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A Tale of Two Americas: Marina's Bicultural Experiences and Exploration of Bitcoin - 2
Episode 397th August 2023 • Orange Hatter • Tali Lindberg
00:00:00 00:10:59

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Welcome to Orange Hatter podcast, and part two of Tali's conversation with Marina.

This conversation:

-brings to light the financial strain transaction fees impose on international workers, exemplified by a startling story of a 70% interest credit card.

-touches on Marina's belief in Bitcoin's stability and her work to grow the developer ecosystem.

-notes some advantages of Bitcoin over fiat currencies, especially in South American countries where the local currency can be unstable.

-illustrates how Bitcoin has become a lifeline for many, preserving value against rapid devaluation, with real-life examples.

-discusses Bitcoin's anti-inflationary nature and its potential to revolutionize traditional banking.

Share this eye-opening episode with those looking to understand the transforming power of Bitcoin!

Marina's Contact Info:

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Twitter-@MarinaSpindler

To learn more about Bitcoin: Join the Orange Hatter Women's Reading Club. Visit https://www.meetup.com/womensbitcoinreadingclubwithorangehatter

Please email questions/comments to Tali@orangehatter.com

Remember: Knowledge is empowerment! 🍊🎩

Mentioned in this episode:

Free Market Kids Short

Get your HODL UP ("The best bitcoin game ever!") at www.freemarketkids.com.

Transcripts

Tali:

Hi everyone, welcome to Orange Hatter.

Tali:

Today you're listening to part two of my conversation with Marina.

Tali:

... you're going person to person, it's peer to peer.

Tali:

And also I wanted to just, again, bring, bring it back to the fees, because I,

Tali:

I feel like a lot of people who are working internationally, or who are

Tali:

not working internationally, don't quite grasp the heavy toll the fees

Tali:

play on, like, for example, immigrants who are working overseas and trying

Tali:

to send money back to their families.

Tali:

And the banks doing nothing, except allowing that transaction,

Tali:

takes such a big chunk.

Marina:

Well, I can just tell you, yesterday I was speaking to my father,

Marina:

and he said he walked into a bank the other day, and they were like, oh,

Marina:

we have a new credit card for you.

Marina:

We have a new credit for card for you, sir.

Marina:

It has 70% interest.

Marina:

70!

Marina:

So it's, like, blows your mind.

Marina:

I mean, not even 10%, not even, like, 25 if you're really bad

Marina:

and you don't pay on time.

Marina:

70%.

Marina:

And that was, like, the new good card to get.

Marina:

So obviously it's, it's a crime practically to owe money...

Marina:

and to be, I mean, being in debt here is slavery almost if you cannot

Marina:

pay on time, if something happens.

Marina:

It really is horrible.

Marina:

So that's why I also think the system has to change and we have to

Marina:

have different options, you know?

Tali:

Yeah, for sure.

Tali:

Okay, so you were, you were brought into Bitcoin in 2017, and it sounds

Tali:

like based on our previous conversation, that you actually entered this space

Tali:

with not only Bitcoin but also other cryptocurrencies, but current...

Tali:

but since you've learned more about Bitcoin, you've now completely

Tali:

dedicated yourself to Bitcoin.

Tali:

Can you talk a little bit about, just, the comparison between Bitcoin

Tali:

and the other cryptocurrencies?

Marina:

Well, I, I mean, I don't think that the world is gonna be

Marina:

one thing, everything for everyone.

Marina:

It, it, I think, you know, you have to respect people's needs and choice.

Marina:

Personally, I believe in Bitcoin.

Marina:

I believe in what it offers, and I also believe that it will be

Marina:

the global money, if you will.

Marina:

And so because of those factors, I've made, made my decision to focus

Marina:

on that technology, because it's the one that has been least hack...

Marina:

least problems, least issues.

Marina:

And for that, those reasons alone, I do think that it, it is the most stable and

Marina:

the most trustworthy option out there.

Marina:

And that's why I think I wanna dedicate myself to that, to that ecosystem and

Marina:

to ensure that it continues to stay stable, it continues to stay strong.

Marina:

And so my focus has been in, you know, I'm not a developer, but my, my work now

Marina:

is about growing the developer ecosystem.

Marina:

Because I love to, like, what I used to do was work with CEOs.

Marina:

So for me, finding talent, thinking about talent, understanding what it means

Marina:

to find people who are really good at what they do, that was my job, to find

Marina:

the next generation of CEOs and find who can change the world, if you will.

Marina:

That's what I wanted to do here, because developers are such an important part of

Marina:

the Bitcoin ecosystem, and even if I may not be technical, I'm very good at finding

Marina:

talent that is technical, if you will.

Marina:

And that's what I've been dedicating myself to.

Tali:

Yeah, that's so important.

Tali:

And I wanna just bring it back one more time, just, about the other

Tali:

cryptocurrencies, because I know that that's a major question that a

Tali:

lot of women out there who don't...

Tali:

who are new to this space would ask, which is why Bitcoin?

Tali:

Why not Ethereum?

Tali:

Why not other currencies?

Tali:

But you mentioned that in the South American countries that you work

Tali:

with, you really need more than one.

Tali:

You need more options than one, because they have issues with their

Tali:

fiat currency that's more urgent.

Tali:

So can you talk a little bit about that?

Marina:

Sure.

Marina:

I mean, I, I can, so I'll touch two angles.

Marina:

So I interviewed 63 women from 32 countries to create this report, because

Marina:

there was previous reports about how women use Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies,

Marina:

but it really was about US and UK.

Marina:

I mean, it was 4,000 people interviewed, but none of them

Marina:

were from the global south...

Marina:

or some kind of tried, but, but because I grew up abroad, even though I'm

Marina:

American, I really think that the story is much broader and much more complex.

Marina:

And so, yes, for example, and I'll give you just the basics of, of the case

Marina:

of Argentina, which all of you have known, they're in the news all the time,

Marina:

because they have defaults all the time.

Marina:

And I, I remember speaking with a girl who works for a US company, but

Marina:

she gets paid in pesos in Argentina.

Marina:

And within six months, her money has devalued to the half of it.

Marina:

So one of the options she had was to exchange it for cryptocurrencies,

Marina:

whether it's Bitcoin or something else.

Marina:

But she also chose to, okay, save half, and then the other half, she would use

Marina:

stable coins, because that way her money could last for the rest of the month.

Marina:

And then she would exchange it for pesos once she had to pay more bills, right?

Marina:

Because her life was still pesos, her life was still fiat, and she

Marina:

needed to have fiat, but she just didn't want it to lose value, half

Marina:

of its value within six months.

Marina:

And even though she was paid by a international company, they were paying

Marina:

her in the local currency, and it really, really made it very difficult

Marina:

for her to make her money stretch, even if she had such a privileged

Marina:

position to work for a US company.

Marina:

And the other case, which was an interesting part of the report, I spoke

Marina:

with somebody who was pretty high up.

Marina:

He used to run, like, the, the bank regulation system in, in a country.

Marina:

And he told me, this is not money, Marina.

Marina:

Bitcoin is not money.

Marina:

And I, and I go, wait a minute.

Marina:

And what we proved was that 80% of the women that we interviewed preferred to

Marina:

get paid in cryptocurrencies than not.

Marina:

They preferred it over fiat, which definitely tells you, yes, it is money.

Marina:

And it was a big myth that we debunked.

Marina:

So much so that he opened up doors for me to talk to people at the IMF and the

Marina:

World Bank and all these other places, where he kind of realized, oh shoot,

Marina:

maybe, maybe I'm wrong about this.

Marina:

So I think that was very interesting that, that like me, like when my

Marina:

colleague chose to get paid in fiat and I chose to get paid in

Marina:

Bitcoin, you know, I was completely convinced, I believed in it, and I

Marina:

made a choice that made sense for me.

Marina:

Right?

Marina:

And I think that that's, uh, something that, that we're proving little by little.

Marina:

I don't, I don't think it's, like, the norm, obviously, we're still, we're still

Marina:

trailblazers in that sense, if you will.

Marina:

And you, you can call it risk, but this girl that was...

Marina:

that, I was talking to another girl in Argentina.

Marina:

She says, Marina, I was working two jobs.

Marina:

I couldn't barely buy a, a slice of pizza.

Marina:

I was living very precariously in my country.

Marina:

You know?

Marina:

And, and I'm studying law, but I can't afford the books.

Marina:

Like, my, my law degree is free.

Marina:

I can, my...

Marina:

they pay, they pay for me to, to go to my...

Marina:

to, to my law degree.

Marina:

But I can't pay for the bus or the books to study law.

Marina:

So when you tell me that Bitcoin and, and, and all these options that I have are

Marina:

dangerous for me, I mean, shut up dude.

Marina:

Like, literally shut up.

Marina:

Uh, my life was precarious.

Marina:

Bitcoin is not precarious.

Marina:

I mean, I at least know the risk.

Marina:

I know I have to sometimes wait certain times when the price is too

Marina:

low and, and maybe that's when I buy Bitcoin instead of panicking, right?

Marina:

Because we all have that moment where you buy it...

Marina:

I remember buying a hundred dollars of Bitcoin in 2017 or something, and

Marina:

then selling it immediately, like, when it came from 7K to 10K, I, I sold it.

Marina:

I was, like, panic.

Marina:

And, and then, you know, slowly you start learning.

Marina:

Okay, it sometimes goes up, it sometimes goes down.

Marina:

What is your horizon?

Marina:

How long do you want to, to keep it?

Marina:

You, you start learning, but only until you download a wallet and, and kind of

Marina:

understand it and follow the cycles...

Marina:

you can understand what they mean by diamond hands and what they

Marina:

mean by hodling, which is, uh, misspelling of hold, right, that

Marina:

stayed as part of the culture.

those are the reasons, like A:

it is money, and B: don't tell me, you

those are the reasons, like A:

know, Bitcoin is precarious, because my life was precarious already.

those are the reasons, like A:

Like, this is actually not a risk.

those are the reasons, like A:

The risk is that my money will devalue within six months, and I'll have it,

those are the reasons, like A:

and I will have no way to pay my bills.

those are the reasons, like A:

So yes, I can wait it out.

those are the reasons, like A:

I can, in that case, use stable coins to to save, like, as if

those are the reasons, like A:

you were saving in dollars.

those are the reasons, like A:

Right?

those are the reasons, like A:

And not have the burden of, of the risk of your country defaulting again,

those are the reasons, like A:

and not being able to access your bank account, like in Lebanon, right?

those are the reasons, like A:

These, these things are happening all over the world.

those are the reasons, like A:

And people are smarter and understand that they cannot trust

those are the reasons, like A:

the government sometimes, right?

Tali:

Yeah, for sure.

Tali:

And that the value, which I, we call it value, but really it's

Tali:

just an exchange rate, when it goes from, like, the high of Bitcoin was

Tali:

68,000 and then it dropped to 16.

Tali:

And our families who knew that we had invested in Bitcoin said, oh

Tali:

my gosh, what are you gonna do?

Tali:

And I said, well, it's on sale.

Tali:

I'm gonna tell my kids go buy it.

Tali:

If you understand what it stands for, then the exchange rate is less significant.

Marina:

Well, I do think it takes time to get to that point, right?

Marina:

Like, I do remember panicking, and I do remember, like, when it was low, I

Marina:

didn't have money to buy more, right?

Marina:

So, so sometimes it's not, like, so easy as we make it out to be.

Marina:

But I do agree that if you have a conviction, and if you've been

Marina:

reading, understanding, following, you know why, you know?...

Marina:

and, and in fact, that's something that's really interesting...

Marina:

that I realized that...

Marina:

I was speaking to a lady, an older lady the other day that had never

Marina:

heard about Bitcoin, and she didn't know that there was a limit...

Marina:

that there wasn't, that there was a certain amount of Bitcoin that was

Marina:

gonna be printed, if you will, as they say in the fiat world, and then

Marina:

it would stop being available, right?

Marina:

So become scarce with time.

Marina:

And she did not realize that.

Marina:

She thought you could just keep on printing Bitcoin, and Bitcoin was always

Marina:

gonna be, like, being, you know, made or minted or whatever you wanna call it...

Marina:

mined, in our case, we call it mined.

Marina:

And so she then realized how it was anti-inflationary and with time, how

Marina:

it would become more and more valuable.

Tali:

Thanks for joining us today and learning with us today.

Tali:

If the discussion with our guest resonated with you, and you would

Tali:

like to dive deeper into the world of Bitcoin, don't miss out on joining the

Tali:

Orange Hatter Women's Reading Club.

Tali:

The meetup link is in the show notes.

Tali:

Also, if there are women in your life whom you think will both enjoy and

Tali:

benefit from learning more about Bitcoin, please share Orange Hatter with them.

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