Why BTC Fear Craig Wright

Why do they care so much about Craig Wright? It’s a question that lingers, like a shadow cast long by the setting sun. BTC Core and the rest of crypto's self-proclaimed elites fight tooth and nail to discredit him, to erase what he's said from the public discourse. But why? If Bitcoin is what they claim it to be—resilient, impervious, immune to the whims of courts and governments, beyond the grasp of laws or the authority of states—then why would his voice matter? Why would Craig, a single man, cause such waves of disruption in a system that is supposedly untouchable?
If Bitcoin is so resilient, why waste time on him? In the vastness of this digital landscape, what could one person do to threaten the future of a currency that is meant to be unstoppable? If he's wrong, if everything I say is just noise in the wind, then surely Bitcoin should carry on undisturbed, unshaken, and immune to my challenges. And yet, here we are, with millions of dollars and countless hours spent to fight, to slander, to crush the words he's spoken.
If Bitcoin cannot be influenced by courts or governments, if it is truly outside the reach of human institutions, then why even bother with Craig Wright? Why pour resources into silencing one voice? Why argue against him if he is so inconsequential to the system? This isn’t a battle between equals. No, this is a battle between truth and control. They sense it, whether they admit it or not. They know that beneath the bravado and the claims of decentralization lies a system that isn’t nearly as impervious as they say. That’s what they fear—not CSW, but what he represents. The truth.
What if Craig is W(right)? What if everything he's been saying is rooted in truth? What if Bitcoin isn’t the untouchable fortress they make it out to be? What if it can be shaped, influenced, and yes, even controlled by the very forces they claim it stands against? That’s the reality they’re afraid to confront. It’s not about Craig, it’s about the agenda they’ve carefully crafted. An agenda that seeks to maintain control while preaching the gospel of freedom.
The ones at the bottom of the system—the ordinary users, the people just trying to secure their future—aren’t the ones they should be afraid of. Those people are living on the fringes, using a system they’ve been told is liberating but is slowly being choked by the very powers it was meant to resist. The people you need to fear are the ones who control the narrative, the ones who profit from maintaining the illusion of decentralization while pulling the strings behind the scenes.
What if the people at the top want to control the agenda? They have no fear of the people who live under the illusion that they are free. No, what they fear is someone stripping away that illusion, revealing the wires and cogs that drive the machine. They fear a truth that pulls the curtain back on the cozy little cabal they’ve built, a truth that reveals Bitcoin Core has strayed from its path.
Bitcoin, in its purest form, was meant to be a tool of freedom. A timestamp server, a way to prove ownership, to verify transactions, to live free from the constraints of central banks and financial institutions. It was supposed to allow anyone, regardless of their wealth or status, to engage in commerce, to secure their future, to manage their own lives.
But BTC Core? It’s become something else entirely. High transaction fees, second-layer solutions that rob people of security, a system that locks out those who can’t afford to pay $50 for a single transaction. It no longer serves the people it was meant to help. Instead, it serves those who would use it as a tool of control—the very thing it was meant to resist.
So ask yourself this: Why do they care so much about Craig Wright? Why argue against him, why waste time and money attacking him, if he's just one person shouting into the void? Because deep down, they know that he's struck at the heart of the matter. They fear the truth he's uncovered. They fear the loss of control. And if he's right—and I know he is—it’s not Craig they should be afraid of. It’s the system they’ve built that’s teetering on the edge of collapse.
The house of cards they’ve constructed can only stand as long as people believe in the illusion. As long as they buy into the idea that Bitcoin is untouchable, that it can’t be influenced by courts or governments or centralized forces. But what happens when the illusion is shattered? What happens when the people realize they’ve been played?
They’ll run, not toward the gates of freedom, but away from a system that has betrayed them. And the ones who’ve been pulling the strings will be left holding the pieces of a system that no longer serves their needs. They’ll be exposed for what they are—the true gatekeepers, the ones who tried to control the agenda while preaching liberty.
What if what he's saying is true? Then the game is over. The truth will be laid bare. And those who tried to suppress it will be the ones who fall. It’s not the people at the bottom you need to fear. It’s the ones at the top, the ones who’ve been manipulating the narrative for their own gain. They’ve been holding the puppet strings for too long, and now the show is coming to an end.
The question isn’t whether Bitcoin is resilient or whether it can survive Craig Wright. The question is whether Bitcoin can survive the truth. And I’ll tell you this—it’s not the people you need to fear, it’s the day they realize he's been right all along.
Why do they always resort to attacks on Craig personally? It’s a question worth asking. Time and again, BTC Core supporters and those in the broader crypto space resort to tu quoque arguments, diverting attention from the real issues by attacking me rather than addressing the substance of my claims. Why? If what he's saying is so baseless, wouldn’t it be easier to disprove the claims instead of attacking the person?
Yet, what do we see? Instead of engaging with the facts, they constantly engage in ad hominem attacks. They try to discredit him, hoping that by tearing down the person, they can avoid having to engage with the truth.
Why do they never address the real issues? Because deep down, they know the truth of what I’ve been saying will unravel everything they’ve built. BTC Core and those who rally behind it know that their system no longer aligns with what Bitcoin was designed to be. Instead of confronting these discrepancies, they divert attention by making personal attacks. COPA, the very organization created to "protect" Bitcoin innovation, does the same. Ask yourself: Why is nothing in COPA about the real Bitcoin?
Why do they avoid what Bitcoin was about before Satoshi left? Because they know that the moment we turn back to the original vision of Bitcoin—a micropayment system and timestamp server designed for low-cost transactions—they lose control. The Bitcoin Satoshi envisioned was built for the people, for everyone, and not just the wealthy few who control the current system. That’s why they avoid engaging with the original design and instead focus on post-Satoshi narratives and myths that further their agenda of centralization and control.
What do they fear most? It’s not the users or the technology—it’s the truth. They manipulate, they lie, and they fabricate stories because they know that the truth will destroy them. They know that once people understand the real potential of Bitcoin, their carefully curated narrative falls apart. The high fees, the reliance on off-chain solutions like Lightning, the centralization of power in the hands of the few—it all crumbles when the truth is laid bare.
They fear the day when We the People realise that Bitcoin was never meant to be a speculative asset, that it wasn’t supposed to be dominated by plutocrats charging outrageous fees, and that it wasn’t designed for people to lose control of their transactions. They fear the day when people take back control of their financial future, when individuals start to understand that Bitcoin, in its original form, was built for personal empowerment—a way to secure one’s life, data, and financial transactions in a decentralized, accessible system.
Why do they fight so hard to suppress the truth? Because once the truth comes out, their system collapses. They know that Satoshi's vision of Bitcoin as a micropayment system for everyone—not just the wealthy few—still stands, and that vision terrifies them. If Bitcoin scales, if it becomes what it was designed to be, it will eliminate the need for intermediaries, high fees, and the plutocratic control they currently enjoy.
What must we do as We the People? We must bring the truth into the light. We must peel back the layers of lies, manipulation, and fabrications they’ve built to maintain their power. We the People must reclaim Bitcoin for what it was always intended to be—a tool for individual empowerment, for financial freedom, for proving truth, ownership, and integrity. The real Bitcoin, the one that was meant to enable low-cost transactions, that allowed for timestamping and micropayments, must be restored.
This is not just about a technology or a currency—this is about the future of freedom itself. The current system is a lie, built to benefit those in control at the expense of everyone else. We the People must demand the truth, expose the deception, and fight to make Bitcoin the tool for empowerment that it was always meant to be. The truth will destroy their narrative, and once that happens, we will see a system that serves the people, not the plutocrats. It’s time to strip away the curtain and reveal what’s really been going on.
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