The Dark Hole #03 stages a mythological clash.
On one side: Thomas Hobbes and his Leviathan — the modern State born from fear, order imposed to contain human violence, power centralized to keep chaos at bay.
On the other: Satoshi Nakamoto and Bitcoin — a peer-to-peer system with no king, no center, no permission, where trust is written in code and verified by everyone.
Hosted by Brooke Candy, this episode doesn’t explain Bitcoin — it feels it.
WHEN FEAR BUILDS STATES — AND CODE BREAKS THEM
Hobbes believed humans needed a sovereign to survive themselves. The Leviathan was not a metaphor — it was an operating system for society, built on fear, obedience and centralized authority.
“Humans are violent, stupid and horny.
So you trade your freedom for protection.”
Centuries later, Bitcoin appears not as a currency, but as a counter-myth.
No ruler. No permission. No center.
“No king. No prince. Everyone verifies.”
In The Dark Hole #03, Bitcoin is treated as what it really is:
a political architecture, not a financial product.
FROM GUTENBERG TO BITCOIN — A WAR ON MONOPOLIES
This episode draws a sharp historical line:
the printing press broke the monopoly of speech;
blockchain breaks the monopoly of trust.
“Printing was the first machine that freed truth.
Blockchain is a printing press for trust.”
Here, technology is not neutral.
It redistributes power — violently, silently, irreversibly.
Languages fracture. References collide. Philosophy becomes spoken code.
NO CENTER. NO CROWN. JUST FLOW.
The Dark Hole #03 is not a podcast.
It’s not a debate.
It’s a radio ritual for a world where the Leviathan is cracking and trust no longer comes from above.
“No crown.
Just connection.”
Broadcast as part of ZUPER WOK on Cashmere Radio Berlin, this episode belongs to the Meetings from Nowhere / The Dark Hole series — a space where impossible encounters happen to test the limits of modern power, technology and belief.
Press play.
The sovereign is dissolving.
The flow remains.
