I’m deeply fascinated by Satoshi. Personally, I believe Satoshi wasn’t a single individual, but rather a group of people working together.

In a way, I’d say Satoshi was “unlucky.” After their disappearance, they left behind a legacy of true decentralization—without ever selling a single BTC they mined.

If Satoshi had been “lucky,” Bitcoin would have become a financial reward for them—but it didn’t.

And that’s the paradox. Every human being loves money to some extent—yet Satoshi walked away from it all.

Once again, idealism can’t be bought.

To me, the true essence of democracy is decentralization—and that was Satoshi’s vision all along.

For those who have followed me since June and July, I understand how confusing some of my posts may seem.

I’ve consistently invited my followers to challenge and explore $BOB, to help identify vulnerabilities—not to criticize blindly, but so we can all learn and grow.

If there are flaws, call them out. Let Binance Intern see them and take action.

Yes, I’m a $BOB holder—but I’m also a critical thinker. I don’t follow blindly.

Criticism is not hatred—it’s a form of care.

I’ve said this many times: my mission is to Build on BNB, not just BOB.

But BOB, as you know, carries that mission at its core.

Decentralization doesn’t need explanation—every block speaks for itself as immutable proof.

And just like that, I don’t need recognition, nor do I expect belief.

Decentralization doesn’t require belief—it just works.

My time is limited. I don’t have the luxury to write to convince people—and frankly, there’s no gain in it for me.