Three-day festivals usually disperse into noise, yet this one distilled a single theme: the conversation has vaulted beyond legitimacy questions. Governments, regulators, and megacorps now jostle over integration, taxation, and monetisation.
“Tether will be the biggest Bitcoin miner in the world,” Paolo Ardoino boomed, recounting $13 billion in profit and revealing “more than 100,000 Bitcoin that we own as a company,” before tossing off a maximalist haiku, “Bitcoin is perfect, gold is imperfect.” Investors inhaled the news of a further $2 billion sunk into energy projects, sensing a stable-coin juggernaut pivoting from liquidity plumbing to literal dig-the-ground infrastructure.
However, with only five MPs and a recent poll putting Farage at the bottom of the pile of voter-preferred Prime Ministers, it’s the power of his rhetoric in ‘waking up’ the major political parties to the true importance of Bitcoin in his speech that is the most consequential here.
Regulatory mood music softened in tandem. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce conceded, “We need to create a good environment for the good actors and a bad one for the bad actors,” warning that enforcement-by-ambiguity chases innovators offshore, and later hammered the point, “We can’t ignore it … value will eventually be incorporated into traditional financial products.” Her dry jab at meme traders, “If you want to speculate, go for it … don’t come complaining to the government”, drew cathartic laughs, yet signalled a pivot from obstruction toward rule-craft.
Builders matched the policy tempo. Ark Labs CEO Marco Argentieri unveiled Arkade, describing how it “virtualizes Bitcoin’s transaction layer, transforming it into a dynamic financial platform where operations happen instantly,” eliminating side-chains or wrapped tokens. Early partners span wallet apps to stable-coin titans, and a Q3 main-net launch looms, promising ninja-level programmability atop the ossified base layer.
As attendees walked out into the Nevada dusk, some may have noticed that the narrative arc now resembles urban planning more than rebellion; zoning boards, tax codes, and energy grids are the new battlefields. That is progress of a sort, though one suspects the bitcoiners will miss the outlaw adrenaline once the paperwork sets in.
Michael Saylor delivered his keynote on the opening day of Bitcoin 2025. His “21 Ways to Wealth” speech was a highlight of the event’s Industry Day. Saylor emphasized Bitcoin’s role as a transformative financial asset and urged corporations to adopt it as a primary treasury reserve.
He stated, “Take your fiat currency, trade it for bitcoin… sell your bonds, sell your inferior real-estate property, buy bitcoin,” emphasizing his belief in Bitcoin’s superiority over traditional assets.
In other high-profile moments, Vice-President JD Vance laid out a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve as the next plank of American resilience, declaring that financial sovereignty now outranks budget scare-mongering in Washington’s pecking order.
Miles Suter followed with a Square-powered demo, insisting, “Bitcoin isn’t just something to hold anymore, it’s something to live on”, while free-speech banners then framed Donald Trump Jr.’s chat with Rumble chief Chris Pavlovski. The duo pitching uncensorable money plus uncensorable media as the movement’s new culture-war flank.
Robinhood founder Vlad Tenev sketched an AI-fuelled future of single-person companies and tokenised equity, arguing that permission-less capital will puncture gatekeeper cartels just as decisively as Bitcoin battered remittance fees.
Finally, White House crypto czar David Sacks reminded attendees that presidential authorisation already exists, adding, “If either Treasury or Commerce can figure out how to fund it without adding to the debt, then they are allowed to create those programmes”.
However, for all the posturing, the US Bitcoin strategic reserve continues to be a promise not to sell seized Bitcoin rather than a monetary policy. If the government takes your Bitcoin, it won’t dump it into the market anymore, but it still has no official policy to actually buy Bitcoin.
I can’t shake the lingering concern that the keynotes focused almost entirely on Bitcoin propaganda and political posturing rather than protocol development, security, and decentralization. I’m all for helping to educate the world on the importance of Bitcoinization, but I’m wondering how the Bitcoin Conference headliners are doing that.
Indeed, the headline talks energized the Bitcoin faithful in America, but I worry we’re straying further and further from the cypherpunk ethos of Bitcoin’s origin. Populist politicians with minor government roles continue using Bitcoin to garner votes while corporations celebrate their Bitcoin stacks.
Is this still Satoshi’s Bitcoin? I think so, but we must continue to remind ourselves why we love Bitcoin and whether we’re truly advancing the next one billion users or simply patting ourselves on the back for how high the price is this week.