4.8 • 786 Ratings
🗓️ 16 November 2021
⏱️ 19 minutes
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0:00.0 | Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW. |
0:09.2 | It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world. |
0:16.3 | The breakdown is sponsored by Nidig and produced and distributed by CoinDes. |
0:22.7 | What's going on, guys? It is Monday, November 15th, and today we are talking about one of the |
0:28.1 | crazier, more fascinating, more compelling stories that I've seen in some time. A Dow is trying |
0:35.7 | to buy the U.S. Constitution. I started paying attention to this over the weekend |
0:40.9 | when I saw a tweet from Zero X Planet that said, I've been talking about BTC all morning, not Bitcoin, |
0:47.7 | buying the Constitution. So what the hell are they talking about? Well, this is one of the more |
0:52.7 | ambitious things I've seen in some time. But before we talk about Constitution Dao specifically, I want to look at some |
1:00.3 | precedent. Dows are decentralized autonomous organizations. It's a term that you've probably |
1:06.0 | heard me talk about before. A couple of weeks ago, I featured an essay about the legal |
1:10.6 | ramifications for |
1:11.6 | Dow's on Longreed Sunday. Dows represent online collectives, people getting together to do things, |
1:18.6 | and there are people who are looking to do dows for all types of things. But if the history of |
1:22.9 | crypto shows us anything, it is that while there may be a million big different use cases, things |
1:28.5 | usually hit their stride when they're about the better coordination of money. Certainly, |
1:33.8 | when it comes to all of the experimental DAOs out there right now, that is the fundamental |
1:39.3 | driving use case so far. Now, for me, I've always thought that Daos were some type of inevitable. |
1:46.1 | It's just seemed insane to me that the only options for human organization would remain, |
1:51.4 | on the one hand, legal structures that had existed for tens, if not hundreds of years, |
1:56.7 | and on the other hand, super informal things like Facebook groups or GoFundMe pages, it just seemed |
2:02.8 | like there had to be something that lived in that middle space, and that enabled strangers |
... |
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