Four books covering every angle of Bitcoin — the monetary case, the philosophical argument, the deep insights, and the investment decisions. Browse the covers, read the opening chapters free, and find the one that fits how you think.
Click any cover to read the opening pages. The suggested book for your path is shown first — but all four are always open to you.
"Remember this day in which you came out from Egypt, out of the house of slavery..." — Exodus 13:3
The Exodus is one of the most powerful and enduring stories ever recorded. A people in bondage. A system designed to keep them there. A dramatic, costly escape. And — for those who persevered — a promised land that had to be built, not just received.
This book is an exploration — not a declaration of equivalence. Its purpose is to highlight a recurring pattern of liberation, explore how that pattern applies to our current moment in monetary history, and invite readers to consider what it means to leave a broken system — and what it costs to do so.
We live under a monetary system that was not designed with your interests at its center. It takes quietly, through inflation — the slow erosion of everything you save. You don't see the chains — but you feel them.
This system is not broken. It works as designed. That is precisely why it cannot be reformed from within. In Argentina, families have watched their savings evaporate through decades of currency collapse. When Canadian truckers had their bank accounts frozen during the 2022 protests, it became a wake-up call for many who had never considered that their money could be made inaccessible by institutional decree.
Bitcoin is not a protest. It is an alternative — built on mathematics rather than institutional trust. Decentralized. Fixed supply. Borderless. Permissionless. Choosing this path takes learning, patience, and discomfort. But then — the Exodus never was easy.
The question is not whether the system is broken. You already know the answer to that. The question is: will you leave?
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Before Bitcoin, digital money always required a trusted middleman. Bitcoin changed that. Introduced in 2009, it allows two people anywhere in the world to exchange value directly — without permission from any third party. Only 21 million bitcoin will ever exist. This limit is enforced by the software itself and verified by thousands of independent computers worldwide. No one can create more.
Satoshi published a nine-page document describing a system for digital payments without a trusted third party. It was posted quietly to a cryptography mailing list. Most recipients ignored it. Embedded in Bitcoin's very first block was a message: "The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks." A timestamp — and a statement of purpose. Satoshi disappeared in 2011. Their true identity has never been confirmed. By stepping away, Satoshi ensured no single person could be pressured to change Bitcoin's rules.
Only 21 million bitcoin will ever exist — enforced by code, verified by thousands of independent computers. No government can print more. This scarcity enforced by mathematics rather than institution is genuinely novel in the history of money. Bitcoin's value is also volatile and speculative. The honest answer includes both sides: a monetary property without precedent, and a market price that remains highly uncertain.
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Most people think Satoshi sat down and typed MAX_SUPPLY = 21000000. That's not what happened. The 21 million limit was never written into Bitcoin as a number. It emerged from a mathematical structure Satoshi designed for a completely different purpose: the halving schedule. Every 210,000 blocks, the reward miners receive gets cut in half. Run the math on that geometric series:
Not 21,000,000. Not a round number. The final satoshis can never be minted — computer arithmetic rounds down. The 21 million limit is a mathematical inevitability that fell out of a halving schedule. No price signal in the universe can produce a single additional satoshi. That has never existed before in all of human economic history.
Insight 2 — Bitcoin Invented Its Own Clock. What time is it on the Bitcoin network right now? The answer is not a timestamp. It's a block number. Bitcoin doesn't use atomic clocks. It doesn't trust any external time source — because any external source could be manipulated. The unit of time is not the second. It's the block. One block is approximately ten minutes. The halving happens every 210,000 blocks — not every four years. The difficulty adjustment happens every 2,016 blocks — not every two weeks. No one can speed up Bitcoin's issuance schedule. No one can slow it down.
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This guide answers the questions most Bitcoin investors actually have — but rarely find answered in one place.
What’s the difference between buying Bitcoin on an exchange and buying a Bitcoin ETF? The answer changes depending on whether you want direct ownership or tax-advantaged convenience.
Can I hold Bitcoin inside my IRA or 401k? Yes — but there are five different methods, each with different tax treatment, fees, and custody implications.
How much should I actually allocate? What experienced investors and financial advisors say about position sizing — and the one number that matters more than the percentage.
What are mining stocks actually buying you? Why most retail investors misunderstand what they’re getting — and when it actually makes sense.
Self-custody vs. exchange custody — what are you actually responsible for? The honest answer that most guides skip over.
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All four books plus five action guides, Coach Satoshi, and curated resources. One kit, $37, instant access.
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