b'After all, what could be less speculative and more rich in innate value than a non-crypto non-currency, supporting small organic farms and local food systems? What could be more satisfying than coming together (albeit virtually, for now) to put some money up, so it can recirculate in perpetuity via 0% loans to local farmers? What is a more potent kind of rebalancing and reconnection than funding by majority vote of members, one person one vote, no matter whether a members contribution is $250 or $50,000? This is why the preceding pages wove in and out of the territory of smiles, affection, mythic informality and occasionally irreverent references to the Great Fiduciary in the Sky. And waxed almost poetically about the virtues of lively seriousness and borscht.Now, the Tom Robbins quote on the beetcoin artwork is a not-terribly- well-veiled call to a million of us baby boomers (many of whom are also the target market for that Grayscale ad). A million? Thats a nice round number. You know, the million who have read Jitterbug Perfume or E.F. Schumachers Small Is Beautiful or Wendell Berrys The Unset-tling of America. The million who sense that investing globally over and over again, hoping for a different result, is not all there is. Who feel Gretas outrage and realize that by putting money in this green fund or that, we have not fully discharged our obligation to future generations. 6Who want to team up with millions of millennials who are carrying forward new waves of conversation about food, money and culture.6 See Wendell Berrys essay In Distrust of Movements.13'