's like, oh, good.

You answered.

I didn't know what that meant.

I was like, yeah, of course I answered.

Told me I got hacked or whatever.

And so John Deaton, who's another big, he's another big XRP guy in the crypto community, awesome dude.

He had got SIM cards swapped.

about a week before

and i didn't know it was a sim card swap right i knew he got hacked and i knew he got his account back and it was all fine.

And so I immediately knew when this happened, like, oh, the same people that did to him, they're doing it to me right now.

Like, it'll be fine.

I'll get my Twitter account back in a couple of days, whatever.

So, you know, because I was very confident I was getting the account back.

But the problem was, I didn't realize is that I had been SIM card swap.

So the next morning, I go take my kid to his baseball game, his baseball tournament.

It was a Sunday morning.

He plays travel.

It was the first weekend.

He's switched hitting.

I don't know.

He's 11 and he switched hits.

I'm believing.

He went like eight for 10.

But anyways, the point is, really proud, super excited to go to the game that day.

We pull out the neighborhood.

Well, as soon as we pull out the driveway, my phone goes to zero service.

And I said, Hold on a second.

I didn't realize I've been someone comes up because I was on Wi-Fi the whole time.

That's why I didn't get those calls from Cassie.

I also didn't get, I found out a ton of other people tried to call me.

I didn't get those calls.

I had no service.

It was only through Wi-Fi and through calling on apps that people could get me.

Wow.

Yeah.

And so, as soon as I left my driveway, I realized that.

I said, oh, no.

So I went and I dropped my kid off of his game.

His game was at 10.30.

So I had to have him there like 9.15.

So it was in Rome, Georgia.

And so I went and I took him.

And then the Verizon store, luckily in Rome, on a Sunday morning, opened at 10 a.m.

Wow.

Which, you know, you think usually on Sundays, those are open until 12.

So I was waiting at the doors at 10 a.m.

Guy comes to open the door.

The guy who, who, the manager of the store, he recognized me.

I could recognize a pretty good bit, you know.

And he was like, oh, God, it is you.

I was like, yeah, what's up?

I got SIM card swap.

Need to fix it, you know.

And so he brings me in.

It made the identification process a little bit easier because he knew who I was.

And there was a girl there that was the person, the girl that actually helped me.

She was phenomenal.

She was really great.

But I will say,

she, and I don't know how common this is, but she didn't even know what a SIM card swap was.

That's what happened to me when I went.

They don't even know what it is.

They didn't know.

They have no clue.

That's how rare it happens.

But it happens.

Mostly people in crypto, you know, or people with hyper-volume social media accounts.

And so the most interesting thing while I was talking to her, I'm explaining to her kind of what happened and that, you know, like,

I know the back end of what this is.

I know it's some part swapping.

I know it's organized crime.

I've done the research.

And so I'm telling her this.

And she goes, you know what?

That's really interesting.

That makes total sense.

Now I understand why they just put us through this training called don't take the bribe.

Wow.

Don't take the bribe.

The phone companies know organized crime is doing this.

And they're not telling people.

They're lying about it to people.

And there's, here's, this is what I learned through this Michael Turbin case, which is

the stuff that you sign and you don't realize you're signing is unbelievable.

When you sign up with your phone company, any major carrier, you're signing something that says,

if someone who works at the company steals your information or causes you financial loss due to information they were able to gain through work,

the company's not responsible at all.

wow and they say that in you sign it yep it's a terms of service they must have added that after they got sued for sim swap well the michael turbin case the whole lawsuit was based on that clause so it was already in there

and that was 2018 2017 is when he got hacked or 2018 when the the trial began or case began um so so they the phone companies know this stuff's happening they're negligent yeah um and i michael turbin was wiping the floor with these people and somehow he lost at the end of the case and like i say he's in the appeal process and i i can't for the life of me understand how he lost other than corrupt system.

You know, it's just a corrupt system.

That's insane.

These phone companies, these monopolies, and this, it's another reason we go right back to the beginning of this conversation.

It was the best of times.

It was the worst of times, right?

Look at what our country is doing with corporations and banks right now.

When I was a kid, I say as a kid, when I was 18, you had a ton of choices on phone companies.

You had 10 legitimate phone companies you could go to and sign up with.

You know, you had PowerTel, you had before T-Mobile, you had VoiceStream, you had Singular, you had all these different companies, right?

What have we dwindled down to now?

Three.

We've got T-Mobile, ATT,

and Verizon.

That's it.

Now, true, you got Cricket Wireless, right?

Who's using Cricket Wireless?

You don't use Cricket Wireless.

I'm just saying.

Ain't nobody using Cricket Wireless, okay?

But if you are, I'm sorry.

There's little pop-up phone companies, right?

One just get acquired.

Yeah.

Like that guy just sold his.

Yeah.

Just like

T-Mobile bought Sprint.

Right.

And that's what we've seen.

We've seen these consistently go down.

Now let's look at the banks.

You have all these regional banks, right?

Well, they're all collapsing.

You had Signature, you had Silvergate,

you had Silicon Valley Bank.

There was a first, first something,

First Republic Bank.

All these banks are going down.

Well, the government comes out and says, oh, well, you know, it's the regional banks are really struggling, but the big banks, like, they're solid.

There's a plan to do the same thing to banks that we've seen done to phone companies.

Get you down to Bank of America, Citi, Chase, Wealth Fargo.

That's it.

That's what they want.

They just want four banks.

And eventually maybe move it to just one.

Two.

I heard Chase and JP Morgan.

That's it.

Yeah.

And maybe Apple Bank will be around, Ashley Bank itself.

It could be.

I just heard those two.

Four is a lot.

It makes sense.

I mean, I think Citi was included in that group, and then City.

JP Morgan owns Chase.

So it'll just be Chase bank and then the actual JP Morgan bank.

Why are they doing this?

Why are they drilling this down?

Well, isn't it for control?

It's just like stake

over the industry.

They want to control the market.

Control the money.

They want to have to say so, which JP Morgan is at the top.

I mean,

even in real estate, right?

You know what I'm saying?

Black Rock.

Yeah.

Black Rock.

Well, JP Morgan has their.

JP Morgan owns Blackstone, I think.

Blackstone?

Yeah.

Blackstone and BlackRock are two different companies.

they're different companies.

Yeah, they're different companies.

One of the guys used to, the guy that started Black Stone used to work at Black Rock.

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Couldn't think of a

story behind it.

Yeah, I read something about it.

So, Black Stone is the real estate arm of JP Morgan.

They're the ones that

buy up real estate and do rental properties and stuff like that.

But the whole point is, I'm trying to make here: we can kind of look at the banking system, or we can look at the way the phone companies have done this

and kind of get a good roadmap for what's going to happen to the banks.

So, the the phone companies, guys, everybody hates their phone company.

And you've tried all three of them over your lifetime, most likely.

I've only had T-Mobile my whole life.

Your whole life?

Whole life.

I've tried two of them.

Yeah.

I've had T-Mobile 14 years.

Wow.

Wow.

That's my first and only phone.

Wow, that's wild, man.

I go back, I guess I'm on

my

22nd year of having a phone, I guess, 2001, I think, was the first time I got one.

It was a prepaid phone back then, you know.

So I've been with everyone over the years.

And most people tell you they have, especially the business accounts are so bad at Verizon.

And you have problems over time.

What you realize is, why would I switch phone companies?

Because any problem I'm dealing with with this company, I'm just going to go to the next company and they're going to have the same problem.

They're too big.

They're too big.

You talk to somebody, they'll tell you, like, oh, you know, oh, your billing issue is fixed.

And then you get something in the mail and it's not fixed.

And then you call in and they're like, no, we actually don't see you ever called in.

It's because they're so separated because they're so big that when you get transferred, you're getting transferred from one continent to the other, you're not getting transferred down the hall, right?

There's no transfer from LA to India, right?

And there's no motivation for these phone companies to give you better customer service because used to, if you said, Oh, I'm going to cancel my account, oh, no, sir.

Oh, no, sir, we'll do anything.

We'll give you, you know, like direct TV.

I tried to cancel my direct TV account several times until I finally cut the cord.

And they're like, Oh, well, uh, we'll give you free NFL packages next year.

We'll give you five months for free.

We'll give you this.

I'm like, yes.

Now you say you're going to counsel.

They'll just be like, okay, you want to activate deactivate right now?

Yep.

That's it.

Be my guest.

That's it.

Because they understand you don't have a choice.

And you look at your internet service, you look at your cable service, like we don't have choices.

There's monopolies everywhere in our country right now.

For sure.

That's the problem, right?

There's no customer service.

There's no motivation.

People don't want to work these lower-level jobs.

The people that are working them in other countries, they don't care about you, they don't care if you quit the phone company.

Actually, it is.

It's dictatorship.

Exactly.

Yeah, it's exactly what it is from a corporate standpoint.

They just want to control the narrative,

that monopoly, that industry, that whole place.

So it's like they're breaking it into like four industries that are controlled by like four or five people.

And think about this.

Think about with the phone companies.

Like, now, if you have control of the phone companies, you have control of all of the communication in our our country.

The internet.

Jesus.

That's scary.

Uh-huh.

So, so let's use that as a roadmap.

And now let's look at banks and see banks collapsing.

They're going to start doing the same things.

I remember like back in the day, if I had

an overdraft charge, because I was poor, like I said.

If I had an overdraft charge, I got to call the bank.

But look, I was like, come on.

My account showed I had the money in there.

I thought I had the money.

I made this charge.

It was negative.

And be like, oh, you know what, sir?

We understand.

Like, you haven't had an overdraft charge in in two years or whatever.

Like, we'll remove it.

$35, blah, blah, blah.

Now,

say,

hey, like, I have this overdraft charge.

I'll say, all right, switch banks.

Like, say you buy.

Like, you're going to pay it.

Like, there's no option to drop it.

You want to close?

Well, you can't close your account until you pay an overdraft fee.

Yeah.

Something like that.

Yeah.

So, so it's like,

they won't help you out anymore.

Like, they used to help you out.

Yeah.

They get colder and colder and colder and colder.

And that's where we're now going with banks.

And so it's very, very concerning.

You know, like, I don't know if you remember a couple weeks or a couple of months ago, there was this thing with Bank of America where

there was an issue with Zell, and all these people were not getting their money with Zelle.

Like, they get their paycheck every week with Zelle and they didn't get it.

And they went to the banks and they were like, where's my money?

And it was like just a few branches of Bank of America people were in there doing it.

It became this big national story.

And one day it's going to happen across the country.

You know, one day.

Everybody wake up and say, where's my money?

Uh-huh.

Uh-huh.

And you'll be in dubai when that happens well

so so wrapping back to dubai here

you know i'm concerned i had a conversation with my wife i said look i said you know i i'm feeling very in the crosshairs in crypto right now especially with with working with this coin and doing all this stuff it's like i'm not doing anything wrong but that doesn't matter it's like the pressure you feel like coinbase did everything by the book but the sec still came after them and it's like if that's the roadmap anyone who has ever tweeted or said a word about crypto is in the crosshairs.

And so for me, I told her, I said, look, I said, here's the thing.

It feels like an unfortunate situation because I love America.

Like, I love Las Vegas.

I love L.A.

I love Atlanta.

I mean, Dubai is better.

I love all these places, right?

But

look, Dubai's not better for a lot of reasons.

Like, my switch-hitting kid playing baseball, he's probably going to be the best player in the whole country over there.

He ain't going to have a competition.

Or he's going to switch to cricket.

You know what I mean?

I don't want my kid to play cricket.

Sorry, cricket.

Sorry, cricket.

But it's like

the fast food over there is not what it is over here.

Over here, you know, you feel like eating some junk food, you really go eat some junk food.

Over there, a little tougher to eat some junk food.

Eat healthy.

Yeah, even their junk food doesn't taste like junk food, you know.

And like, trust me, I went to KFC, try to get some chicken.

It won't taste the same.

You know, like, there's comforts in America that I like.

Yeah.

I don't want to leave.

I said, honey, you know, it feels unfortunate.

We're kind of the crosshairs here.

And, like, you know, I'm a little nervous that if I leave the country, like, I won't, I'm, I may never be able to come back.

Like, that's the truth.

I may never be able to come back.

I hope I can't.

I hope that, you know, things change in the next year and a half and things go in a different trajectory.

But I told her, I said, Look, you know, it feels like right now we're at the bottom of the totem pole and we're having to make this tough decision.

It's hard.

But the reality is, we're at the top of the totem pole because we've worked ourselves into a position in life to where we can actually make this move if we want to make this move.

And the way our country is going to look in two years, we may look back and be like, we were the luckiest people in the world to feel like we were forced out.

And that is kind of the way that things are feeling.

Going to Dubai is not necessarily even necessarily about crypto.

It's about what is going to happen when these banks collapse.

When you look at inflation, and the thing people don't look at with inflation that is 100% correlation is civil unrest and inflation go hand in hand.

When people can't afford diapers for their babies, they get pissed, right?

We've seen this in other countries in the world.

We saw it in Greece, maybe early 2010s or mid-2010s.

We saw people in Greece, what happened?

They cut the government handouts.

When they cut the government assistance,

hey, you know, wake up by the first of the month, you're getting that check.

You're not getting that check, you're going to be pissed.

There's been a direct correlation between crime and higher inflation areas, civil unrest.

And, you know, I live in a part of the country where we defend ourselves pretty well down in the south, you know, but not everywhere in the country is like that.

So, you know, there's a lot of places if you defend yourself, you're the one in trouble, even if you got attacked.

So, Kelly, yeah.

Man, it's been a pleasure.

What are you trying to promote and where can people find you?

Look, you just search BitBoy Crypto, you'll find me anywhere.

In the world of crypto, I like to convert myself to the, I'm like the, the biggest collector of beanie babies at a beanie baby conference.

You know, that's kind of what it is.

Like in crypto, everybody knows me.

If you if you search Bitboy Crypto, you're definitely going to find me.

I mean, I'm on YouTube, Twitter, everything.

Beware of impersonators.

We got a lot of impersonators out there.

I'm never going to ask you for money.

I don't need your investments.

I don't have time to trade your crypto for you, you know, stuff like that.

So you guys can check me out there.

The other big thing, just check out Bencoin, joinbitcoin.com.

You can go to join Bitcoin on Twitter and be part of the revolution.

Perfect, Wayne.

Yeah, Dubai.

That's where we're moving to.

Dubai, baby.

Thanks for watching, guys.

See you next time.

Peace.