LOVE & HARD MONEY — Episode 18: I Do What I Want - Why freedom of money matters more than freedom of speechThe Episode in One LineA man in Saskatchewan kept every word of his free speech and lost everything that mattered. The order of our rights is backwards — and this episode is the argument for why.What This Episode Is AboutBrian makes the case that freedom of money is more fundamental than freedom of speech — not equal to it, more important than it. Working from first principles, he argues that freedom is the capacity to act on your values in the world, that human beings act through only two channels (speech and exchange), and that money is the dominant medium by which values become consequences. Speech is the signal; money is the action.From there: why a regime that controls the money can afford to grant generous speech rights, why the historical record keeps proving it, and why Bitcoin is best understood not as an investment but as a political technology — the thing that restores the substrate on which every other freedom is actually exercised.It opens and closes on the frozen account of one Canadian trucker-convoy donor, and runs through a steelman of the opposing view that Brian takes seriously before dismantling.In This EpisodeThe Saskatchewan donor: full First Amendment-equivalent rights, a frozen account, and a bounced mortgage — the cleanest demonstration of the thesis in living memoryThe standard hierarchy: Mill, the First Amendment, and why "speech is the master key" is a serious position, not a stupid oneA first-principles definition of freedom — and the two channels through which anyone acts on their valuesSpeech is the signal, money is the action: folk philosophy, Hayek on prices as information, Mises on the impossibility of calculation without honest pricesBreedlove's "crystallized time" and inflation as compelled speech — the state forging your signatureThe steelman ("speech is logically prior") taken seriously, and why logical priority isn't practical priorityA firsthand story from Shanghai: cameras in every hall and a supplier brave enough to whisper the truth behind a sheet of paperThe historical record: the Canadian truckers, Operation Chokepoint (1.0 and 2.0), and FDR's Executive Order 6102 — plus why privacy software prosecutions like Samourai Wallet are the modern echoSelf-custody as the monetary equivalent of free speech, and the permissioned stack that real "free speech" actually runs onWhy the founders wrote the First Amendment first — and why that choice no longer holdsReferences & Further ReadingJohn Stuart Mill, On LibertyFriedrich Hayek, "The Use of Knowledge in Society"Ludwig von Mises, Human Action (economic calculation problem)Robert Breedlove — money as "crystallized time"Hans-Hermann Hoppe — property as the foundation of rightsCanadian Emergencies Act account freezes (Feb 2022)Operation Chokepoint (2013) and "Chokepoint 2.0" (2022–23)Executive Order 6102 (1933)The Samourai Wallet developer prosecutionConnectFind me on Nostr — tell me what's landing and what isn't, or share the episodes that are worth a stranger's time. Next week we break format for something a little different.Stack sats. Speak hard truths. And remember — the order matters.www.satoshigeneral.comlinkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529
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