Drama raged in the high seas as a collective of libertarian crypto bros’ proposed utopia — a seafaring community of ships and floating pods in the shape of the Bitcoin symbol — fell apart.
In The Guardian‘s investigation into the bizarre project, in which wealthy crypto enthusiasts bought a discounted cruise ship, named it the Satoshi in honor of Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator, and set sail to live a “seasteading” life where they could revolutionize the very concept of governance, it quickly becomes clear that the team bit off more than they could chew.
“We were like, ‘This is just so hard,\’” Grant Romundt, one of the co-owners of the Satoshi, told The Guardian.
Swim Trunks
The grand vision for the seasteading movement was an ever-shifting community of people living on boats or floating platforms who would be free to live and travel as they see fit on a highly-romanticized vision of the high seas. Even though the oceans are some of the most tightly-regulated spaces on the planet, the leaders of the seasteading movement saw the freedom of the oceans as a place to innovate on government. After all, as the movement’s founders wrote in the book “Seasteading,” they could “vote with their houses” by sailing away from any community they didn’t like.
So for a movement seemingly designed in a lab to attract Bitcoin billionaires who want to escape financial regulations, the move to buy a 30-year-old cruise ship during a pandemic and rent tiny residential cabins with no kitchens seems almost laughable.
“I was thinking a week into the job, I can see I’m going to be resigning,” the cruise ship’s captain, Peter Harris, told The Guardian.
Needless to say, the Satoshi quickly flopped — the ship didn’t even complete its maiden voyage before it became clear that the project would fail. Logistical challenges and expired certificates made it impossible to find insurance, something that Harris blamed on insurance companies being unwilling to wade into the murky waters of a cruise ship-turned-crypto hub.
The Satoshi, now the Ambiance, is under new ownership, and the seasteaders who spoke to The Guardian are seemingly undeterred.
Credit to @ futurism