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Other => Beginners & Help => Topic started by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 12:13:08 PM



Title: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 12:13:08 PM
I've been disappeared from Reddit, Twitter and other digital forums for having a positive voice of change, humility, selflessness, magnanimity, compassion, creativity, curiosity and patience; I have found this forum now and I believe it to be my new home. Thank you, Bitcoin.

The dollar bill can't collapse,
because that shit
is just
a fucking
illusion
to begin with.


Let's change this world. Now.

0011010000101110001101000010111000110001­00110100


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: cesmak on December 19, 2013, 12:15:15 PM
Welcome !  :)


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 12:19:22 PM
Thank you, Cesmak!


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: cesmak on December 19, 2013, 12:31:34 PM
Thank you, Cesmak!

 :) :) :)


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: Mike Christ on December 19, 2013, 12:39:31 PM
What are your political views?


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 01:41:35 PM
Hey Mike, thanks for asking!

Regarding "policy"--

As a twenty-five year old whom through no conscious endeavor of his own was raised by two individuals from the lower-class whom lacked any real semblance of analytical, emotional nor let alone existential prowess-- and having the predisposition of beautiful intuition and the capacity to see through the illusion of the modern world, I spent the majority of my adolescence and now adulthood in great turmoil, searching for a marked catharsis. I left high-school at the age of seventeen, despite having been in "gifted" programs in elementary school and scoring "above" the top one percentile nationally in most standardized testing. My parents did not allow me to "skip" the grades I was recommended to and instead moved me around from various districts, leaving me alienated, frustrated and severely depressed. Fearing suicide, I left high-school, concerned that there was something profoundly wrong with the state of the world, and convinced that there might actually be something I could actually do to possibly help it.

After nearly a decade now of profound and sometimes frightening internal and external travel, I'm finally coming out on the other side and seeking like-minded/hearted individuals whom are seeking a similar path toward practical solutions to changing our world for the better. I do not mean to be egotistical when I say that I believe I have the capacity to lead selflessly and with great virtue; with patience and magnanimity that few or probably unfortunately none of "my" American "leaders"/"politicians" today share. I recognize my path as that of hardship and I appreciate it, as it has opened my eyes and toughened my skin that much for the better. From having lived homeless and in the woods for almost a year, riding my bicycle 3000 miles across the country and camping out in the woods each and every night, teaching music and guidance counseling at a prestigious performing arts camp for parents of "well-to-do" children and camping Occupy Philadelphia, DC and Baltimore, you can bet I have a lot to share regarding the nature of our reality and the current paradigm with which we as humans interact.

Regarding today's politics literally, I have written a book which I unfortunately currently have no means to publish, but have placed online somewhat in the form of 31 "open letters" to humanity--

http://humanity.wordsweheard.org/

As I continue to grow, a lot of those letters could use some editing, so don't hold me to anything too rigidly! Hahah.

What are your political views, Mike?


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: Oden on December 19, 2013, 01:50:23 PM
Welcome Mr Nessi  ;)


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 01:57:11 PM
Welcome Oden!  ;D


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: aeveus on December 19, 2013, 01:57:35 PM
Hi Nessi! Welcome to the club. :)

Like you, I'm also here to stay. I'm not sure what exactly happened to the person or group calling themself/themselves "Satoshi Nakamoto", and quite frankly, I'm not sure whether I should care. All I know is that the age of cryptocurrency has dawned, and everyone should start learning about them.


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 02:03:12 PM
Thanks Aeveus!


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: ni| on December 19, 2013, 03:46:01 PM
Im pretty sure that in the near future, bitcoin will be the currency for the world order.

Hence you see the government freaking out now


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 19, 2013, 08:18:44 PM
Would that be before or after we throw all of our most figurative bricks through all of the most deserving Starbucks windows?

Regarding this "World Order", who's on the list to lead? Can I throw my name in the hat? I promise we replace religion with love by 2020 and work to terrraform Mars by 2040.

Vote Nessi in 2024

 ;)


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: sneeze on December 19, 2013, 09:09:13 PM
Haha! NWO! Welcome to BTCitcointalk!  ;D


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: Mike Christ on December 19, 2013, 10:21:24 PM
Hey Mike, thanks for asking!

Regarding "policy"--

As a twenty-five year old whom through no conscious endeavor of his own was raised by two individuals from the lower-class whom lacked any real semblance of analytical, emotional nor let alone existential prowess-- and having the predisposition of beautiful intuition and the capacity to see through the illusion of the modern world, I spent the majority of my adolescence and now adulthood in great turmoil, searching for a marked catharsis. I left high-school at the age of seventeen, despite having been in "gifted" programs in elementary school and scoring "above" the top one percentile nationally in most standardized testing. My parents did not allow me to "skip" the grades I was recommended to and instead moved me around from various districts, leaving me alienated, frustrated and severely depressed. Fearing suicide, I left high-school, concerned that there was something profoundly wrong with the state of the world, and convinced that there might actually be something I could actually do to possibly help it.

After nearly a decade now of profound and sometimes frightening internal and external travel, I'm finally coming out on the other side and seeking like-minded/hearted individuals whom are seeking a similar path toward practical solutions to changing our world for the better. I do not mean to be egotistical when I say that I believe I have the capacity to lead selflessly and with great virtue; with patience and magnanimity that few or probably unfortunately none of "my" American "leaders"/"politicians" today share. I recognize my path as that of hardship and I appreciate it, as it has opened my eyes and toughened my skin that much for the better. From having lived homeless and in the woods for almost a year, riding my bicycle 3000 miles across the country and camping out in the woods each and every night, teaching music and guidance counseling at a prestigious performing arts camp for parents of "well-to-do" children and camping Occupy Philadelphia, DC and Baltimore, you can bet I have a lot to share regarding the nature of our reality and the current paradigm with which we as humans interact.

Regarding today's politics literally, I have written a book which I unfortunately currently have no means to publish, but have placed online somewhat in the form of 31 "open letters" to humanity--

http://humanity.wordsweheard.org/

As I continue to grow, a lot of those letters could use some editing, so don't hold me to anything too rigidly! Hahah.

What are your political views, Mike?

Very interesting story ;D  I'm glad you're able to see through the veil.  I'll bookmark this site and take a look through it when I have the opportunity, but from what I've read, it seems to me that you've left the cave and taken a gander at what really casts those shadows we once called reality; I'm glad we've both come to terms with this.  That moment of realization is an interesting one; it feels as though a burden is lifted from your shoulders, and you can finally see the sunshine with such vivid clarity that all you want to do is show everyone who's still clinging to their shadows that there's something more out there, that the world really isn't so black and white, that there is hope.

Anyhow I have a lot of political views but I believe they can be compounded into voluntaryism (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voluntaryism): all human associations should be voluntary.  Albeit a simple philosophy, applying it to all aspects of our lives, as our lives currently are, reveals many of the involuntary associations we must take part in and further begs the question of how we can resolve these involuntary associations and ensure they become and remain voluntary.

Essentially this boils down to the following:

A voluntary transfer of wealth is a trade, and we consider this good; an involuntary transfer of wealth is theft, and we consider this bad.  Voluntary sex, we consider this good (usually :P); involuntary sex, we consider this rape, therefore bad.  Voluntary death, we call this a sacrifice, and though saddening, we consider this good; involuntary death, we call this murder, and we consider this bad.  Voluntary employment, we call this a job; involuntary employment, we call this slavery.  So on and so forth; it seems all of our mishaps within society are caused by the belief that some relationships must be mandatory, which I find an excuse to commit one of the crimes listed above; because people are naturally inclined to work toward self-interest, there is no reason to believe they would ever have to do anything against their will "but for their good"; people know what's good or bad for them, and if a relationship, an act, or an idea is done voluntarily, then it is naturally for the benefit of the parties involved.


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: solidshotnosh on December 19, 2013, 10:54:22 PM
I've been disappeared from Reddit, Twitter and other digital forums for having a positive voice of change, humility, selflessness, magnanimity, compassion, creativity, curiosity and patience; I have found this forum now and I believe it to be my new home. Thank you, Bitcoin.

The dollar bill can't collapse,
because that shit
is just
a fucking
illusion
to begin with.


Let's change this world. Now.

0011010000101110001101000010111000110001­00110100

You probably weren't liked because you're pretentious and arrogant, and most likely extremely narcissistic.

Don't act all high and mighty when you jumped on board once it started becoming a "Get Rich Quick" scheme.



Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 20, 2013, 09:19:23 PM
Hi Solidshotnosh, thank you for typing out a response to what you believe to be the energy that lives deep inside of me.

It is somewhat important to me, not to defend myself necessarily, but at least to share with you some photons to hopefully quell this energy which you have presented here toward my digital avatar. Given what I consider very basic wisdom regarding the human psyche and its inherent condition, as well as the inherent wisdom and nature of reality, it wouldn't be a stretch to consider the sentiment you have chosen to project here as one of major internal transference. Example being: There is a very reasonable possibility that it is actually You whom are extremely pretentious, narcissistic and arrogant-- After all, if you spot it, you got it, right?

Without being judgmental, and only for the sake of response to your energy-- Your words exhibit to me an underlying sense of guilt, shame, grief, repression and regret. Does our modern world not present to you and I enough negative, self-absorbed egotistical energy every waking moment of our waking life-- So much so that instead of mirroring this energy subconsciously and out of ignorance, it isn't important for us to see through this illusion clearly and choose instead to represent those most intuitive and beautiful of inherent human qualities-- those of magnanimity, positivity, connection, humility, curiosity, humor, benevolence, selflessness, love, patience, kindness, etc.?

I am not saddened by your words, and I certainly am not hurt, and I apologize if that was what you were attempting to invoke with them. I would like to be your friend, as I would like to be every waking creature's "friend" and "partner". I hope that in the future you consider profoundly the energy that lives within you before you present it to your external world. There is enough aggression, ego and negativity in my world, I know that much; do we really need to reflect it even into our digital forums? Is this not a place for us to find one-another and engage our innermost beliefs and virtues sincerely and without absolute darkness and judgement? If not, why isn't it? It is our choice, after all.

I would also like to mention that I do not consider myself "high", nor "mighty", and again, I recommend looking deeply within yourself and considering whether or not these are simply characteristics your subconscious has attached itself to-- Pieces of yourself that you secretly are disturbed by and therefore feel the need to point out in others.

Furthermore, regarding Bitcoin as being a "get rich scheme"-- I haven't held money in over a year. I find materialism makes me sick and I prefer to have closer to "nothing" always rather than ever have anything like "something" at all. I have lived in the woods and homeless for the greater part of a year. I have ridden my bicycle 3000 miles across the country, camped out every single night. I prefer eating food that has been discarded rather than purchasing it and supporting the debilitating structure of the modern world and its capital.

I have not had a cellphone in over five years, let alone held a traditional "Facebook". I exist as far outside of the modern paradigm and its consumer nature as I possibly can at any given point in time. Money and materialism makes me sick to my stomach, and all I know for certain is that any time I feel like I have anything whatsoever, it is then that I know for certain it is time to give it all away.

Are you also this way? If so, let's be friends! After all, my motive for being here, as I have already typed, is simply to find like-hearted/minded individuals.

I hope you're having a wonderful "holiday"!

love&light,
jayson nessi


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: Glermferther on December 20, 2013, 09:34:04 PM
Hippie talk.


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 21, 2013, 12:15:30 AM
Hey there, Glermferther!


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: mindfulmojo on December 21, 2013, 01:26:16 AM
Hippie talk.

The world needs more hippies and less fascists...  :P


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 21, 2013, 01:33:09 AM
Thanks Mojo.  ;)


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: vaskomobile on December 21, 2013, 05:39:28 PM
We need more good hackers than hippies.


Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: WordsWeHeard on December 21, 2013, 08:09:58 PM
We need more positivity than negativity. Let us not consider either term "hippie" nor "hacker" with any semblance of negative connotation whatsoever-- Just because this is the energy our nihilistic, selfish, impatient, loveless consumer paradigm has primed us with-- We are stronger that that.

Be a hippie. Be a hacker. Be whatever the hell you Want to BE, And Be it SINCERELY; OWN IT. No person is inherently bad and no person was ever born with the inherent desire to inflict profound harm upon itself or its world. We are products of our culture and of this base and out-dated, categorically ignorant, argumentative "language".

No surprise whatsoever the tangible energy the language of "business" might manifest-- Rather than that of one of Love, Connection, Compassion and Understanding.


Fixed that for you!



Title: Re: My name is Jayson Nessi, and I'm here to stay. Thank you, "Satoshi Nakamoto".
Post by: krostue on February 21, 2014, 06:02:02 AM
I totally misread your title and thought that it read that you are "Satoshi Nakamoto"
if you are or not, i am more than happy to read your letter. It is quite lengthy and I want to give it my undivided attention.

want to get together sometime and talk? pm me :D