He started reading, took all the coins to the top, and watched his community crumble. Charlie Lee built Litecoin from scratch in 2011. He left his comfortable engineering gig at Google to pursue it. He dedicated years to promoting it, building it, and fostering daily public belief. Then came December 2017. The market was buzzing, people were deciphering each other's opinions, and some even mortgaged their homes, betting on an endless rise. Charlie was quietly selling all the Litecoin he owned. At the top. Then he announced it on Reddit. The backlash came back immediately, fierce and unpredictable. People called him a traitor, claiming he deserted his own community when he needed it most, leaving everyone to deal with the consequences while he walked away with a fortune. He spilled the beans. He mentioned owning Litecoin when the leader had a conflict of interest. Which was the honest thing to do when selling. The community heard him. I don't care. What happened made everything worse. 2018 saw Litecoin's value plummet by 90%, along with other cryptocurrencies Charlie had already sold. But this is the role people will always overlook. He never quit. He never took the money without leaving a trace. He continued building Litecoin for years without ever having a room of his own. Be the most selfless thing a founder has ever done in crypto. Or the best-timed exit ever. #US-IranTalks #TrumpSeeksQuickEndToIranWar #CLARITYActHitAnotherRoadblock #LTC $LTC $BTC $ETH