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  <title>Love &amp; Hard Money</title>

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  <copyright>© 2026 Love &amp; Hard Money</copyright>
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  <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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  <description><![CDATA[<p>Love &amp; Hard Money is a weekly podcast that explores the intersection of Bitcoin, ethics, and business strategy. Each episode features deep dives into sound money principles, monetary history, and how Bitcoin fits into a principled business approach.</p><p><br></p><p>Hosted by Brian Bundy, founder of Satoshi General, the podcast is designed for business leaders, CFOs, and entrepreneurs who want to understand Bitcoin beyond the hype—grounded in economics, ethics, and practical business experience.</p>]]></description>
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     <title>Love &amp; Hard Money</title>
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    <itunes:title>Why You Can&#39;t Afford A House</itunes:title>
    <title>Why You Can&#39;t Afford A House</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[The 30-year mortgage didn't make housing affordable. It made it permanently more expensive. Here's the only thing that actually fixes it. Episode Summary Brian traces the systemic causes of housing unaffordability — from the 30-year mortgage to securitization to the Cantillon effect — arguing that every proposed fix fails because none of them address the monetary premium at the root of the problem. He then makes the honest case for Bitcoin as the demonetizer: not a quick fix, not without vola...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p><em>The 30-year mortgage didn&apos;t make housing affordable. It made it permanently more expensive. Here&apos;s the only thing that actually fixes it.</em></p><p><b><em>Episode Summary</em></b></p><p>Brian traces the systemic causes of housing unaffordability — from the 30-year mortgage to securitization to the Cantillon effect — arguing that every proposed fix fails because none of them address the monetary premium at the root of the problem. He then makes the honest case for Bitcoin as the demonetizer: not a quick fix, not without volatility, not without a difficult transition — but the only path that actually resolves the underlying cause rather than managing the symptoms.</p><p><b><em>Key Concepts Covered</em></b></p><p>The co-op covenant as a real-world controlled experiment on financing and price — The elevator inversion as a technology value-structure analogy — The financing-inflates-prices principle across housing, student loans, and healthcare — The 30-year mortgage as inflation transmission mechanism — Securitization and the socialization of mortgage risk — The monetary premium in housing — The Cantillon effect on first-time buyers — Early adopter benefit vs. Cantillon extraction — Bitcoin volatility as demonetization in progress — The genie/baby thought experiment — Living in both worlds during the monetary transition</p><p><b><em>The Baby and the Bridge — Thought Experiment</em></b></p><p>The core analogy: asking a genie for the best bridge-building technology and receiving a human baby. The baby cannot build a bridge today. Critics who evaluate it on those terms are not wrong — on those terms. But the baby grows up. Bitcoin is the baby: the best long-run monetary technology that exists, evaluated unfairly by critics using short-run criteria. The right question is not &apos;can it do X today&apos; but &apos;what does this become?&apos;</p><p><b><em>Recommended Reading &amp; Resources</em></b></p><p>The Bitcoin Standard — Saifedean Ammous</p><p>What Has Government Done to Our Money? — Murray Rothbard</p><p>The Price of Tomorrow — Jeff Booth</p><p>The Richest Man in Babylon — George S. Clason (starting point for anyone new to saving)</p><p>Nostr — decentralized social media with native Bitcoin tipping (lightning wallet required)</p><p><b><em>Data Points Referenced</em></b></p><p>Median home price to median income ratio: approximately 3x in 1980, 6–8x today in most US markets (Census / NAR data).</p><p>College tuition increase: ~1,200% since 1980, vs. ~300% general inflation (College Board data).</p><p>US healthcare spend: approximately 2x OECD average per capita (WHO / OECD data).</p><p>Median US homebuyer age: 59 years in recent NAR surveys, up from 39 in 2010 and 31 in 1980.</p><p>Bitcoin drawdowns: approximately 80%+ peak-to-trough in 2011, 2014–15, 2018, 2022 — with each subsequent cycle floor higher than the prior cycle peak.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>The 30-year mortgage didn&apos;t make housing affordable. It made it permanently more expensive. Here&apos;s the only thing that actually fixes it.</em></p><p><b><em>Episode Summary</em></b></p><p>Brian traces the systemic causes of housing unaffordability — from the 30-year mortgage to securitization to the Cantillon effect — arguing that every proposed fix fails because none of them address the monetary premium at the root of the problem. He then makes the honest case for Bitcoin as the demonetizer: not a quick fix, not without volatility, not without a difficult transition — but the only path that actually resolves the underlying cause rather than managing the symptoms.</p><p><b><em>Key Concepts Covered</em></b></p><p>The co-op covenant as a real-world controlled experiment on financing and price — The elevator inversion as a technology value-structure analogy — The financing-inflates-prices principle across housing, student loans, and healthcare — The 30-year mortgage as inflation transmission mechanism — Securitization and the socialization of mortgage risk — The monetary premium in housing — The Cantillon effect on first-time buyers — Early adopter benefit vs. Cantillon extraction — Bitcoin volatility as demonetization in progress — The genie/baby thought experiment — Living in both worlds during the monetary transition</p><p><b><em>The Baby and the Bridge — Thought Experiment</em></b></p><p>The core analogy: asking a genie for the best bridge-building technology and receiving a human baby. The baby cannot build a bridge today. Critics who evaluate it on those terms are not wrong — on those terms. But the baby grows up. Bitcoin is the baby: the best long-run monetary technology that exists, evaluated unfairly by critics using short-run criteria. The right question is not &apos;can it do X today&apos; but &apos;what does this become?&apos;</p><p><b><em>Recommended Reading &amp; Resources</em></b></p><p>The Bitcoin Standard — Saifedean Ammous</p><p>What Has Government Done to Our Money? — Murray Rothbard</p><p>The Price of Tomorrow — Jeff Booth</p><p>The Richest Man in Babylon — George S. Clason (starting point for anyone new to saving)</p><p>Nostr — decentralized social media with native Bitcoin tipping (lightning wallet required)</p><p><b><em>Data Points Referenced</em></b></p><p>Median home price to median income ratio: approximately 3x in 1980, 6–8x today in most US markets (Census / NAR data).</p><p>College tuition increase: ~1,200% since 1980, vs. ~300% general inflation (College Board data).</p><p>US healthcare spend: approximately 2x OECD average per capita (WHO / OECD data).</p><p>Median US homebuyer age: 59 years in recent NAR surveys, up from 39 in 2010 and 31 in 1980.</p><p>Bitcoin drawdowns: approximately 80%+ peak-to-trough in 2011, 2014–15, 2018, 2022 — with each subsequent cycle floor higher than the prior cycle peak.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1903</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>15</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>The Monkey, The Rat, The Amish and You</itunes:title>
    <title>The Monkey, The Rat, The Amish and You</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Episode Summary Brian traces the arc from evolutionary biology to monetary policy, arguing that the rage and tribalism of modern political life are not caused by cultural failure or moral decline — they are the predictable output of a monetary system that exploits humanity's hardwired fairness instincts while hiding its own role in doing so. Key Concepts Covered Frans de Waal's capuchin fairness experiments — Displaced aggression in stress research — Interest rates as civilization's operating...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p><b><em>Episode Summary</em></b></p><p>Brian traces the arc from evolutionary biology to monetary policy, arguing that the rage and tribalism of modern political life are not caused by cultural failure or moral decline — they are the predictable output of a monetary system that exploits humanity&apos;s hardwired fairness instincts while hiding its own role in doing so.</p><p><b><em>Key Concepts Covered</em></b></p><p>Frans de Waal&apos;s capuchin fairness experiments — Displaced aggression in stress research — Interest rates as civilization&apos;s operating system — The monetary premium in housing — The Cantillon effect and institutional credit advantage — Maslow&apos;s hierarchy as a diagnostic tool for monetary policy — The Amish data point on mental health and economic structure — Adam Smith&apos;s Theory of Moral Sentiments — Bitcoin as a restoration of rule-based fairness</p><p><b><em>Recommended Reading</em></b></p><p>The Theory of Moral Sentiments — Adam Smith (1759)</p><p>The Age of Empathy — Frans de Waal</p><p>The Bitcoin Standard — Saifedean Ammous</p><p>What Has Government Done to Our Money? — Murray Rothbard</p><p>Maslow&apos;s hierarchy original paper: A Theory of Human Motivation (1943)</p><p><b><em>Referenced Research</em></b></p><p>de Waal, F. &amp; Brosnan, S. (2003). Monkeys reject unequal pay. Nature, 425, 297–299.</p><p>Displaced aggression research: Dollard et al. frustration-aggression hypothesis; subsequent refinements by Marcus-Newhall et al.</p><p>Amish mental health studies: various, including work by Egeland &amp; Hostetter on affective disorders in Plain communities.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b><em>Episode Summary</em></b></p><p>Brian traces the arc from evolutionary biology to monetary policy, arguing that the rage and tribalism of modern political life are not caused by cultural failure or moral decline — they are the predictable output of a monetary system that exploits humanity&apos;s hardwired fairness instincts while hiding its own role in doing so.</p><p><b><em>Key Concepts Covered</em></b></p><p>Frans de Waal&apos;s capuchin fairness experiments — Displaced aggression in stress research — Interest rates as civilization&apos;s operating system — The monetary premium in housing — The Cantillon effect and institutional credit advantage — Maslow&apos;s hierarchy as a diagnostic tool for monetary policy — The Amish data point on mental health and economic structure — Adam Smith&apos;s Theory of Moral Sentiments — Bitcoin as a restoration of rule-based fairness</p><p><b><em>Recommended Reading</em></b></p><p>The Theory of Moral Sentiments — Adam Smith (1759)</p><p>The Age of Empathy — Frans de Waal</p><p>The Bitcoin Standard — Saifedean Ammous</p><p>What Has Government Done to Our Money? — Murray Rothbard</p><p>Maslow&apos;s hierarchy original paper: A Theory of Human Motivation (1943)</p><p><b><em>Referenced Research</em></b></p><p>de Waal, F. &amp; Brosnan, S. (2003). Monkeys reject unequal pay. Nature, 425, 297–299.</p><p>Displaced aggression research: Dollard et al. frustration-aggression hypothesis; subsequent refinements by Marcus-Newhall et al.</p><p>Amish mental health studies: various, including work by Egeland &amp; Hostetter on affective disorders in Plain communities.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1692</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>14</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>The Eight Forms Of Capital</itunes:title>
    <title>The Eight Forms Of Capital</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Episode Summary In this episode, Brian explores a framework from permaculture that expands what we mean by wealth. Drawing on the work of Ethan Roland and Gregory Landua's 2011 paper Regenerative Enterprise, he walks through the eight forms of capital — and argues that sound money and regenerative living aren't competing philosophies. They need each other. He also gets personal: what it means to sell chemicals for a living while believing in regenerative agriculture, why the family is the mos...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p><b>Episode Summary</b></p><p>In this episode, Brian explores a framework from permaculture that expands what we mean by wealth. Drawing on the work of Ethan Roland and Gregory Landua&apos;s 2011 paper <em>Regenerative Enterprise</em>, he walks through the eight forms of capital — and argues that sound money and regenerative living aren&apos;t competing philosophies. They need each other.</p><p>He also gets personal: what it means to sell chemicals for a living while believing in regenerative agriculture, why the family is the most underrated unit of resilience, and why Bitcoin may matter most not because of what it stores — but because of what it gives back.</p><p><b>What We Cover</b></p><p><b>The system we built</b> — Why a world optimized for efficiency is quietly becoming more fragile. The soda can supply chain as a case study in converting living capital into financial capital at a loss.</p><p><b>The real problem is time</b> — All capital is just time and energy stored in different forms. When money can be created without either, everything gets mispriced.</p><p><b>Scarcity and abundance</b> — Why real abundance comes from constraints, not from removing them. And what we&apos;ve done by creating artificial abundance in money while destroying real abundance in soil and health.</p><p><b>The eight forms of capital</b> — The full framework from Roland and Landua, with Brian&apos;s commentary on each:</p><ul><li>Financial capital</li><li>Material capital</li><li>Living capital</li><li>Social capital</li><li>Intellectual capital</li><li>Experiential capital</li><li>Cultural capital</li><li>Spiritual capital</li><li>Plus one Brian adds: time capital — sovereignty over your own attention and future</li></ul><p><b>The two incomplete solutions</b> — Bitcoiners see the money problem clearly but often miss the living and social capital question. Permaculturalists see the ecological and community problem clearly but often ignore incentives. Neither works without the other.</p><p><b>The synthesis</b> — Locally rooted. Globally connected. Not isolation, not collapse-fantasy, not nostalgia. Balance achieved through distributed consensus.</p><p><b>The family as base layer</b> — Why every form of capital ultimately lives or dies at the household level. What it actually looks like to build systems optimized for healthy families.</p><p><b>Bitcoin as the base layer for money</b> — What sound money actually restores, and why the most important thing it might give back is time.</p><p><b>Referenced</b></p><ul><li>Ethan Roland &amp; Gregory Landua, <em>Regenerative Enterprise</em> (2011) — the original eight forms of capital framework</li><li>Sri Lanka&apos;s 2021 chemical fertilizer ban and the famine and political collapse that followed</li></ul><p><b>Key Quotes</b></p><p><em>&quot;Sound money is necessary. It is not sufficient.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;You can understand Bitcoin perfectly and still be completely dependent on fragile systems.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;When you lose sovereignty over your time, you lose everything else too.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;The goal isn&apos;t to tear down the system. It&apos;s to stop needing it for things it was never meant to provide.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Real wealth isn&apos;t just what shows up in your bank account or your hardware wallet.&quot;</em></p><p><b>Follow</b></p><p>Love &amp; Hard Money is available on Fountain, Nostr, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>Bitcoin accepted. Fiat tolerated.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Episode Summary</b></p><p>In this episode, Brian explores a framework from permaculture that expands what we mean by wealth. Drawing on the work of Ethan Roland and Gregory Landua&apos;s 2011 paper <em>Regenerative Enterprise</em>, he walks through the eight forms of capital — and argues that sound money and regenerative living aren&apos;t competing philosophies. They need each other.</p><p>He also gets personal: what it means to sell chemicals for a living while believing in regenerative agriculture, why the family is the most underrated unit of resilience, and why Bitcoin may matter most not because of what it stores — but because of what it gives back.</p><p><b>What We Cover</b></p><p><b>The system we built</b> — Why a world optimized for efficiency is quietly becoming more fragile. The soda can supply chain as a case study in converting living capital into financial capital at a loss.</p><p><b>The real problem is time</b> — All capital is just time and energy stored in different forms. When money can be created without either, everything gets mispriced.</p><p><b>Scarcity and abundance</b> — Why real abundance comes from constraints, not from removing them. And what we&apos;ve done by creating artificial abundance in money while destroying real abundance in soil and health.</p><p><b>The eight forms of capital</b> — The full framework from Roland and Landua, with Brian&apos;s commentary on each:</p><ul><li>Financial capital</li><li>Material capital</li><li>Living capital</li><li>Social capital</li><li>Intellectual capital</li><li>Experiential capital</li><li>Cultural capital</li><li>Spiritual capital</li><li>Plus one Brian adds: time capital — sovereignty over your own attention and future</li></ul><p><b>The two incomplete solutions</b> — Bitcoiners see the money problem clearly but often miss the living and social capital question. Permaculturalists see the ecological and community problem clearly but often ignore incentives. Neither works without the other.</p><p><b>The synthesis</b> — Locally rooted. Globally connected. Not isolation, not collapse-fantasy, not nostalgia. Balance achieved through distributed consensus.</p><p><b>The family as base layer</b> — Why every form of capital ultimately lives or dies at the household level. What it actually looks like to build systems optimized for healthy families.</p><p><b>Bitcoin as the base layer for money</b> — What sound money actually restores, and why the most important thing it might give back is time.</p><p><b>Referenced</b></p><ul><li>Ethan Roland &amp; Gregory Landua, <em>Regenerative Enterprise</em> (2011) — the original eight forms of capital framework</li><li>Sri Lanka&apos;s 2021 chemical fertilizer ban and the famine and political collapse that followed</li></ul><p><b>Key Quotes</b></p><p><em>&quot;Sound money is necessary. It is not sufficient.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;You can understand Bitcoin perfectly and still be completely dependent on fragile systems.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;When you lose sovereignty over your time, you lose everything else too.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;The goal isn&apos;t to tear down the system. It&apos;s to stop needing it for things it was never meant to provide.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Real wealth isn&apos;t just what shows up in your bank account or your hardware wallet.&quot;</em></p><p><b>Follow</b></p><p>Love &amp; Hard Money is available on Fountain, Nostr, and all major podcast platforms.</p><p>Bitcoin accepted. Fiat tolerated.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1325</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>13</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>The Unspoken Sermon Of Satoshi Nakamoto</itunes:title>
    <title>The Unspoken Sermon Of Satoshi Nakamoto</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[No one wrote this sermon. No one preached it. But if you pay attention, it's there. In Episode 12, Brian explores one of the most provocative ideas on Love &amp; Hard Money yet: that Bitcoin — without intending to — encodes principles that every major religious and philosophical tradition has tried to teach for thousands of years. Don't steal. Tell the truth. Respect limits. Honor your word. This isn't an argument that Bitcoin is sacred. It's an observation that it rhymes with something that ...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>No one wrote this sermon. No one preached it. But if you pay attention, it&apos;s there.</p><p>In Episode 12, Brian explores one of the most provocative ideas on Love &amp; Hard Money yet: that Bitcoin — without intending to — encodes principles that every major religious and philosophical tradition has tried to teach for thousands of years. Don&apos;t steal. Tell the truth. Respect limits. Honor your word.</p><p>This isn&apos;t an argument that Bitcoin is sacred. It&apos;s an observation that it rhymes with something that is.</p><p><b>What We Cover</b></p><ul><li>Why every civilization across history converged on the same moral warnings — and what that pattern means</li><li>How major traditions — Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism — each point to the same underlying reality about honesty, limits, and consequences</li><li>The Tower of Babel as a mirror for the fiat era — and why Bitcoin may be the common language we lost</li><li>Why fiat money isn&apos;t just bad economics — it&apos;s misaligned with truth</li><li>The crucial distinction: religion works on the inside, Bitcoin works on the outside</li><li>Why Bitcoiners who treat it as a digital savior are making a category error</li><li>How the kind of money you live under shapes not just your finances — but your thinking, your time horizon, and who you become</li></ul><p><b>Key Lines From This Episode</b></p><p><em>&quot;It&apos;s not moral. But it rhymes with morality.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Religion says: you should not steal. Bitcoin says: it&apos;s much harder to.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Maybe that&apos;s not climbing toward heaven. Maybe that&apos;s just… coming back to earth.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Bitcoin fixes money. It doesn&apos;t fix you — but maybe it gives you the breathing room to work on yourself.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;No one wrote this sermon. No one preached it.&quot;</em></p><p><b>If This Episode Resonated</b></p><p>The thesis of Love &amp; Hard Money is simple: the money you use is a moral choice. Fiat is built on lies. Hard money — money that can&apos;t be inflated, manipulated, or conjured from nothing — aligns with how reality actually works.</p><p>If you&apos;re new here, start with Episode 1. If this one hit something for you, share it with someone who&apos;s never thought about money this way.</p><p><em>Love &amp; Hard Money is a podcast about sound money, Austrian economics, and Bitcoin — hosted by Brian Bundy</em></p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No one wrote this sermon. No one preached it. But if you pay attention, it&apos;s there.</p><p>In Episode 12, Brian explores one of the most provocative ideas on Love &amp; Hard Money yet: that Bitcoin — without intending to — encodes principles that every major religious and philosophical tradition has tried to teach for thousands of years. Don&apos;t steal. Tell the truth. Respect limits. Honor your word.</p><p>This isn&apos;t an argument that Bitcoin is sacred. It&apos;s an observation that it rhymes with something that is.</p><p><b>What We Cover</b></p><ul><li>Why every civilization across history converged on the same moral warnings — and what that pattern means</li><li>How major traditions — Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism — each point to the same underlying reality about honesty, limits, and consequences</li><li>The Tower of Babel as a mirror for the fiat era — and why Bitcoin may be the common language we lost</li><li>Why fiat money isn&apos;t just bad economics — it&apos;s misaligned with truth</li><li>The crucial distinction: religion works on the inside, Bitcoin works on the outside</li><li>Why Bitcoiners who treat it as a digital savior are making a category error</li><li>How the kind of money you live under shapes not just your finances — but your thinking, your time horizon, and who you become</li></ul><p><b>Key Lines From This Episode</b></p><p><em>&quot;It&apos;s not moral. But it rhymes with morality.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Religion says: you should not steal. Bitcoin says: it&apos;s much harder to.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Maybe that&apos;s not climbing toward heaven. Maybe that&apos;s just… coming back to earth.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;Bitcoin fixes money. It doesn&apos;t fix you — but maybe it gives you the breathing room to work on yourself.&quot;</em></p><p><em>&quot;No one wrote this sermon. No one preached it.&quot;</em></p><p><b>If This Episode Resonated</b></p><p>The thesis of Love &amp; Hard Money is simple: the money you use is a moral choice. Fiat is built on lies. Hard money — money that can&apos;t be inflated, manipulated, or conjured from nothing — aligns with how reality actually works.</p><p>If you&apos;re new here, start with Episode 1. If this one hit something for you, share it with someone who&apos;s never thought about money this way.</p><p><em>Love &amp; Hard Money is a podcast about sound money, Austrian economics, and Bitcoin — hosted by Brian Bundy</em></p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 31 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>746</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>12</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>The Cost Of A Dollar</itunes:title>
    <title>The Cost Of A Dollar</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Episode 11: "The Cost Of A Dollar" Henry Ford believed that if Americans truly understood the banking and monetary system, there would be a revolution before morning. In this primer episode — built to share with the Bitcoin-curious — Brian walks through three acts: how dollars are actually created (the Treasury/Fed/fractional reserve cycle, and the Cantillon Effect that tells you who benefits), what that monetary architecture has produced in the real world (fiat food, fiat health, fiat relati...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p><b>Episode 11: &quot;The Cost Of A Dollar&quot;</b></p><p>Henry Ford believed that if Americans truly understood the banking and monetary system, there would be a revolution before morning. In this primer episode — built to share with the Bitcoin-curious — Brian walks through three acts: how dollars are actually created (the Treasury/Fed/fractional reserve cycle, and the Cantillon Effect that tells you who benefits), what that monetary architecture has produced in the real world (fiat food, fiat health, fiat relationships, ugly culture, opioids, endless war — and why politics cannot fix any of it), and how Bitcoin&apos;s fixed supply and inverted incentive structure points toward something genuinely different.</p><p>No prior Bitcoin knowledge required. Start here. Send it to someone.</p><p><b>Topics covered:</b></p><ul><li>The money creation cycle: Treasury bonds, the Federal Reserve, and fractional reserve lending</li><li>The Cantillon Effect: why newly printed money enriches those closest to the printer first</li><li>Time preference: the hidden variable connecting monetary policy to civilizational decay</li><li>Fiat food, fiat health, fiat relationships, and the epidemic of meaninglessness</li><li>The opioid epidemic as a wages-of-despair story</li><li>Why sound money constrains war — and fiat money enables it</li><li>Why both political parties have agreed on one thing for over a century: print the difference</li><li>Why the structure of the system makes political resolution impossible — and what that means for how you spend your energy</li><li>Bitcoin&apos;s 21 million supply cap: the first truly fixed monetary asset in human history</li><li>The incentive inversion: how hard money produces long-term thinking</li><li>Addressing the objections: volatility, criminals, intrinsic value, competition</li><li>Four practical steps you can take today</li></ul><p><b>Recommended reading/watching:</b></p><ul><li>What’s the Problem – Joe Bryant (https://youtu.be/YtFOxNbmD38)</li><li><em>The Bitcoin Standard</em> — Saifedean Ammous</li><li><em>The Sovereign Individual</em> — James Dale Davidson &amp; William Rees-Mogg</li><li><em>What Has Government Done to Our Money</em> — Murray Rothbard</li><li><em>Principles of Economics</em> — Carl Menger</li></ul><p> </p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Episode 11: &quot;The Cost Of A Dollar&quot;</b></p><p>Henry Ford believed that if Americans truly understood the banking and monetary system, there would be a revolution before morning. In this primer episode — built to share with the Bitcoin-curious — Brian walks through three acts: how dollars are actually created (the Treasury/Fed/fractional reserve cycle, and the Cantillon Effect that tells you who benefits), what that monetary architecture has produced in the real world (fiat food, fiat health, fiat relationships, ugly culture, opioids, endless war — and why politics cannot fix any of it), and how Bitcoin&apos;s fixed supply and inverted incentive structure points toward something genuinely different.</p><p>No prior Bitcoin knowledge required. Start here. Send it to someone.</p><p><b>Topics covered:</b></p><ul><li>The money creation cycle: Treasury bonds, the Federal Reserve, and fractional reserve lending</li><li>The Cantillon Effect: why newly printed money enriches those closest to the printer first</li><li>Time preference: the hidden variable connecting monetary policy to civilizational decay</li><li>Fiat food, fiat health, fiat relationships, and the epidemic of meaninglessness</li><li>The opioid epidemic as a wages-of-despair story</li><li>Why sound money constrains war — and fiat money enables it</li><li>Why both political parties have agreed on one thing for over a century: print the difference</li><li>Why the structure of the system makes political resolution impossible — and what that means for how you spend your energy</li><li>Bitcoin&apos;s 21 million supply cap: the first truly fixed monetary asset in human history</li><li>The incentive inversion: how hard money produces long-term thinking</li><li>Addressing the objections: volatility, criminals, intrinsic value, competition</li><li>Four practical steps you can take today</li></ul><p><b>Recommended reading/watching:</b></p><ul><li>What’s the Problem – Joe Bryant (https://youtu.be/YtFOxNbmD38)</li><li><em>The Bitcoin Standard</em> — Saifedean Ammous</li><li><em>The Sovereign Individual</em> — James Dale Davidson &amp; William Rees-Mogg</li><li><em>What Has Government Done to Our Money</em> — Murray Rothbard</li><li><em>Principles of Economics</em> — Carl Menger</li></ul><p> </p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 24 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>2012</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>11</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>Do Tariffs Matter?</itunes:title>
    <title>Do Tariffs Matter?</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Episode 10: Do Tariffs Matter? The tariff debate is one of the most consequential economic conversations of our time — and it's almost entirely missing the point. In this episode, Brian argues that the fight over tariffs is a second-order argument happening inside a fraudulent frame. The real question isn't whether tariffs are good or bad. It's whether free trade is even possible when the money itself is corrupt. What we cover: Why money is half of every transaction — and what happens when th...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p><b>Episode 10: Do Tariffs Matter?</b></p><p>The tariff debate is one of the most consequential economic conversations of our time — and it&apos;s almost entirely missing the point. In this episode, Brian argues that the fight over tariffs is a second-order argument happening inside a fraudulent frame. The real question isn&apos;t whether tariffs are good or bad. It&apos;s whether free trade is even possible when the money itself is corrupt.</p><p><b>What we cover:</b></p><ul><li>Why money is half of every transaction — and what happens when that half is crooked</li><li>The <b>proof-of-weapons network</b>: Simon Dixon&apos;s framework for understanding what actually backs the US dollar (hint: it&apos;s not the economy)</li><li>How the petrodollar system, SWIFT, the IMF, and military force form an interlocking system that controls global purchasing power</li><li>A candid look inside Gravitas Chemical — how tariff whipsaw forced a costly supply chain migration from China to Indonesia, and why the math on reshoring doesn&apos;t work for small businesses</li><li>The two completely different things being called &quot;reshoring&quot; — and why only politically connected corporations are eating from the government trough</li><li>Why free trade also means free movement of people — and how dollar hegemony drives the very migration crisis politicians blame on migrants</li><li>What a Bitcoin-denominated world actually looks like: peer-to-peer trade, honest war financing, and individual wealth sovereignty that no army can seize</li><li>Why &quot;stack accordingly&quot; isn&apos;t a political statement — it&apos;s a rational response to an unstable signal environment</li></ul><p><b>Key idea:</b> You cannot have free trade without honest money. Half of every transaction is the unit of account. If that half is controlled by the proof-of-weapons network — by the alignment of central banks, defense contractors, and political establishments — the price signal is lying and the measuring stick is crooked. No amount of tariff negotiation changes that. Bitcoin fixes the money. Honest money gives trade a chance to actually be free.</p><p><b>Mentioned:</b></p><ul><li>Simon Dixon — proof-of-weapons network framework</li><li>Nixon closing the gold window (1971) and the petrodollar arrangement</li><li>Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein, and Ayatollah Khamenei as historical examples of dollar hegemony enforcement</li><li>CHIPS Act, TSMC Arizona, Intel, MP Materials — industrial policy reshoring vs. small business reshoring</li><li><em>Love &amp; Hard Money</em> Episode 9 (Solzhenitsyn / Live Not By Lies)</li></ul><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Episode 10: Do Tariffs Matter?</b></p><p>The tariff debate is one of the most consequential economic conversations of our time — and it&apos;s almost entirely missing the point. In this episode, Brian argues that the fight over tariffs is a second-order argument happening inside a fraudulent frame. The real question isn&apos;t whether tariffs are good or bad. It&apos;s whether free trade is even possible when the money itself is corrupt.</p><p><b>What we cover:</b></p><ul><li>Why money is half of every transaction — and what happens when that half is crooked</li><li>The <b>proof-of-weapons network</b>: Simon Dixon&apos;s framework for understanding what actually backs the US dollar (hint: it&apos;s not the economy)</li><li>How the petrodollar system, SWIFT, the IMF, and military force form an interlocking system that controls global purchasing power</li><li>A candid look inside Gravitas Chemical — how tariff whipsaw forced a costly supply chain migration from China to Indonesia, and why the math on reshoring doesn&apos;t work for small businesses</li><li>The two completely different things being called &quot;reshoring&quot; — and why only politically connected corporations are eating from the government trough</li><li>Why free trade also means free movement of people — and how dollar hegemony drives the very migration crisis politicians blame on migrants</li><li>What a Bitcoin-denominated world actually looks like: peer-to-peer trade, honest war financing, and individual wealth sovereignty that no army can seize</li><li>Why &quot;stack accordingly&quot; isn&apos;t a political statement — it&apos;s a rational response to an unstable signal environment</li></ul><p><b>Key idea:</b> You cannot have free trade without honest money. Half of every transaction is the unit of account. If that half is controlled by the proof-of-weapons network — by the alignment of central banks, defense contractors, and political establishments — the price signal is lying and the measuring stick is crooked. No amount of tariff negotiation changes that. Bitcoin fixes the money. Honest money gives trade a chance to actually be free.</p><p><b>Mentioned:</b></p><ul><li>Simon Dixon — proof-of-weapons network framework</li><li>Nixon closing the gold window (1971) and the petrodollar arrangement</li><li>Gaddafi, Saddam Hussein, and Ayatollah Khamenei as historical examples of dollar hegemony enforcement</li><li>CHIPS Act, TSMC Arizona, Intel, MP Materials — industrial policy reshoring vs. small business reshoring</li><li><em>Love &amp; Hard Money</em> Episode 9 (Solzhenitsyn / Live Not By Lies)</li></ul><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1756</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>Live Not By Lies</itunes:title>
    <title>Live Not By Lies</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Why do smart people go quiet when you explain inflation to them? They hear the words. They understand the logic. And then they change the subject. In this episode, Brian explores what's really happening in that moment — and why Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's challenge to Soviet citizens in 1974 may be the most relevant framework for understanding Bitcoin's role in the world today. The lie doesn't survive because powerful people enforce it. It survives because ordinary people participate in it — eve...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Why do smart people go quiet when you explain inflation to them? They hear the words. They understand the logic. And then they change the subject.</p><p>In this episode, Brian explores what&apos;s really happening in that moment — and why Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn&apos;s challenge to Soviet citizens in 1974 may be the most relevant framework for understanding Bitcoin&apos;s role in the world today.</p><p>The lie doesn&apos;t survive because powerful people enforce it. It survives because ordinary people participate in it — every day, in small ways, by choosing comfort over truth. Solzhenitsyn&apos;s ask wasn&apos;t revolution. It was quieter and more dangerous: just stop repeating what you know isn&apos;t true.</p><p>Brian connects this to the hidden nature of inflation, Jeff Booth&apos;s deflationary thesis from <em>The Price of Tomorrow</em>, and the civilizational stakes of Bitcoin as an honest measuring stick. He also confronts a real tension: the difference between Bitcoin expanding and Bitcoin being domesticated — and why self-custody isn&apos;t just a technical preference but a philosophical commitment.</p><p><b>In This Episode</b></p><ul><li>Why people shut down when you talk about inflation — and what&apos;s really going on beneath that discomfort</li><li>Solzhenitsyn&apos;s description of how systemic lies work: everyone knows, no one says</li><li>Technology is deflationary — so why does everything keep getting more expensive?</li><li>Bitcoin as the first monetary measuring stick that can&apos;t be quietly stretched</li><li>The co-optation risk: ETFs, custodial products, and the difference between adoption and domestication</li><li>The beautiful game theory: why decentralization must be actively defended, not assumed</li><li>Truth as the foundation of cooperation, prosperity, and civilization itself</li></ul><p><b>References &amp; Further Reading</b></p><ul><li>Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, <em>Live Not By Lies</em> (1974 essay)</li><li>Jeff Booth, <em>The Price of Tomorrow</em></li></ul><p><b>Connect</b></p><p>Stack sats. Live free. Tell the truth — and insist on truth in money.</p><p><em>New episodes every week.</em></p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Why do smart people go quiet when you explain inflation to them? They hear the words. They understand the logic. And then they change the subject.</p><p>In this episode, Brian explores what&apos;s really happening in that moment — and why Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn&apos;s challenge to Soviet citizens in 1974 may be the most relevant framework for understanding Bitcoin&apos;s role in the world today.</p><p>The lie doesn&apos;t survive because powerful people enforce it. It survives because ordinary people participate in it — every day, in small ways, by choosing comfort over truth. Solzhenitsyn&apos;s ask wasn&apos;t revolution. It was quieter and more dangerous: just stop repeating what you know isn&apos;t true.</p><p>Brian connects this to the hidden nature of inflation, Jeff Booth&apos;s deflationary thesis from <em>The Price of Tomorrow</em>, and the civilizational stakes of Bitcoin as an honest measuring stick. He also confronts a real tension: the difference between Bitcoin expanding and Bitcoin being domesticated — and why self-custody isn&apos;t just a technical preference but a philosophical commitment.</p><p><b>In This Episode</b></p><ul><li>Why people shut down when you talk about inflation — and what&apos;s really going on beneath that discomfort</li><li>Solzhenitsyn&apos;s description of how systemic lies work: everyone knows, no one says</li><li>Technology is deflationary — so why does everything keep getting more expensive?</li><li>Bitcoin as the first monetary measuring stick that can&apos;t be quietly stretched</li><li>The co-optation risk: ETFs, custodial products, and the difference between adoption and domestication</li><li>The beautiful game theory: why decentralization must be actively defended, not assumed</li><li>Truth as the foundation of cooperation, prosperity, and civilization itself</li></ul><p><b>References &amp; Further Reading</b></p><ul><li>Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, <em>Live Not By Lies</em> (1974 essay)</li><li>Jeff Booth, <em>The Price of Tomorrow</em></li></ul><p><b>Connect</b></p><p>Stack sats. Live free. Tell the truth — and insist on truth in money.</p><p><em>New episodes every week.</em></p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1147</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>How Far Does Your Love Reach?</itunes:title>
    <title>How Far Does Your Love Reach?</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Why are young people waiting longer to have kids — and what does that have to do with inflation? In Episode 8 of Love &amp; Hard Money, Brian connects monetary policy to family formation, generational thinking, and the quiet cost of living under a system that punishes saving. Plus: the trap no one talks about on the other side of financial discipline. www.satoshigeneral.com linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529 ]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Why are young people waiting longer to have kids — and what does that have to do with inflation? In Episode 8 of Love &amp; Hard Money, Brian connects monetary policy to family formation, generational thinking, and the quiet cost of living under a system that punishes saving. Plus: the trap no one talks about on the other side of financial discipline.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Why are young people waiting longer to have kids — and what does that have to do with inflation? In Episode 8 of Love &amp; Hard Money, Brian connects monetary policy to family formation, generational thinking, and the quiet cost of living under a system that punishes saving. Plus: the trap no one talks about on the other side of financial discipline.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 03 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>1067</itunes:duration>
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  <item>
    <itunes:title>Why 21 Million: The Hitchhiker&#39;s Theory</itunes:title>
    <title>Why 21 Million: The Hitchhiker&#39;s Theory</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[21 million is what makes Bitcoin work — but where did the number come from? Satoshi was too methodical with everything else for us to assume it was arbitrary. In this episode of Love &amp; Hard Money, Brian walks through why mathematical scarcity is different from every other kind of scarcity we've ever had, why our current payment system is essentially a leaky balloon with an evil clown airbrushed on it, and why the volatility you see in Bitcoin is caused by the exact same people who don't u...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>21 million is what makes Bitcoin work — but where did the number come from? Satoshi was too methodical with everything else for us to assume it was arbitrary. In this episode of Love &amp; Hard Money, Brian walks through why mathematical scarcity is different from every other kind of scarcity we&apos;ve ever had, why our current payment system is essentially a leaky balloon with an evil clown airbrushed on it, and why the volatility you see in Bitcoin is caused by the exact same people who don&apos;t understand it yet. </p><p>Then he makes his case for why Satoshi chose 21 million — a hilarious theory that is either completely ridiculous or one the most important footnotes in monetary history.  It just might be improbable enough to be true. You&apos;ll have to decide for yourself.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>21 million is what makes Bitcoin work — but where did the number come from? Satoshi was too methodical with everything else for us to assume it was arbitrary. In this episode of Love &amp; Hard Money, Brian walks through why mathematical scarcity is different from every other kind of scarcity we&apos;ve ever had, why our current payment system is essentially a leaky balloon with an evil clown airbrushed on it, and why the volatility you see in Bitcoin is caused by the exact same people who don&apos;t understand it yet. </p><p>Then he makes his case for why Satoshi chose 21 million — a hilarious theory that is either completely ridiculous or one the most important footnotes in monetary history.  It just might be improbable enough to be true. You&apos;ll have to decide for yourself.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2026 03:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>987</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>READ ALOUD: The Winds Of Uncertainty (Bonus, Ep. 6)</itunes:title>
    <title>READ ALOUD: The Winds Of Uncertainty (Bonus, Ep. 6)</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[In this bonus, midweek episode, I read aloud my children's book, The Winds Of Uncertainty. If you would like to follow along with pictures, they are available in the free e-book download on my website www.satoshigeneral.com. About the book: After losing everything to The Winds of Uncertainty, Eldin sets out on a hero’s journey where he discovers the value of hard work, hard money and truth over lies. This beautifully illustrated story is meant to be handed down generation-to- generation and r...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>In this bonus, midweek episode, I read aloud my children&apos;s book, The Winds Of Uncertainty. If you would like to follow along with pictures, they are available in the free e-book download on my website www.satoshigeneral.com.</p><p>About the book:</p><p>After losing everything to The Winds of Uncertainty, Eldin<br/>sets out on a hero’s journey where he discovers the value of<br/>hard work, hard money and truth over lies. This beautifully<br/>illustrated story is meant to be handed down generation-to-<br/>generation and read aloud to instill values many families hold<br/>dear. It teaches that prosperity results from free and fair<br/>trade, hard work and initiative and that sometimes you have<br/>to embark on an adventure to find the spark within.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this bonus, midweek episode, I read aloud my children&apos;s book, The Winds Of Uncertainty. If you would like to follow along with pictures, they are available in the free e-book download on my website www.satoshigeneral.com.</p><p>About the book:</p><p>After losing everything to The Winds of Uncertainty, Eldin<br/>sets out on a hero’s journey where he discovers the value of<br/>hard work, hard money and truth over lies. This beautifully<br/>illustrated story is meant to be handed down generation-to-<br/>generation and read aloud to instill values many families hold<br/>dear. It teaches that prosperity results from free and fair<br/>trade, hard work and initiative and that sometimes you have<br/>to embark on an adventure to find the spark within.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 21 Feb 2026 09:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>1064</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>The Winds of Uncertainty</itunes:title>
    <title>The Winds of Uncertainty</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[What if the most important lesson we never teach our kids is what money actually is? In this episode, Brian shares the story behind The Winds of Uncertainty — his children's book about scarcity, abundance, and the hidden forces that shape our economic lives. He talks about why he hired a Nostr artist and paid in Bitcoin, why he's only sold 10 copies and doesn't care, and why he believes it takes a generation to heal a broken relationship with money. From the gold florin that funded the Renais...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>What if the most important lesson we never teach our kids is what money actually <em>is</em>?</p><p>In this episode, Brian shares the story behind <em>The Winds of Uncertainty</em> — his children&apos;s book about scarcity, abundance, and the hidden forces that shape our economic lives. He talks about why he hired a Nostr artist and paid in Bitcoin, why he&apos;s only sold 10 copies and doesn&apos;t care, and why he believes it takes a generation to heal a broken relationship with money.</p><p>From the gold florin that funded the Renaissance to the moment Nixon closed the gold window in 1971 — and everything that came apart after — Brian traces how the money we choose shapes the culture we live in. Fiat money doesn&apos;t just inflate prices. It inflates dependence, erodes incentives, and quietly rearranges who wins and who loses.</p><p>Hard money is the inverse. And that&apos;s a lesson worth planting early.</p><p>The e-book is free. Signed hardcovers are available for Bitcoin at satoshigeneral.com.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What if the most important lesson we never teach our kids is what money actually <em>is</em>?</p><p>In this episode, Brian shares the story behind <em>The Winds of Uncertainty</em> — his children&apos;s book about scarcity, abundance, and the hidden forces that shape our economic lives. He talks about why he hired a Nostr artist and paid in Bitcoin, why he&apos;s only sold 10 copies and doesn&apos;t care, and why he believes it takes a generation to heal a broken relationship with money.</p><p>From the gold florin that funded the Renaissance to the moment Nixon closed the gold window in 1971 — and everything that came apart after — Brian traces how the money we choose shapes the culture we live in. Fiat money doesn&apos;t just inflate prices. It inflates dependence, erodes incentives, and quietly rearranges who wins and who loses.</p><p>Hard money is the inverse. And that&apos;s a lesson worth planting early.</p><p>The e-book is free. Signed hardcovers are available for Bitcoin at satoshigeneral.com.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2026 08:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>921</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
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  <item>
    <itunes:title>Ep.4 Stop Letting Them Steal From You</itunes:title>
    <title>Ep.4 Stop Letting Them Steal From You</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Almost everything you've been told about inflation is wrong. In this episode, Brian breaks down the difference between what inflation actually is versus what we're told it is—and why that distinction matters more than you think. You'll discover why your paycheck feels like it buys less every year despite "low" official inflation numbers, why your parents could afford a house on one income while you can't on two, and why the CPI consistently understates the real erosion of your purchasing powe...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Almost everything you&apos;ve been told about inflation is wrong. In this episode, Brian breaks down the difference between what inflation actually is versus what we&apos;re told it is—and why that distinction matters more than you think.</p><p>You&apos;ll discover why your paycheck feels like it buys less every year despite &quot;low&quot; official inflation numbers, why your parents could afford a house on one income while you can&apos;t on two, and why the CPI consistently understates the real erosion of your purchasing power. Brian walks through concrete examples using housing prices, college tuition, and the stock market measured in gold to show the gap between official statistics and lived reality.</p><p>Learn about the Cantillon Effect, why governments have every incentive to inflate the currency, and how measuring prices in Bitcoin reveals the truth about monetary debasement. Most importantly, understand why the only real protection against inflation is saving in something that can&apos;t be inflated.</p><p>If you&apos;ve ever felt like you&apos;re falling behind despite doing everything right, this episode explains why—and what you can do about it.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Almost everything you&apos;ve been told about inflation is wrong. In this episode, Brian breaks down the difference between what inflation actually is versus what we&apos;re told it is—and why that distinction matters more than you think.</p><p>You&apos;ll discover why your paycheck feels like it buys less every year despite &quot;low&quot; official inflation numbers, why your parents could afford a house on one income while you can&apos;t on two, and why the CPI consistently understates the real erosion of your purchasing power. Brian walks through concrete examples using housing prices, college tuition, and the stock market measured in gold to show the gap between official statistics and lived reality.</p><p>Learn about the Cantillon Effect, why governments have every incentive to inflate the currency, and how measuring prices in Bitcoin reveals the truth about monetary debasement. Most importantly, understand why the only real protection against inflation is saving in something that can&apos;t be inflated.</p><p>If you&apos;ve ever felt like you&apos;re falling behind despite doing everything right, this episode explains why—and what you can do about it.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 10 Feb 2026 09:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>1313</itunes:duration>
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  <item>
    <itunes:title>Bonus Episode - A Rant on Money, Power and Bitcoin </itunes:title>
    <title>Bonus Episode - A Rant on Money, Power and Bitcoin </title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This is a bonus episode. I went off script to highlight some of the evil that we are seeing in the world today and to offer a solution to help build a more beautiful and just future.   If you like this format, let me know by subscribing or commenting.  Either way, we will continue with weekly monologues every Tuesday on the thesis that Hard Money allows us to express love to the world beyond our own homes and families.  There is darkness in the world, but there is also light.&n...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>This is a bonus episode. I went off script to highlight some of the evil that we are seeing in the world today and to offer a solution to help build a more beautiful and just future.  </p><p>If you like this format, let me know by subscribing or commenting.  Either way, we will continue with weekly monologues every Tuesday on the thesis that Hard Money allows us to express love to the world beyond our own homes and families. </p><p>There is darkness in the world, but there is also light.  Choose the light.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a bonus episode. I went off script to highlight some of the evil that we are seeing in the world today and to offer a solution to help build a more beautiful and just future.  </p><p>If you like this format, let me know by subscribing or commenting.  Either way, we will continue with weekly monologues every Tuesday on the thesis that Hard Money allows us to express love to the world beyond our own homes and families. </p><p>There is darkness in the world, but there is also light.  Choose the light.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2026 11:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>488</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>Hard Money &amp; The Non-Aggression Principle</itunes:title>
    <title>Hard Money &amp; The Non-Aggression Principle</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Most of us grew up hearing some version of "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." But what if our entire monetary system is a systematic violation of this golden rule? In this episode, we explore how money printing violates the Non-Aggression Principle—the simple idea that you shouldn't initiate force or fraud against others. As Jack Mallers puts it, "Money is your time and energy in abstracted form." When the Federal Reserve creates trillions of dollars out of thin air, they're...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Most of us grew up hearing some version of &quot;Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.&quot; But what if our entire monetary system is a systematic violation of this golden rule?</p><p>In this episode, we explore how money printing violates the Non-Aggression Principle—the simple idea that you shouldn&apos;t initiate force or fraud against others. As Jack Mallers puts it, &quot;Money is your time and energy in abstracted form.&quot; When the Federal Reserve creates trillions of dollars out of thin air, they&apos;re diluting the value you&apos;ve already earned without your consent.</p><p>We&apos;ll cover:</p><ul><li>Why monetary debasement is theft, not policy</li><li>The Cantillon Effect: how inflation transfers wealth from Main Street to Wall Street</li><li>How legal tender laws force you to participate in a system that robs you</li><li>The hidden cost: the multi-generational wealth and long-term thinking that monetary inflation has destroyed</li><li>Why Bitcoin offers an alternative built on voluntary exchange instead of coercion</li></ul><p>This isn&apos;t about politics. It&apos;s about the ethical foundation of how we exchange value—and what happens when that foundation is built on force instead of consent.</p><p>If you&apos;ve ever wondered why it&apos;s so much harder to get ahead than it was for your parents&apos; generation, this episode explains why. And more importantly, what you can do about it.</p><p>Ready to protect your business from monetary debasement? Visit <a href='http://www.satoshigeneral.com'>www.satoshigeneral.com</a> to learn how Bitcoin treasury strategies can help you preserve the value you&apos;ve created.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Most of us grew up hearing some version of &quot;Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.&quot; But what if our entire monetary system is a systematic violation of this golden rule?</p><p>In this episode, we explore how money printing violates the Non-Aggression Principle—the simple idea that you shouldn&apos;t initiate force or fraud against others. As Jack Mallers puts it, &quot;Money is your time and energy in abstracted form.&quot; When the Federal Reserve creates trillions of dollars out of thin air, they&apos;re diluting the value you&apos;ve already earned without your consent.</p><p>We&apos;ll cover:</p><ul><li>Why monetary debasement is theft, not policy</li><li>The Cantillon Effect: how inflation transfers wealth from Main Street to Wall Street</li><li>How legal tender laws force you to participate in a system that robs you</li><li>The hidden cost: the multi-generational wealth and long-term thinking that monetary inflation has destroyed</li><li>Why Bitcoin offers an alternative built on voluntary exchange instead of coercion</li></ul><p>This isn&apos;t about politics. It&apos;s about the ethical foundation of how we exchange value—and what happens when that foundation is built on force instead of consent.</p><p>If you&apos;ve ever wondered why it&apos;s so much harder to get ahead than it was for your parents&apos; generation, this episode explains why. And more importantly, what you can do about it.</p><p>Ready to protect your business from monetary debasement? Visit <a href='http://www.satoshigeneral.com'>www.satoshigeneral.com</a> to learn how Bitcoin treasury strategies can help you preserve the value you&apos;ve created.</p><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Brian</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2026 12:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
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    <itunes:duration>1466</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>Hard Money And The Costs Of War</itunes:title>
    <title>Hard Money And The Costs Of War</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Can hard money constrain governments' ability to finance unpopular wars? In this inaugural episode, we explore a provocative thesis: that money which can't be printed at will—whether gold or Bitcoin—creates democratic accountability by forcing governments to fund wars through direct taxation rather than hidden inflation. We examine the $2.3 trillion cost of the Afghanistan war, current defense spending proposals, and the historical relationship between monetary systems and warfare. From World...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Can hard money constrain governments&apos; ability to finance unpopular wars?</p><p>In this inaugural episode, we explore a provocative thesis: that money which can&apos;t be printed at will—whether gold or Bitcoin—creates democratic accountability by forcing governments to fund wars through direct taxation rather than hidden inflation.</p><p>We examine the $2.3 trillion cost of the Afghanistan war, current defense spending proposals, and the historical relationship between monetary systems and warfare. From World War I&apos;s suspension of the gold standard to Nixon closing the gold window during Vietnam, we trace how the ability to expand money supply has transformed the nature and duration of war itself.</p><p>This isn&apos;t a simple &quot;Bitcoin good, fiat bad&quot; argument. We explore serious counterarguments: wars happened under gold standards too, hard money creates economic constraints that can cause their own problems, and governments might find workarounds even under a Bitcoin standard.</p><p>The question isn&apos;t whether hard money is perfect—it&apos;s whether the constraint on war-making power is a feature rather than a bug.</p><p><b>Topics discussed:</b></p><ul><li>The hidden costs of war finance through monetary expansion</li><li>Historical examples: WWI, Vietnam, and the gold standard</li><li>How fiscal illusion obscures the true cost of military spending</li><li>The ethical dimensions of financing war through inflation</li><li>Austrian vs Keynesian perspectives on monetary constraint</li><li>What a Bitcoin standard could mean for government accountability</li></ul><p><b>Mentioned in this episode:</b></p><ul><li>Brown University&apos;s Costs of War Project</li><li>The relationship between Bretton Woods and modern warfare</li><li>Benjamin Anderson&apos;s Economics and the Public Welfare</li></ul><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Can hard money constrain governments&apos; ability to finance unpopular wars?</p><p>In this inaugural episode, we explore a provocative thesis: that money which can&apos;t be printed at will—whether gold or Bitcoin—creates democratic accountability by forcing governments to fund wars through direct taxation rather than hidden inflation.</p><p>We examine the $2.3 trillion cost of the Afghanistan war, current defense spending proposals, and the historical relationship between monetary systems and warfare. From World War I&apos;s suspension of the gold standard to Nixon closing the gold window during Vietnam, we trace how the ability to expand money supply has transformed the nature and duration of war itself.</p><p>This isn&apos;t a simple &quot;Bitcoin good, fiat bad&quot; argument. We explore serious counterarguments: wars happened under gold standards too, hard money creates economic constraints that can cause their own problems, and governments might find workarounds even under a Bitcoin standard.</p><p>The question isn&apos;t whether hard money is perfect—it&apos;s whether the constraint on war-making power is a feature rather than a bug.</p><p><b>Topics discussed:</b></p><ul><li>The hidden costs of war finance through monetary expansion</li><li>Historical examples: WWI, Vietnam, and the gold standard</li><li>How fiscal illusion obscures the true cost of military spending</li><li>The ethical dimensions of financing war through inflation</li><li>Austrian vs Keynesian perspectives on monetary constraint</li><li>What a Bitcoin standard could mean for government accountability</li></ul><p><b>Mentioned in this episode:</b></p><ul><li>Brown University&apos;s Costs of War Project</li><li>The relationship between Bretton Woods and modern warfare</li><li>Benjamin Anderson&apos;s Economics and the Public Welfare</li></ul><p>www.satoshigeneral.com</p><p><a href='https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529'>linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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