Saylor’s Bombshell: How Political Shifts Are Igniting Bitcoin’s Unstoppable Rally
Bitcoin's latest surge isn't just about halvings or institutional adoption—it's riding a geopolitical tsunami.
The Washington effect
When fiat regimes falter, digital gold gets its moment. Saylor's right—career politicians suddenly can't print their way out of this one.
Wall Street's worst nightmare
Traditional finance still thinks this is a 'speculative asset.' Meanwhile, Bitcoin's eating their lunch while they debate P/E ratios.
The revolution won't be centralized—and judging by Treasury's latest panic, they're finally getting the memo. Too late.

The self-custody crowd was out in force in Prague. Hardware-wallet Maker Trezor, a lead sponsor, said more than 5,000 developers, veterans and first-timers streamed through its demo booths, peppering staff with questions about running their own keys. Conference organizers described the mood as “builder-heavy and maximalist,” a backdrop that seemed to amplify Saylor’s sky-high forecast.
Skeptics will note that Bitcoin still hovers NEAR $100,000—hardly pocket change, but orders of magnitude below Saylor’s moonshot. He counters that adoption curves, regulatory clarity and corporate treasury demand all tilt the odds in his favor. “This is the one moment in the network’s life,” he said, “when 21 years out and 21 million dollars line up as more than just a headline.” For believers and doubters alike, the clock is now ticking.