SATOSHI NAKAMOTO
ARE THE
NSA
By
Søren Nielsen
2019
The short definition of bitcoin is: cash for the Internet. Basically it’s a new kind of currency and a payment network. It was invented by "Satoshi Nakamoto", whom ironically, nobody has ever met.
However, another likely explanation is that "Satoshi Nakamoto" is the "NSA", which means he is either working for the "NSA" is is a sock puppet character created by the "NSA" for the purpose of this whole grand experiment.
On top of the fact that the "NSA" authored a technical paper on cryptocurrency long before the arrival of Bitcoin, the agency is also the creator of the "SHA-256" hash upon which every Bitcoin transaction in the world depends.
In other words, if the "SHA-256" hash, which was created by the "NSA", actually has a backdoor method for cracking the encryption, it would mean the "NSA" could steal everybody’s Bitcoins whenever it wants. (Call it "Zero Day.")
It’s obvious that "Satoshi Nakamoto" had some academic training because when he first introduced the concept he wrote a whitepaper in the style of a peer-reviewed academic journal article. He not only came up with the idea but also wrote the code that made it work.
In 2008, "Satoshi Nakamoto" (NSA) invented bitcoin and the blockchain. His invention made it possible to send money around the globe without the intervention of banks, governments, or any other intermediaries.
Six weeks after the "Lehman Brothers" collapsed, on November 2, 2008, while most of the world was desperately seeking a way to save the banks, a document appeared on a little-known website for cryptographers.
A clever mind took advantage of the darkest days in the financial crisis and came up with a solution. This well-written and well-documented document proposed a completely new monetary system.
The author goes by the name "Satoshi Nakamoto".(NSA)
NSA solved a problem that had been previously deemed unsolvable. Whenever this happens what usually follows is a lot of inspiration and innovation as minds are opened to see the future from a totally different perspective.
Blockchain has two main components: asymmetric cryptography and distributed systems. Once you are able to understand these two "ingredients" then it makes it easier to understand all the technical details that bitcoin or blockchain are all about.
The blockchain are networks that have the potential to transform the structure of financial services even though it started as a grassroots movement introduced by the technology sector and not by established businesses.
This is going to eventually affect every single industry much in the same way that the internal combustion engine and the Internet did. It’s one of those big generational technology shifts that require a quick response; otherwise you run the risk of getting left behind.
There are a number of financial institutions whose business models are threatened by the blockchain. So of course they are trying to do whatever it takes to slow down or water down the possibilities that this technology offers because of the revolution or disruption of the decentralization.
Other banks will no longer be each other’s competitors. They will be dealing with a generation of a ‘bank of one’ that owns a digital asset that wasn’t issued by a financial institution or government.
It’s easy to forget that governments and banks control money creation. But not everybody is walking around with blinders on, however.
There’s a community of people who are fed up of being bullied and robbed by financial terrorists. This community is switching to what they believe to be a better monetary system.
In this system banks are no longer needed because payments can be made directly from one person to another.
According to the World Bank about 74% of the world’s population does not have access to basic financial services such as savings accounts, checking accounts, or credit cards.
This technology could reduce poverty and at the same time allow more people to engage in global commerce.
How long will it take before this becomes the norm and before many of the tasks that were previously handled by individuals and institutions become fully automated?
Some experts suggest that it could all happen within a decade or two.
Bitcoin is fundamentally different. The system allows you to send as much money as you want to around the world without fees and without having to rely on permissions from banks or governments.
The process is simple and takes only seconds to complete. This allows anybody to become his or her own bank because it’s not a system based on debt, but on ownership.
This means that nobody can censure your funds, cease them, or freeze them.
Many of those who oppose the use of bitcoin say they are worried because criminals could use it. As it is, criminals use conventional money and the banking system.
So that might mean that their biggest worry is really that the rest of the population might have access to bitcoin and might start using it.
That would spell disaster for modern banking. Nevertheless, the proponents of bitcoin see it as a digital miracle that can save the world from financial ruin.
A few visionaries jumped at the opportunity immediately and began buying bitcoins. There was a time when one bitcoin was worth one dollar. That has changed.
One man bought $25,000 worth of bitcoins in 2008 and they are now worth over $6 million. Perfect money should have a limited supply and it needs to be easily recognizable, durable, and transportable. Bitcoin offers all this and more.
How are bitcoins created? Is it too late to get involved in bitcoin?
"Satoshi Nakamoto" started working on bitcoin about a decade ago to solve the problem of creating money that would not involve any government.
He wanted to find a solution to ‘double spending’ in which a digital asset can easily be copied. Solving this problem made bitcoin possible.
"Satoshi Nakamoto" brilliantly designed the incentives so that you don’t have to pay anybody to verify that all transactions are valid, the system itself pays them for that.
The Bitcoin network made fundamental promises about supply. Only 21 million bitcoins have been created and by 2040 no more bitcoins will be issued.
Bitcoin puzzles a lot of economists who would not have predicted that you’d be able to start from something that has no intrinsic value and become the world’s most valuable currency.
Many are attracted to bitcoin because of the fact that it’s democratized, decentralized, anonymous, and a fixed money supply with zero transaction costs.
Others are attracted to the fact that its anonymity allows an individual to spend his or her money however she or she may please and not necessarily doing illegal things.
Bitcoin needs to be seen as a tool. And a tool can be used by anyone who finds it useful. The same way that bad people can use a cellphone to harm others, bad people will inevitably use bitcoin. This is not a reason to be afraid or to condemn or reject bitcoin.
The average online business that is accepting Paypal or credit cards is paying roughly 2.7% in fees and processing costs to be able to offer that payment alternative to their clients. This is not a problem with Bitcoin, plus it offers the opportunity to do microtransactions without processing fees because there is no minimum.
IF YOU THINK CRYPTOGRAPHY IS BULLETPROOF? THINK AGAIN...
Consider this article from The Hacker News:
Researchers Crack 1024-bit RSA Encryption in GnuPG Crypto Library, which states,
"The attack allows an attacker to extract the secret crypto key from a system by analyzing the pattern of memory utilization or the electromagnetic outputs of the device that are emitted during the decryption process."
In fact, every cryptocurrency becomes obsolete with the invention of large-scale quantum computing.
Once China manages to build a working 256-bit quantum computer, it can effectively steal all the Bitcoins in the world (plus steal most national secrets and commit other global mayhem at will).
Here’s one possible plan by the globalists to seize total control over the world’s money supply, savings, taxation and financial transactions while enslaving humanity. (And it all starts with Bitcoin.)
1) Roll out the "NSA"-created Bitcoin to get the public excited about a digital currency.
2) Quietly prepare a globalist-controlled cryptocurrency to take its place. (JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs?)
3) Initiate a massive, global-scale false flag operation that crashes the global debt markets and sends fiat currencies down in flames. (Hoax alien invasion, hoax North Korean EMP attack, mass distributed power grid terrorism network, etc.)
4) Blame whatever convenient enemy is politically acceptable (North Korea, "The Russians," Little Green Men or whatever it takes…).
5) Allow the fiat currency debt pyramid to collapse and smolder until the sheeple get desperate (i.e. Venezuela-style desperation with people eating out of dumpsters).
6) With great fanfare, announce a government-backed cryptocurrency replacement for all fiat currencies, and position world governments as the SAVIOR of humanity. Allow the desperate public to trade in their fiat currencies for official crypto currencies.
7) Outlaw cash and criminalize gold and silver ownership by private citizens. All in the name of "security", of course.
8) Criminalize all non-official cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, crashing their value virtually overnight and funneling everyone into the one world government crypto, where the "NSA" controls the blockchain. This can easily be achieved by blaming the false flag event on some nation or group that is said to have been "funded by Bitcoin, the cryptocurrency used by terrorists."
9) Require embedded RFID or biometric identifiers for all transactions in order to "authenticate" the one-world digital crypto currency activities. Mark of the Beast becomes reality. No one is allowed to eat, travel or earn a wage without being marked.
10) Once absolute control over the new one-world digital currency is achieved, weaponize the government-tracked blockchain to track all transactions, investments and commercial activities. Confiscate a portion of all crypto under the guise of "automated taxation." In an emergency, the government can even announce negative interest rates where your holdings automatically decrease each day.
What evidence supports this notion? First, take a look at a document entitled,
"How to make a mint: The cryptography of anonymous electronic cash."
This document, released in 1997 — yes, twenty years ago — detailed the overall structure and function of Bitcoin cryptocurrency.
Who authored the document? Try not to be shocked when you learn it was authored by,
"Mathematical cryptographers at the National Security Agency’s Office of Information Security Research and Technology."
The NSA, in other words, detailed key elements of Bitcoin long before Bitcoin ever came into existence.
Much of the Bitcoin protocol is detailed in this document, including signature authentication techniques, eliminating cryptocoin counterfeits through transaction authentication and several features that support anonymity and untraceability of transactions.
Although Bitcoin adds mining and a shared, peer-to-peer blockchain transaction authentication system to this structure, it’s clear that the NSA was researching cryptocurrencies long before everyday users had ever heard of the term.
Note, too, that the name of the person credited with founding Bitcoin is "Satoshi Nakamoto", who is reputed to have reserved one million Bitcoins for himself.
Millions of posts and online threads discuss the possible identity of "Satishi Nakamoto", and some posts even claim the NSA has identified "Satoshi Nakamoto".
With all this accomplished, globalists can now roll out absolute totalitarian control over every aspect of private lives by enforcing financial "blackouts" for those individuals who criticize the government.
They can put in place automatic deductions for traffic violations, vehicle license plate taxes, internet taxes and a thousand other oppressive taxes invented by the bureaucracy.
With automatic deductions run by the government, citizens have no means to halt the endless confiscation of their "money" by totalitarian bureaucrats and their deep state lackeys.
How do you feel about your Bitcoin now?