Lol, man, your logical abilities seem to have taken an extended sabbatical.
Updating your views based on new information and experience is called learning. It's also the foundation of science, in case that concept somehow escaped you. The way you thought as a child is different from the way you think as an adult. Your opinions evolve, your understanding evolves, your perspective evolves. That's how growth works... although judging by this conversation, perhaps not for everyone.
Almost four years ago,
@RootkitAlpha made certain calls and trusted someone who, at the time, appeared legitimate and backed by convincing promises. Over the years, more information surfaced, more lessons were learned, and his opinion changed accordingly. If you think changing your stance in light of new evidence is a flaw, then you're not criticizing him; you're criticizing the entire concept of rational thought.
Blind loyalty disguised as "belief" has never built anything worthwhile.
Real power comes from holding people accountable for their promises, their actions, and their results. That's exactly what
@RootkitAlpha is doing. The fact that this even needs to be explained says a lot.
Now let's ask the questions that actually matter.
To all
$PORK,
$PNDC, and
$wPOND holders and miners:
Are you genuinely satisfied with the team's performance after all these years?
Are you comfortable with
Geoff.ai having no legal connection to
@pond0x? If everything is supposedly part of the same vision, why are there separate legal entities? Ignore what
@Pauly0x aka
@JackDorsey0x posts from his mock twitter accounts. Look at the legal structure. Look at what is actually binding.
Are you happy receiving pennies after months of mining?
How much longer are people expected to survive on promises while waiting for results?
At some point, every community faces a choice: continue defending narratives, or start demanding accountability. Not because you hate the project, but because you care enough to expect better.
Four years is a long time to live on hope alone.
Maybe it's time to stop asking people to believe and start asking leadership to deliver.