In this episode of The Average Bitcoiner, I dive into the idea of government data accessibility and why public information should be truly public—available via API, rate-limited, and anchored to real-world, in-person identity through local jurisdictions. I explore how modern AI tools can scrape, analyze, and visualize county and school data, and share an experiment to publish transparent audits with Nostr-enabled feedback loops. Beyond the tech, I make the case that the most meaningful leverage we have is local: showing up in meatspace, building resilient community ties, and applying our skills, time, and resources where we live. I challenge listeners to do one above-average thing today: audit your local government, attend a school board or county meeting, and ask hard questions. With broken incentives, inflating budgets, and increasingly digital isolation, our strength is in intentional, physical community building—leading with example, fitness, grace, and clear boundaries. We can’t fix everything at once, but we can start local, build our frame, and make measurable progress—one county, one conversation, one act of service at a time.