U.S. President Trump threw down a harsh remark at the Future Investment Initiative summit: “Bitcoin is very powerful, and now many people want to pay you directly with cryptocurrency.”
Did you feel your blood rush after hearing that? But take a calm three seconds, and you will realize a heartbreaking question: who will verify this money? Is it the tech giants from Silicon Valley, or is it your own country’s government?
I am now fixated on @SignOfficial , precisely because this answer has been clearly written in the Middle East: they don't play by others' rules; they want to be in charge themselves.
This is also the core logic behind my heavy investment in $SIGN . It has no intention of competing with Bitcoin for the position of “money”; what it aims to do is lay the foundation for the digital age in the Middle East. Look at what Abu Dhabi is doing now—property on the blockchain, identity on the blockchain, every step is firmly grasping “verifiable trust” in its own hands.
While others are still arguing about buying a cup of coffee with Bitcoin, $SIGN has already helped Middle Eastern governments pocket the verification rights. This is not just an ordinary token; it is simply a golden ticket in geopolitics.
Whoever first understands this urgent need for “sovereign verification” will lock in the next wave of wealth codes five years ahead of time.
I have understood it, how about you?

