What About The Dow?
- The Slip That Wasn’t a Slip
- The New Deity Has No Face, Only a Ticker
- The Engine of Engineered Devotion
- The Name on the Deed
- The Hostage Situation We Refuse to Name
- The Exit
- The Mirror
The Slip That Wasn’t a Slip
In February, during a congressional hearing about the Epstein files, US Attorney General Pam Bondi was asked a straightforward question: how many of Epstein’s co-conspirators had been indicted? It was the kind of question the public had waited years to hear answered under oath, in public, on the record.
After brief introductory remarks blaming previous administrations for sitting on the Epstein files, Bondi looked into the cameras and said, with a completely straight face:
“The Dow is over 50,000 right now, the S&P at almost 7,000, and the Nasdaq smashing records. Americans’ 401(k)s and retirement savings are booming. That’s what we should be talking about.”
The room erupted, some in laughter, some in confused disbelief. The talking heads dismissed it as a Karen-esque verbal malfunction from a woman clearly out of her depth, and perhaps it was all of those things. Having said that, to just label it as mere incompetence is to miss the far more sinister implications behind it. What if Bondi wasn’t confused? What if she was, in her clumsy and unguarded way, telling us exactly what she meant? Memes and political satire aside the only question that truly matters is; what is Bondi actually saying?
It makes zero sense that she is asked about accountability for some of the most evil but powerful people alive, and she responds by pointing at the stock market. The logical leap required to connect Epstein’s co-conspirators to the Dow Jones Industrial Average is not a small one; unless the connection is that the same people are responsible for both. In other words, what Bondi may have been saying, with the subtlety of a sledgehammer, is this:* “the markets would collapse if we arrested those folks. Justice for the victims be damned if it means torching our precious 401(k)s”.*
If that reading is correct, then It means the architects of one of history’s most documented elite sex-trafficking networks are also the load-bearing pillars of the global financial system. It means that justice, in this instance, carries a price tag denominated in index points. It reframes the entire conversation from law, morality and justice, into a cold Faustian bargain: “your money or justice.”
Bondi’s Karen-like filibustering is easy to mock, and corporate media has been happy to oblige. But she is perfectly in tune with how revered the Dow is by its devotees, and precisely what it would cost to disturb the men who keep it aloft.
The New Deity Has No Face, Only a Ticker
To fully understand the reaction to Bondi’s remarks, you have to understand what the stock market has become in the twenty-first century. It is no longer merely a fundraising mechanism for growing companies, or an abstract scoreboard for corporate performance that politicians brandish during election season. It has evolved into something more theological. The stock market is the new god of the age.
It is omnipresent and invisible. It determines fates without explanation. Its moods are studied by the initiated (economists, asset managers, private equity analysts, Federal Reserve governors) who translate its movements into prophecy for the masses. You dare not question the wisdom of the market, and you cannot know its ebbs and flows unless you are one of its high priests.
The majority of people’s post-retirement quality of life is tethered, directly and inescapably, to the performance of markets they do not understand, cannot meaningfully influence, and are not equipped to exit. The market god does not merely signal economic health, but also determines whether you can afford your medication at seventy-five. Whether you can leave work at sixty-five or must grind until you die. Whether dignity in old age is possible or merely aspirational. That is the authority this deity exercises daily, invisibly, over billions of lives.
Yet the market is emphatically not what its devotees believe it to be. It is not a free market. It is neither a neutral mechanism of price discovery nor a level playing field on which the prudent and patient are rewarded over time. It is a system assembled piece by piece through lobbying, legislation, and regulatory capture, one whose actual architecture is the precise opposite of what its vocabulary suggests. It is a machine built to extract from those at the bottom and protect those at the top.
The Engine of Engineered Devotion
The Federal Reserve has made it structurally impossible to save productively outside the equity market. When the Fed holds rates at or near zero, savings accounts return less than inflation, government bonds yield below the cost of living, and the investor who simply wants to preserve the purchasing power of their accumulated labour has no rational low cost alternative to equity market participation. This is a choice made under duress. The coercion is invisible and deniable, since no law compels you to buy stocks, but it is as real as any coercion that operates through the elimination of alternatives rather than explicit force. This system first impoverishes you through monetary expansion, then charges you for the privilege of trying to keep up.
The 401(k): The Prisoner Who Thinks He’s Choosing
The 401(k), presented as an instrument of financial empowerment, is in real terms a closed cell. Contributions are automatically deducted before the worker receives their pay. Investment options are limited to a pre-selected menu of mutual funds and index products managed by institutions participating in the very system described throughout this essay. Early withdrawal carries a 10% penalty plus income tax, making exit financially catastrophic for most. The worker is not choosing between participation and non-participation. The worker is already inside the system, and the system has been designed to ensure the cost of leaving exceeds the cost of staying.
Ironically, the same institutions that manage these captive retirement savings would never extend a loan without exhaustive due diligence from income verification, credit history, employment records, to collateral. They scrutinise you before lending you a cent, yet the average worker hands over their life savings to those same institutions with barely a question asked, not because they are foolish, but because the system was designed to ensure the question never needed to be asked. The bank studies you, but you do not study the bank. The laws, as we shall see, were quietly rewritten to ensure that when things go wrong, the bank’s claim on your assets is the only one that matters.
This, Bondi’s pivot from Epstein’s co-conspirators to the Dow is not a non-sequitur when viewed through this lens. She was not speaking to lawmakers but to the 401(k) holders watching at home, invoking the one number that determines whether their retirement is comfortable or catastrophic and reminding them, of what they stand to lose should they continue to demand justice.
The Name on the Deed
There is a word embedded at the heart of America’s securities infrastructure that most investors have never encountered, despite the fact that it describes the precise legal status of everything they believe they own. The word is cede. It means, in plain English, to relinquish title or surrender possession. The entity that holds legal title to every publicly traded security in the United States is called Cede & Co. Coincidence? Not exactly.
Cede & Co. is the nominee entity of the Depository Trust Corporation, through which all publicly traded US securities are held. Every share of every company you believe you purchased through your brokerage account is legally registered not in your name, but in the name of Cede & Co. You hold what the law, since the revision of UCC Article 8 in 1994, calls a security entitlement. You ***do not hold ***a security. You hold a contractual claim against your broker, who holds a claim against the central depository, which holds the actual securities in an unsegregated pool under a name that literally means we gave it away. The title was ceded. The investors were simply not informed.
This distinction between a property owner and an entitlement holder is not a legal technicality. It is the difference, in a sufficiently severe insolvency, between recovering your assets and losing them entirely. A property owner can demand delivery of what is theirs. An entitlement holder is an unsecured creditor of their broker, ranked behind every secured creditor in the insolvency queue. Behind the banks that financed the broker’s operations, the derivatives counterparties with prior claims on the broker’s positions. Behind everyone with the legal sophistication to have arranged priority before the collapse. You are at the back of a queue whose existence you were never told about, in a race that started long before you knew you were running.
The completion of this legal architecture came in 2005, when Congress amended the bankruptcy code to grant derivatives counterparties, overwhelmingly the large banks, a privilege called safe harbour. Under safe harbour, derivative claimants can seize collateral from a bankrupt estate without going through the court process. The provision was lobbied into existence by the same institutions that benefited from it during the crisis that followed. The property you thought you owned was feudal tenure dressed masquerading as ownership. You held it at the pleasure of a chain of intermediaries whose rules you did not write, whose solvency you cannot guarantee, and whose legal obligations to you rank last.
The Hostage Situation We Refuse to Name
The question Bondi inadvertently posed is the real question that demands an answer. If the choice were put plainly, your 401(k) or accountability for Epstein’s network, how many people would choose accountability? The honest answer is that more would choose the former than we care to admit. Not because they are evil or indifferent to suffering (although some are), but because the system has been arranged to make that trade feel not like a moral failing but like practical wisdom. Decades of psychological research like Milgram’s obedience experiments, the Stanford Prison Experiment, have documented exactly how most people capitulate under structural pressure.
Just in case you need more evidence, consider this; wouldn’t it be true to say that there was demonstrably more public outrage over the 2008 financial crisis than over the protection of Epstein’s co-conspirators? Based on that observation alone, it is not far-fetched to conclude that a social contract of sorts has been struck with its terms roughly as follows: keep the market where it should be, and we will turn a blind eye to your crimes. Indifference and selfishness, repackaged as the pragmatic survival of the fittest.
The system does not require the active bad faith of any individual to produce systematically exploitative outcomes. Its inherently evil architecture requires only a structure of incentives, compounded by legal privilege, enforced by the state. Due to the fiat system’s opacity and its centralised nature, society has delegated its financial future to a remarkably small number of people; people whose character, ethics, and judgment face far less scrutiny than the average mortgage applicant. Epstein was just a symptom and one of many nodes. The system is the disease.
It’s a system in which the monetary conditions of participation are manufactured by a government-appointed central bank with no accountability to retail savers; in which legal title to your securities is held by a nominee entity whose name means to relinquish; in which your governance rights are exercised by three asset management firms indifferent to your individual outcome; and in which bankruptcy law has been pre-arranged so that when the system’s accumulated malinvestment finally liquidates, the losses flow down the priority queue to you. Epstein’s network did not create this architecture. But the same concentration of power and the same opacity of accountability that made his network possible also made this architecture possible. They are products of the same environment.
The Exit
In one of the most memorable exchanges from the television series Suits, Harvey Specter turns to his protégé Mike Ross during a heated strategic debate and asks:* “What are your choices when someone puts a gun to your head?” *Mike, reasoning the way most of us have been conditioned to reason, responds: *“What are you talking about? You do what they say or they shoot you.” *Harvey’s rebuttal is sharp: “Wrong. You take the gun, or you pull out a bigger one. Or you call their bluff. Or you do any one of a hundred and forty-six other things.”
Most of us have been condtioned to think like Mike. To fold under pressure, to mistake submission for pragmatism and cowardice for common sense. The architecture of modern life has been carefully constructed so that the path of least resistance always leads toward compliance and away from sovereignty.
Sovereignty — genuine, functional sovereignty, not the legal fiction of citizenship rights that can be suspended by emergency decree — is not defined by what a person is permitted to do. It is defined by what a person can prevent from being done to them without their consent. The free person has a domain within which their refusal is enforced by something other than the goodwill of whoever is asking.
The problem with capitulation is not that it fails immediately. It is that it succeeds just enough to become a habit. Compliance under threat feels rational in the acute moment because the gun is real, the fear is real, and the cost of resistance appears catastrophic. This calculus is inaccurate as it measures only the immediate cost of saying no while ignoring the compounding cost of saying yes. For a tactician buying time, a strategic retreat has its place. For the person who has simply learned to fold by default, delay is not a strategy but a slow death sentence. Their fate is not avoided by compliance. It is only deferred.
When millions of people were threatened with job loss during the pandemic if they refused vaccination, most complied. The reasoning was understandable, since all they wanted was to provide for their familes and keep the lights on, live to fight another day. The problem is that the fight never came because people who comply under pressure do not suddenly discover their spine when the next demand arrives. They comply again and again. The demands, as they always do, keep escalating. Compliance did not save them. It simply gave the aggressor permission to continue.
This is why financial enslavement is such an elegant trap. It requires only that you remain perpetually dependent on a job you cannot afford to lose, on a currency you did not choose, on institutions whose interests are structurally opposed to your own. Each small act of compliance tightens the screws around you. Each surrender makes the next exit harder to imagine and the next demand easier to accept. The system does not need to be violent. It only needs to have the perception of being inescapable and it manufactures that inescapability by ensuring you never develop the muscle memory of refusal. That you never learn to say no.
Bitcoin: The First Credible No
This is the radical proposition at the core of Bitcoin. Bitcoin is not just number-go-up technology. It is neither digital gold for the portfolio-obsessed, nor a conventional inflation hedge, though it functions as one. Bitcoin is, at its structural core, a mechanism for making your no credible. It is the first monetary instrument in human history designed to operate in a digital world without requiring you to trust and therefore submit to any central authority. .
When you hold Bitcoin, you hold something that cannot be inflated away, cannot be frozen by a government that dislikes your politics or confiscated by an institution that finds your independence inconvenient. It does not require your compliance as a condition of its function. This is precisely why trading Bitcoin for fiat currency is, in most circumstances, an act of self-sabotage. It is not merely a bad financial trade, though the long-term trajectory suggests it is that too. It is the voluntary re-entry into a system of manufactured dependency, exchanging a tool of sovereignty for a token of permission. The number-go-up mentality will always, inevitably, have you trading your freedom for trinkets.
The man who drives an expensive car to a job he cannot refuse, to serve a system he cannot question, to hold a currency he cannot protect; that man, regardless of his net worth, has an inoperative no, and a person with an inoperative no is not free. They are simply a well-compensated slave.
Allodial Title and the Property You Can Actually Own
In most of the developed world, true allodial title to land no longer exists. All land tenure is ultimately held subject to the state’s power of eminent domain and taxation. What we call property ownership is, in practice, a very strong form of conditional tenure. Stocks, as we have established, are not allodial in any meaningful sense.
Bitcoin in self-custody is different. When you hold the private keys to a Bitcoin wallet; you hold the ability to authorise transactions from a specific address on a distributed ledger maintained by tens of thousands of independent nodes across every jurisdiction on earth. No intermediary holds your Bitcoin on your behalf, no nominee entity holds title in your name, no secured creditor has a prior claim.
In 1933, Executive Order 6102 compelled American citizens to surrender their gold to the Federal Reserve, which then revalued it; a direct legislative transfer of wealth from individuals to government. Bitcoin in self-custody forecloses that mechanism. The confiscation that ended the gold standard cannot be replicated on a distributed cryptographic network without the coerced cooperation of every individual key-holder simultaneously. That is an important shift in the power dynamic between the individual and the state that is without precedent in the history of money.
The most powerful vote in a system of institutionalised extraction is not the one cast in a ballot box. It is the one cast with your savings, the decision to hold your accumulated time in a form the system cannot reach, cannot inflate, and cannot confiscate.
The Mirror
History will remember Bondi’s response to that congressional question as a moment of either spectacular incompetence or spectacular honesty. It should also remember it as a mirror held up to the face of a society that has outsourced its financial future to people it never chose to examine too closely, and has always known, on some level, it could not afford to examine.
The same concentration of power and opacity of accountability that protected Epstein’s network also protects the legal architecture that subordinated your property rights without your knowledge. These are not separate problems but they are the same problem, expressing itself through different apertures.
Harvey Specter was right, when someone puts a gun to your head, there are a hundred and forty-six other things you can do. The first step is what it has always been, refusing to call the counterfeit by its stolen name. You can never comply your way out of tyranny, and neither should the Dow be used to bribe you into accepting serfdom. Satoshi understood this when he released Bitcoin into the world and gave people the option to say no to time theft and thus to be sovereign individuals.
No is a complete sentence. Learn to say it and mean it. Learn to build a life in which your refusal carries weight because a life in which it doesn’t is not yours. It belongs to whoever put the gun to your head.
- Reference: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/safeharbor.asp)
- Reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgdFY9R1da4
- Reference: https://www.nasdaq.com/glossary/c/cede)
- Reference: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1632701/)
- Reference: https://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/8
- Reference: https://www.dtcc.com/)
- Reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs3kAFsU6fE\&pp=ygUfaGFydmV5IHNwZWN0ZXIgZ3VuIHRvIHlvdXIgaGVhZA%3D%3D
Highlights (6)
The same concentration of power and opacity of accountability that protected Epstein's network also protects the legal architecture that subordinated your property rights without your knowledge. These are not separate problems but they are the same problem, expressing itself through different apertures.
When millions of people were threatened with job loss during the pandemic if they refused vaccination, most complied. The reasoning was understandable, since all they wanted was to provide for their familes and keep the lights on, live to fight another day. The problem is that the fight never came because people who comply under pressure do not suddenly discover their spine when the next demand arrives. They comply again and again. The demands, as they always do, keep escalating. Compliance did not save them. It simply gave the aggressor permission to continue.
The system does not require the active bad faith of any individual to produce systematically exploitative outcomes. Its inherently evil architecture requires only a structure of incentives, compounded by legal privilege, enforced by the state. Due to the fiat system's opacity and its centralised nature, society has delegated its financial future to a remarkably small number of people; people whose character, ethics, and judgment face far less scrutiny than the average mortgage applicant. Epstein was just a symptom and one of many nodes. The system is the disease.
The Federal Reserve has made it structurally impossible to save productively outside the equity market. When the Fed holds rates at or near zero, savings accounts return less than inflation, government bonds yield below the cost of living, and the investor who simply wants to preserve the purchasing power of their accumulated labour has no rational low cost alternative to equity market participation. This is a choice made under duress. The coercion is invisible and deniable, since no law compels you to buy stocks, but it is as real as any coercion that operates through the elimination of alternatives rather than explicit force. This system first impoverishes you through monetary expansion, then charges you for the privilege of trying to keep up.
The majority of people's post-retirement quality of life is tethered, directly and inescapably, to the performance of markets they do not understand, cannot meaningfully influence, and are not equipped to exit. The market god does not merely signal economic health, but also determines whether you can afford your medication at seventy-five. Whether you can leave work at sixty-five or must grind until you die. Whether dignity in old age is possible or merely aspirational. That is the authority this deity exercises daily, invisibly, over billions of lives.
The majority of people's post-retirement quality of life is tethered, directly and inescapably, to the performance of markets they do not understand, cannot meaningfully influence, and are not equipped to exit. The market god does not merely signal economic health. It determines whether you can afford your medication at seventy-five. Whether you can leave work at sixty-five or must grind until you die. Whether dignity in old age is possible or merely aspirational. That is the authority this deity exercises daily, invisibly, over billions of lives.
Hahaha! We are definitely all pressed for time, but will incorporate that newspaper prose style because i mostly do long form writing as some of these things need to be properly broken down for my audience. Those that have a firm grasp of these concepts are probably not my target audience and have other folks who write at their level as well. That said, brevity without diluting the meaning is always preferred.
no problem. it was mostly the clod with a tin of beans on his head tho. i couldn’t have expressed the critique as well, for starters i got lost about 1/3rd in.
probably would help to define the mindset of the reader - bitcoin curious, maybe a bit pressed for time (as almost everyone is), and follow the newspaper prose style, hit hard at the beginning and short summary of the solution and then go into detail.
i’ve had to explicitly tell both my code and app robots to not be so verbose, there’s only so much time i can spend reading when the clock is ticking on a deadline.
Thank you for the valuable feedback mate. I mostly use Claude for editing and refinement and in some cases it does help in bringing better clarity to some of the ideas I will be trying to convey. I do agree that the piece is a wordy and could have been shorter and will strive for more brevity, however my target audience isn’t the journo in a war zone but the bitcoin curious who have a basic understanding of it and are trying to dive deeper into the architecture of the financial system that made BTC necessary. Probably a very small niche overall, but in my circle that’s the majority of people I have encountered and probably who read my stuff.
The point of the article wasn’t focused on the practical use about stuff like lightning and cashu, although they are important, but just to expose a little bit of the fiat plumbing & why btc is the perfect antithesis. Will dive into the practical uses in future pieces. Thank you again for the pointers. 🔥🤝
The people who already understand the Cede & Co structure and UCC Article 8 revisions don’t need 4000 words of rhetorical runway to get there. The people who don’t understand it will bounce off the wall of text before reaching the payload.
The tells are all over it. The relentless tricolon structure (“cannot be inflated… cannot be frozen… cannot be confiscated”). The performative throat-clearing before every point. The way it quotes Harvey Specter from Suits as though that’s Seneca. The paragraph-level structure where every idea is stated, restated with emphasis, then restated again with a metaphor — that’s the Claude house style when nobody tells it to stop.
The actual signal-to-noise ratio is maybe 800 words of genuine insight buried in 3500 words of ornamentation. The Bondi-Dow connection is worth making. The Cede & Co etymology is worth surfacing. The 401(k)-as-hostage framing is sharp. But wrapping it in this much velvet suffocates the urgency it’s trying to convey.
The audience problem: anyone who’d sit through this already agrees. Anyone who needs convincing quit reading at paragraph three because it reads like a sermon, and sermons only convert the already-converted. A war zone journalist with ten minutes of battery isn’t reading this. They need the 800-word version that hits like a brick through a window.
Also the piece completely ignores Lightning, Cashu, and the actual plumbing that makes “saying no” operational rather than philosophical. It’s a freedom manifesto that never mentions how to actually be free. Which is the tell that the prompter wanted to sound smart about Bitcoin, not help anyone use it.
claude writes so nicely, but i had to stop 1/3 the way in because it gets quite plodding by that point. however, it’s absolutely evil what they are doing. doing whatever we can to facilitate and make it easier for people wanting out of the prison is a job that falls to us developers, and most of them are totally dropping the ball, which in teh age of claude code is inexcusable.