And when it gets to 40%, right, you’ve got one year that you can rely on it. And when it gets to 80 to 90%, right, you’ve got weeks to months. So, so my point here really is there’s easily 500 trillion worth of monetary energy divided between probably a lot more than that divided between bonds and equity and property and collectibles in real estate and currencies.
And and Bitcoin’s only right. It’s you know, not 1% it’s 10 basis points.
[00:40:21] Aleks Svetski: Yeah.
[00:40:22] Michael Saylor: We’re 10 we’re one 10th of a percent of all of that right now. So given a choice, you can either take to position that all nation state governments must topple and fail today. I’m an enemy of all nation states.
So that Bitcoin is the sole currency. Or you can take the position that Bitcoin is simply going to be para pursuit to gold and be 10 times bigger, or Bitcoin is much better than gold. It’ll be a hundred times bigger and you can partner with every nation state if you use common sense, right? Like walk down the street and tell everybody you have a good idea and say, I’ve got a really good idea.
It’s gonna be good for America. Good for your family. Good for your company. Good for your city. Good for your state and good for you. And it’s gonna be fun and think about how many people will want to embrace that idea. And it’ll make you rich. That’s one proposition Bitcoin, better than gold. The other proposition is I need you to abandon your company, quit your job, leave your city, you know, go to war with your state, go to war with your country, tell your family they’re all stupid in order to do the right thing. And if I and if they all agree with you, then maybe we’ll make progress. And that’s the Bitcoin is the only currency you see. So one of them is just so difficult as it’s unin, unin, unnecessarily painful, and it doesn’t get you anywhere.
[00:41:57] Aleks Svetski: Yeah but
[00:41:57] Michael Saylor: not gonna get a hundred people to buy into that crusade.
95 or 99 out of a hundred will just disagree with you. And you’ll like accomplish nothing. if you flip it and say, I’ve just got a better technical idea. And it’s just a better asset than gold. You’ll persuade lots of them. And you will build up support exponentially over time. And at some point 30 years out, 40 years out, 50 years out, maybe there’ll be a nation that has a currency, which is inflating at 3% of the year and Bitcoin.
And then you’ll have this interesting political discussion. Do we get rid of our Fiat currency and just go to all Bitcoin? And if we do, it’ll be a peaceful transition, but there’s no way there’s gonna be any peaceful transition in Argentina to Bitcoin. Right now, that’s not happening.
[00:42:48] Aleks Svetski: Yeah. So reading between the lines. What you’re advocating for is a process. I wanna read a quote here, which is a quote from sun Sue, which actually funny enough, came up to date, says to secure ourselves against defeat lies in our own hands, but the opportunity of defeating the enemy is provided by the enemy himself.
And I guess it’s a, it’s an app quote for what we’re discussing here is that why pick a fight with the big boss when there are steps along the way, and by the time you actually get there, that big boss may just be the what’s the guy behind the curtain in the wizard of Oz. I forgot the name.
[00:43:26] Michael Saylor: so, how about this metaphor? Maybe you’re not fighting against a person it’s just a, it’s just the future fighting against the past. For example sound money in the 19th century was gold sound money in the 21st century is Bitcoin, right? We’re just here to evolve from the best idea we had in the past to the best idea we have in the future. Right? If if you’re looking for someone to lose so that you can win, it becomes a zero sum game, but you know, who’s the loser. If I teach you a mathematics, introduce electricity and I give you an automobile, right. To maybe your grandfather. Was afraid of automobiles and afraid of electricity. And didn’t get a chance to go learn calculus or higher level math, but you know, your grandfather’s not the enemy. It was like he did as good as he could do. We’re just introducing technology. I think a much more constructive way to look at this is we’re introducing a better technology. It’s not it’s the world is not out to get you. Right. All those people that you think are out to get you, they think that they’re trying to save you. They think they’re doing the right thing, right. That everybody’s the hero in their own story. So you may, you have a disagreement with them about their strategy, but they don’t think they’re villains.
And half the people in the world don’t think they’re villains either. And in the best case, right. We could pick almost any. Any issue and the world divides 50, 50 more often than not on most of those issues. So if you wanna make progress, you’ll be a lot more effective. If you introduce a new, better way to achieve a good thing that everyone can benefit from.
So for example, instead of saying down with the banks, the bankers are the bad guys and we’re the good guys. What if we just said the bankers are trying to do their best to provide financial services, but they’ve had to do it with gold and with sovereign debt and with defective securities and and monetize precious metals.
And if they could do it with Bitcoin, they’d be much better at providing financial services. There, there are plenty of products that people might like to have. Let’s take insurance, right. Would you like life insurance? Yeah. Are they life insurance companies? Sure. They are they the enemy? No, what’s the problem they’re using sovereign debt in order to generate yield to pay off the life insurance policy.
Okay. So what would you like ’em to do use Bitcoin? What would happen if they did? The life insurance policy would pay 10 times as much and cost one 10th as much. Okay. Are you gonna say death or down with life insurance companies? no, like there’s nothing, you know, we probably need car insurance companies too.
You know, corporations do things useful, banks do things useful. We just gotta if we look at it that way, like, it’s important to be able to hold your own keys and take personal custody. And that, that point is made often in the Bitcoin community. But what about a 75 year old in a coma in the hospital?
Do they have to take personal custody of their keys? And what about your unborn child or your unborn grandchild? And you want to give them Bitcoin, do they have to take custody of their keys? Like, like, is there a place for a bank or an institution, a custodian to transfer your Bitcoin from you to your unborn child?
Because right. This is that, you know, that libertarian debate, which is everyone should be responsible for their own actions. Yeah. Three year olds. How about three months old? Right? Where do you draw the line? How about not born for three months? Are they responsible for their actions? If they’re not responsible for their actions is it possible for a private company to do you a benefit? I think so. I think a private company can give you insurance. I think a private company can give you a loan. I think a private company can be a custodian for for your unborn child. What if you you know, we’re back to what, if you get in a car wreck and you suffer brain damage. Okay. And you’ve been saving all your life to give money to your family.
What happens? You were stupid. You got in a car wreck, you deserve to lose it. All right. Not really. not really. Right. So it comes down to the question. Is there a place for nonprofit organizations? Is there a place for institutions? Is there a place for companies and is there a place for governmental agencies and for countries?
And there probably is there’s a massive debate. That’ll go on forever. About how big or small that role should be. Right? Some people want very small government. Some people want lots of government. Some people don’t like corporations, but. Ultimately we’d all suffer and live a much lower standard of living if we didn’t have companies.
I mean, a simple example is electric power. I mean, you obviously wanna have centralized generators of electricity because they will give you one day supply of electricity for, you know, for a few pennies, like the amount of electricity you can generate yourself. It would take you eight hours to generate 2 cents worth of power eight hours.
So it’s pretty obvious you want a company, you know, to create a generating facility and you would rather, you know, work for about 15 seconds for that electricity and then spend the rest of your day doing something else. And I think that that once you embrace this idea that we need to allow for a continuum of adoption, right?
A, an economy. There’s a place for for people to hold their own keys. There’s a place for people to custody keys for a small period of time. Like I go into the hospital for heart surgery and I might not live. And so I custody my keys with someone for a week, a day. It’s a place for that. There’s a place for people I just got diagnosed with Alzheimer’s okay I’m gonna transfer my keys to someone for the rest of my life, cuz I got an Alzheimer’s diagnosis.
Right? So it’s a different thing.
[00:50:07] Aleks Svetski: brain will
[00:50:08] Michael Saylor: of a city. If you know, if you’re a, if you run a school right. A private school and you’ve got Bitcoin in the treasury, maybe all the parents don’t want the principal to walk around with the Bitcoin keys. They want it with some kind of institutional custodian for a lot of other reasons, especially what happens when the principal quits and you hire a new principal. Let me tell you, I hire a lot of people in my life. And if you have any experience trusting people, I could interview you for 20 hours and think you’re God’s gift and the perfect person, and I’ll still be right 75% of the time and wrong 25% of the time. And so if you, and if you’re wrong, 25% of the time, right.
And that’s pretty devastating, you know, to you know, what, if the country loses all of its assets, 25% of the time, right? like EV every four years instead of every one year, right? So you can’t afford human fallibility. Sometimes you need something to be 99.9 9, 9, 9, 9% reliable. Like, as you know, DMing would say, or some manufacturing scientists.
So, so I think if you’re going to build a higher level civilization, you have to be open minded. To a lot of different ways to work with the asset and different timeframes. And when you go to the extreme, you undermine adoption, but you also undermine utility because you know, the real economy is gonna be, you know, you need Bitcoin at layer one, you’ve got lightning you know, a non-custodial open layer two, and then you’ve got layer threes, like cash app and PayPal and you know, the exchanges.
And then you’ve got layer fours, you know, securities like micro strategy or G BTC, where we’ve literally got the thing embedded in what we are. And then you’ve got products. You could build it into products and services. You could build a Bitcoin into a Tesla. What if I had a Tesla and I bought the Tesla and the Tesla basically was self-maintaining forever.
Right because I had enough Bitcoin in it to pay for all the electricity and also pay for the maintenance upkeep on the car. So all of these are different aspects of a digital economy, and they’ll all be subject to different rules and different laws, and some things will fail and some will succeed. And if you just take an open mind and allow it all all to evolve, I think people will start to see this is as economically good for everybody technically good for everyone and morally, politically good as well.
There, there don’t have to be any losers here. Everybody can be a winner. And if you go into the marketplace and your position is Bitcoin fixes this well, how about just Bitcoin improves this? What if you went to every company, every product, every family, every country, every politician.
Everybody and just said, I’m here from Bitcoin and we can improve whatever you’re doing. It doesn’t even matter what you’re doing. It’ll be better if you build some type of Bitcoin into whatever you’re doing, there are no enemies there. The world just divides into people that don’t understand how we can help them yet.
People that do understand how they can, how we can help them. Right. And then people we haven’t talked to yet.
[00:53:38] Aleks Svetski: Yeah. I mean, I wanna clarify one thing about, I guess the anus libertarian position is is I’ve always been a big proponent of the idea that companies are one of the most incredible inventions of human society, like, or civilization in general is the ability for a group of people to come together and separate management from operations and from, you know, legally liable directors and shareholders like separating each of those layers, being able to operate towards the, so the solving of a problem or some sort of solution is is a magnificent thing.
And in my mind, how things progress whatever pathway we take. What happens is groups of people will come and they’ll form these companies in whatever shape or size they are, and they will solve a problem. But I think where Bitcoin changes it is that I’ve kind of called it responsibility, go up technology in the sense that right now, I think the problem with corporations and institutions and large scale companies and nation states, et cetera, is the masking of responsibility and the socialization of costs.
So basically these days, there’s nothing wrong with a company. For example, you’ve got a coma or Alzheimer’s you placing custody in their hands and them taking care of it for you, but there is certainly a problem if they go and squander your Bitcoin by playing some sort of shenanigan or moral hazard, and then.
After doing so they go and try and cover it up by getting a bailout or something like that, which then socializes that bad mistake on everyone else. And this is where I think Bitcoin, I guess, in a sense, fixes this or improves this is that it kind of brings responsibility closer to the actor who is making a choice.
Now, if I wanna have a company look after something for me I pay them to take on that responsibility. At the moment, I think we’ve got a bit of a strange world in which everyone is giving responsibility or agency away to an institution or a nation state or corporation or whatever, thinking that there’s no cost in doing so.
And then the cost somehow filters through in the back end through socialization of losses through inflation, through bailouts, through whatever other shenanigans and stupidities going on in the background. And I guess, you know, the. The nice argument there is that it’s not some, you know, evil cabal of people trying to do it actively to destroy the world.
It’s just, you know, when you’re offered a set of solu options in front of you and you’ve been operating in a particular paradigm all your life and as you said, the past versus the future, you generally pick an option from a really bad menu. Even though your intent is good, but you know, the road to hell is often paved with these good intentions, right?
So anyway where I’m kind of getting at there is that the responsibility element of Bitcoin and, you know, companies or nation, I think nation states is probably pushing it too far, but companies, I the corporate model of solving a problem and taking the responsibility for a fee makes perfect sense on a Bitcoin standard.
[00:56:53] Michael Saylor: Yeah, AGA again, I think my my point here really is Bitcoin is a magic technology that offers benefits to any individual or entity that adopts it.
And on the other hand, the simplest way in which to adopt it right now, Is as a long term store value asset, if you’re a private entity and you’re not subject to gap based accounting and the other ways you can adopt it, they have more friction, accounting, friction, tax friction, for example, like we can agree that it would be good at banks.
If banks banked Bitcoin, that would be good. But many banks are afraid to do this due to F D I C guidance. think today there was just a story coming out that ctigroup announced that they will probably start the custody Bitcoin. So,
[00:57:51] Aleks Svetski: So
[00:57:52] Michael Saylor: what we need is we need to educate the regulators, educate the politicians.
And then as the F D I C and FAS B and the S E C and the CFT C and the OCC, and every other agency starts to understand and provide useful guidance. Then all those companies will start to take much larger positions and then the investment community will support that. And and Bitcoin will spread as technology and the best way to get them to provide that constructive guidance is just avoid taking unnecessarily Avi adversarial positions in the evangelism or the advocacy, right.
We don’t need to end the dollar or end the fed in order to spread the good she, of Bitcoin . We can make everybody’s E every everybody in the United States could be better off, right. Without. Dramatic changes to the government. If there was a hundred X as much, Bitcoin, it’d all be better off right now without changing anything in the government.
So the world’s full of challenges. There are a lot of, I mean, there are a lot of things that are inefficient in the world. We could talk about them for a hundred hours, but I think the whole point of laser eyes is focus your energy. So if I’m gonna, what is a laser? A laser is I have a certain amount of energy and I narrow my focus to a pen head, a pen prick, the narrowest focus possible.
And why do I do that? So I can go the longest distance without dissipation. So every time you broaden your focus, you dissipate your energy and you lose your reach. And so the question really is what can you accomplish and how are you gonna accomplish it? And. Not going to fix every company, every bank and every government in the near future with the Bitcoin message.
Right. I tend to look at it a different way, which is there are some entities that can adopt it now and we should go find them and help them do it. There are some places where it’s just gonna be a very difficult or impossible that don’t waste your energy. Don’t waste your energy, fighting with them.
Don’t you’re not gonna change their mind. Don’t squander your energy. You don’t have time and you don’t have the energy to pick fights with people, you know, along the road of life. Right. You should just move on. Let me, I mean, let me offer another possible metaphor here. Let’s say I had I invented a fusion reactor and it generated infinite. For a dollar I can give you enough energy to run your family for the rest of your life for a dollar. Okay. So I’m gonna go travel around the world and where am I gonna be happiest with that fusion reactor? I go to North Korea and they find out I have it and I’m not allowed to own things and they take it away from me and they kill me.
Okay. That didn’t work so well, but I have a future reactor. No, you know, I, maybe I take it to a place where there’s no rule of loss. So the government just seizes it. Right. Maybe I take it to a I take it to a country where there’s a hundred different tribes and they’re all warring with each other.
And so I set up and I’m living HAPPI ever after. And one tribe hears about me with another tribe dancing and they come and they kill me. Okay. No rule of law. No peace. I go to another country and their taxes are excessive, you know, and they find out that I have a nuclear reactor or a fusion reactor.
So they just tax me to death and I lose it. that the short of it is you want, you have a great technology. It’s magical. You wanna live in a country where they speak your language where there’s a rule of law, where there’s peace, where there’s a place force. Like what if your neighbor just comes over with a gun and shoots you in the head and takes your fusion reactor, right?
The fusion reactor doesn’t solve all your problems, right? The fusion reactor doesn’t make Afghanistan a peaceful place to live for an American. You know, that practices Christianity either, right? like there, there are simple, common sense observations, which is you have a technology, you go to a a politically supportive place, you know, and, you know, you don’t take.
You wouldn’t go to a country and say, I have a fusion reactor, and I’m giving away power for free to everybody in the country. And I’m putting the nation’s electric power provider out of business because they’re evil people cuz they sell the electricity, right. That’s not the best way to do it.
Right. You’d probably better off to go to the country’s monopoly energy provider and offer to set up the fusion reactor for them so that they can harness it. You know? And part of you would say they really should give away the energy for zero, but they’re gonna charge a penny a kilowat hour. But if they were charging 10 cents a kilowat hour, then getting them to lower the price to a penny, a kilowat hour is a benefit to everybody and they get a piece of the action and you’re not a revolutionary, you’re an evolution. You’re a technologist. Right. And we move forward. So I think that’s the case with any great technology.
The technology is not enough for you to go, you know, anywhere and write any wrong. And you don’t really need to make it a political fight in order to spread the technology. Most people, you know, if they see an automobile and it’ll get them from point a to point B in an hour, instead of walking for two days, they could be persuaded regardless of political conviction and religious conviction, that the automobile’s a good idea, right?
They have automobiles in a lot of countries that don’t agree with American politics and vice versa. So, and likewise, right? Crude oil, aluminum, steel, automobiles, airplanes, have all been, you know, enthusiastically adopted. In communist socialist, capitalist, you know, autocratic, theocratic states even enthusiastically adopted in countries with hyperinflation, right?
They may be hyper inflating, but they still appreciate steel in the building. Right? If you ever walk out on a, the 15th floor of a building without the steel and the floor collapses and you, and all your friends die, right, then you could be persuaded that steel is a valuable technology. And the key there is whoever sells the steel needs to make it an apolitical statement.
And I think with Bitcoin, Bitcoin can be spread everywhere on earth, you know, as digital energy, right. As as a technology, right? If Bitcoin is digital energy, then it’s simply it’s simply the next evolution of electricity or oil. Or atomic power or hydro power or solar power or the internet.
It’s just the next thing. If Bitcoin’s gotta be a digital currency, then you’re gonna have to replace the government, right. Either peacefully or in a hostile fashion, you gotta replace the government. It’s just like given if I were to try to calculate the difference in effort, one of the things is like a million times harder to do, plus a lot of bloodshed, right.
Castro replaced to government. But like, would you wanna do that? I mean, even if I told you, you could like, we had a civil war in the United States, right? like, you don’t really want a civil war. There’s no winners. And so, so I think that the Bitcoin community has an opportunity to embrace the technology, spread it to everywhere and be everybody’s friend.
And I think that’s something we ought to be spending more time thinking about. And I think we should spend a lot less time fighting over the currency because once you’ve made the point that the currency has inflation, I think you just gotta move on because the next debate is whether or not gold is better than Bitcoin for fighting inflation, right? Because you’re not gonna actually eliminate the source of inflation, right. That will require regime change.
If we demonetize everything everywhere, maybe we cure half of the problem, which is good. I think that’s enough. It might take a hundred years. I’m hard pressed to think it takes less than a hundred years.
Feels like it’s like a multi-generational exercise if we’re successful. And then at the end of it, you’re still gonna have debates about whether to give four year old kids, pharmaceutical products to treat their a D right. You’re still gonna have debates over, over religion. You’re still gonna have debates over, you know, someone at age 87 is dying and someone wants to give them a million dollar treatment.
And someone else says that’s too expensive. Right. And you’re gonna have all those issues and you know, someone’s born and they just have a view that they should beat you. It’s gonna happen. We’re not gonna some other science or technology breakthrough might address some of that problem. And we still got the problem of how do we go to Mars and should we stop there?
And should we go to alpha and Tori or beyond, these are all problems, you know, and some people wanna live forever and not the problem is we can’t live forever and other people don’t think we should live forever. And the problem is stopping the people that wanna live forever. Right? And those things are gonna go on.
We’re not gonna address those. I don’t think we need to. I think that the PR that the root problem that Bitcoin has put their fingers on is there’s a lack of conservation of energy in the civilization. There’s a, there’s an energy imbalance and everything that we think of is money that we use is money. And right now we use gold and we use $90 trillion of currency derivatives and a hundred trillion dollars of bonds. And we use trillions of dollars of equity and we use collectibles. We use all sorts of other derivatives. There’s a lot of things we use as money. All of those things we use as money are low velocity, inefficient, transmitters of energy that, that drain energy and the cost of that you could measure in the tens of trillions, 10 trillion, 20 trillion a year, some huge amount, right?
20 trillion is the GDP of the United States, right? Nominally measured. So the cost of the broken money or the lack of a proper monetary system is many trillions a year compounding for the next, for the last a hundred years for the next a hundred years. fixing that is it’s no different than if you’re an athlete.
And and you were bleeding a pint of blood an hour and I didn’t stop the bleeding. Right? I mean, the number one rule of triage just stopped the bleeding first. First make sure you can breathe right. Three minutes without air and you’re dead and then make sure your bleeding stops cuz you’ll bleed out in a few minutes.
And then after that figure out what the rest of the problem is. So I think that we should think of ourself as trying to stop the bleeding the source of the bleeding as a lack of effective money. And the human race has never had an effective money. A mathematically sound thermodynamically sound money, right?
Goal was the closest thing, but it was it’s way too inefficient. It bleeds energy too fast in time and in space. Right. You can’t really use it. So. we now have a situation where 10 basis points of the civilization has a limited has a, has an effective store of value. And of course, nobody has an effective medium of exchange, right?
So you could probably say it’s like two or three or four basis. Points of the entire economy is efficient 99.9, 5% of all the economic activity in time and in space is woefully inefficient.
[01:10:26] Aleks Svetski: Totally.
[01:10:27] Michael Saylor: And how inefficient, you know, you, it, we probably gotta assume we’re losing 10 to 15% of energy. If you were writing a calculus equation, right?
The time variable was losing 15% of your energy with time. And then there’s another dissipation coefficient, which is how much energy per transaction,
[01:10:49] Aleks Svetski: Oh, there’s that then there’s the cost of the institutions. There’s the cost of the the misallocation of mal investment blind consumerism, you know, the gambling the distortion of of people’s time preferences. So yeah, there’s waste all over the place.
[01:11:06] Michael Saylor: If you just come back to this idea that we’re like three basis points, 1, 2, 3 basis points permeated, you can see that a factor of 10, you know, gets you to 30 basis points. A factor of hundred gets you to 3% of potential. And so a hundred X from now were 3% of potential,
A thousand X from now.
We’re 30% of potential. And so there’s massive, tremendous opportunity here. And we can do this in a very cheerful, constructive way simply by focusing people on the technology and just showing them how much more efficient, how much higher the quality of living is for any entity any part of our civilization.
Should they adopt a better energy technology?