MICHAEL SAYLOR: BITCOIN IS BLOCKADE-PROOF
The MicroStrategy executive doubled down on Bitcoin's resilience, declaring it "impossible to blockade" the network. His comments underscore growing confidence among institutional players that no government or coalition can effectively shut down the world's largest cryptocurrency.
This matters because it reflects how institutional narratives around Bitcoin have shifted. We're past the "is it money?" debate—now the conversation is about whether nation-states can even compete with the network's structure.
The real play here is watching how this sentiment trickles into corporate treasuries and pension funds. When leaders like Saylor publicly take this stance, they're essentially giving cover to other institutions considering Bitcoin exposure without the regulatory fear.
One thing worth tracking: how hostile geopolitical moves test this thesis. If any major economy actually tries to enforce a real blockade, we'll see whether Saylor's conviction holds up in practice or gets stress-tested hard.
Does the network's censorship resistance actually matter if most adoption remains in friendly jurisdictions anyway?
