👉🇬🇧 No Applause, No Outrage: Starmer’s Careful Words on Venezuela Leave Everyone Uneasy 🇻🇪👀
🪙 Bitcoin Standard Hashrate (BSH) feels like one of those projects you only understand after watching it quietly exist for a while. It started as a meme coin built around mining culture, leaning into the language of hash rates and proof of work without pretending to reinvent crypto. What makes it interesting isn’t ambition, but restraint. It’s mostly about community participation and shared humor around Bitcoin’s technical roots.
From what I’ve seen, BSH matters because it attracts people who like experimenting without illusions of grandeur. There’s talk about lightweight tools, gamified mining simulations, and community-led extensions, but nothing is guaranteed. Its future depends entirely on whether the community stays curious. The risk is obvious: low visibility, limited use cases, and the very real chance it stays niche forever.
🌍 Shifting gears, I’ve been trying to understand the tone coming out of the UK after the U.S. intervention in Venezuela. Keir Starmer finally addressed it, and his response landed somewhere in the middle. He acknowledged the situation, emphasized international law, and stopped well short of either endorsing or condemning Washington outright.
That careful positioning has upset people on both sides. Some see it as quiet approval. Others hear hesitation where leadership should be. Inside his own party, the frustration feels less ideological and more emotional, a sense that the moment demanded clarity rather than caution.
Watching this unfold, I’m struck by how often modern politics mirrors crypto communities. Everyone wants certainty, but most decisions are made in uncertainty, with consequences that only become clear much later.
#KeirStarmer #VenezuelaCrisis #CryptoCulture #Write2Earn #BinanceSquare