💍 1. Marriage Is Immutable — So the Ledger Must Be Too Marr…
💍 1. Marriage Is Immutable — So the Ledger Must Be Too
Marriage is a promise — an unchangeable, legally binding, emotionally sacred agreement between two people in the witness of God, the Supreme Being. If you're going to record that union, store memories, preserve vows, or build a family record, then:
You want it on a chain that won’t change. You want it on a ledger that honors time, truth, and law. You want certainty, not speculation.
BTC is for trading lives with numbers. BSV is for life records.
📜 2. BTC Can’t Be Trusted — It Changes, It Lies, It Detaches
BTC as the world wants you to believe is:
A malleable political project, not a stable protocol. Defined by developer consensus, not law. Missing digital signatures (SegWit) — meaning it can’t even prove ownership. Unable to store data at a meaningful enough scale — so even if you wanted to put your marriage certificate on BTC, you couldn’t. How could anyone trust something like that to store the most important event in your life?
🌲 3. BSV Is a Tree of Life — A Ledger That Can Hold Meaning
BSV isn’t just a protocol — it’s a time machine. A place where:
You can upload your vows. Store wedding photos. Timestamp your first dance. Anchor your family name and legacy. Embed anniversaries, children’s births, shared businesses, and more. And 100 years from now, if someone queries the chain, they’ll find:
“Michal and his wife declared their union here. This day. This time. This moment. Forever.”
🔐 4. Your Data = Your Life. BTC Can’t Handle That Responsibility
This is what the world doesn’t get:
Bitcoin was never just about money. It was about ownership — of truth, of memory, of intent. BTC traded that away for speculative gains. But I'm not speculating with a marriage. I'm building a life.
So if you're going to put something as sacred as a wedding on a chain, it has to be one that can be trusted with your heart and verified with the technology of a million human life cycles.
🧾 5. A Future Message to My Wife :
I didn’t write our story on shifting sand. I didn’t write it in a contract with lawyers who were lazy or tied depending on the day, the weather, their moods or on some centralized server or in a place that could be breached and used for the glory of the collective perverts of our time. I etched it into the chain of time. Into the system of truth. Into the one place that honors memory as sacred.
That’s why I waited to put our marriage on BSV.