“The price of inaction is way greater.” — Bilal Bin Saqib MBE, Chairman at Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority Bin Saqib’s comments reflected the reality many emerging markets live with every day: currency risk isn’t theoretical. Rather than pitching Bitcoin as a speculative bet, he framed it as a defensive tool — something to be explored carefully through regulation, energy-backed mining, and limited allocation when depreciation is already doing damage. What stood out: ✅ Currency risk as the starting point, not upside ✅ Mining used to convert surplus energy into reserves ✅ Regulation emphasized over promotion ✅ On-chain usage driven by remittances and youth The signal here is pragmatic. For emerging markets, Bitcoin isn’t about leading narratives — it’s about avoiding being left with no options at all. Follow me - nostr:nprofile1qqsrycm5whkqy4hm6a29wxh255k9g4xfh4ulk7k9hx048wrvlju4y7spr9mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujucmewp5x2unxd3hhwtnpdyq3xamnwvaz7tmjv4kxz7fwdphkgmpwv9eqx6397e for grounded insights on how digital assets are reshaping finance and how to ledger them. #thejonnnycrypto #bitcoin #nostr #asknostr #grownostr #BTC https://blossom.primal.net/2e1c28bdf2ff96c76e96e1dc6354921db72c3b611ef4bb3b070f90c3abd37f56.jpg