âEveryoneâs a burner now.â
My eyes opened wide. He probably thought I was going to kiss him.
But it was just the sentiment, the way it clashed against the scene. Outside one of the most popular clubs in San Juan, locals were being swiftly displaced by a newer, more exotic crypto enthusiast.
Sure, there was the normal dichotomy, button-ups and slacks, graphic tees and jeans, but another faction of the movement has emerged in Puerto Rico. Silver rings, steampunk vests and wide-brimmed hats; they probably wore them âon the playa.â
The playa. Puerto Ricans might understand that to mean the beach, but thatâs not what they mean. No, these people mean more than 4,000 acres of alkaline dust, they mean the Black Rock Desert.
Burning Man.
They mean fucking Burning Man.
***
How did we get here? Certainly it happened fast, a mutation caused by the swift billions of 2017âs great crypto bubble. Still, one man perhaps has become synonymous with the shift, a child actor turned digital currency hype man named Brock Pierce.
Donning a top hat of sorts (a Queen of Hearts and a U.S. dollar bill stuck in the brim), itâs clear Pierce went to Burning Man and that heâs brought the burner aesthetic back with him to bitcoin.
I thought I would be happy about that.
And it might be fine if they had come back with a more well-rounded view of the world â but alas they came back still extreme capitalists, now with âsacredâ geometrical shapes and a love of rainbows to add some innocence to their money grabs.
These are the same people who think the government should get the fuck out of the way so they can (figuratively) rape and pillage throughout the land as they see fit. The people who think others are inherently selfish and never do anything just out of sheer compassion or love, the kind that think the best system is one that pits people against one another for the greater good.
Itâs nauseating, excruciating at times.
And so when I heard about Pierceâs commune in Puerto Rico, first profiled in The New York Times, there was a part of me that thought, this could be positive.
Burning Man stands for things that Iâm generally interested in â radical inclusion, self-reliance and self-expression, as well as community cooperation, civic responsibility, gifting, decommodification, participation, immediacy and leaving no trace.
If (at least) one of those sounds like it doesnât mesh with the ethos of the cryptocurrency community, itâs because it doesnât.
***
I suppose it would be enough if they kept quiet and left others the hell alone.
But alas the burners of Puerto Rico need a show, and as a number of blockchain-related events were happening on the island over the week of March 12 â including multi-day conference Blockchain Unbound, which was hosted by Blockchain Industries Inc in partnership with the Department of Economic Development and Commerce in Puerto Rico â they chose to converge here.
And while the event was completely not-for-profit, with the money raised aiding four local charities, much of what was said at the conference seemed to ignore what the suffering people of Puerto Rico need, and instead focused on the commodification of everything, supposedly for the betterment of all.
Brock Pierceâs wife, for instance, an entrepreneur named Crystal Rose, took the stage to spit out a bunch of nonsense about blockchain islands and human clouds, evoking even the late Stephen Hawking in explaining her project, Sensay, which as far as I can tell is all about commodifying everything you do and say online.
Cue Hawking turning over in his very fresh graveâ¦
Taking notes, I was bewildered by how incoherent the explanation was, but tons of people clapped at the end, making me think, âmaybe I just donât get it.â
But having been in the industry since 2012, I do get it.
These entrepreneurs can basically say whatever they want with a few buzzwords sprinkled here and there â and after seeing the rise of cryptocurrency prices over the years â others will buy in whether they understand or not.
A Puerto Rican business executive hinted at this when he told me he was at the conference because he was interested in how blockchain could benefit the agriculture industry. According to him, people just kept saying blockchain will help, but no one would really give him the nitty-gritty of how or why.
Youâll forgive me if I wasnât surprised.
That all of this is an elaborate exploitation of Puerto Rico should be immediately obvious. But who knows? Maybe everyone is just in on the ruse.
From what I can tell, the government there is open to the idea of crypto-rich investors relocating to the U.S. commonwealth under the guise of trying to âsave Puerto Rico.â But what itâs really about is the tax benefits.
See, Puerto Rico, while a U.S. territory, still gets some sovereignty in deciding its tax structure. As such, recently the territory passed major changes to Act 20 and Act 22. As of July 2017, Act 20 gives businesses a flat 4 percent corporate tax rate on any business income sourced in Puerto Rico, and Act 22 states that individuals and businesses will pay zero â yes, zero â capital gains taxes on assets acquired after moving to Puerto Rico.
Not bad, especially for crypto investors such as Pierce, who would otherwise have to pay upwards of 20 percent capital gains tax on their crypto investments on the mainland.
Crypto folks arenât the first to have their eyes turn to dollar signs because of Puerto Ricoâs lax tax laws. For some time, even before the changes, Puerto Ricoâs tax laws have been less cumbersome than those in U.S. states, and a number of businesses (hedge funds for instance) have relocated to the island, at least on paper.
But today, itâs the crypto industry thatâs getting a warm welcome.
âThe government is very pleased you all are here,â said Manuel Laboy Rivera, Puerto Ricoâs secretary of economic development and commerce, during the morning keynote on March 15.
During his talk, Rivera, who holds the second-highest government seat on the island, announced a new advisory council that brings together government leaders and crypto entrepreneurs in an effort to spur the development of blockchain technology on the island.
And later, George Joyner, the Commissioner for Financial Institutions for Puerto Rico, went so far as to claim, âIn a few years, we wonât be able to imagine our lives without blockchain, just like we canât now with our cell phones.â
According to Rose, one of the main benefits of moving to the island is that Puerto Ricoâs politicians have been amazingly accessible and optimistic.
And many attendees echoed Roseâs sentiment as they moved from conference to conference, event to event as part of what was more broadly labelled #RestartWeek, with a mission of âcelebrating culture, rebuilding the vibrant past and envisioning the future.â
Celebrating culture, huh? Brock Pierce and crew are converting a closed-down childrenâs museum into a commune, and until then are renting out a 20,000 square-foot hotel called the Monastery.
In walking through the streets of San Juan and driving around the island, I can tell you, lavish isnât really the culture of Puerto Rico.
***
But itâs the culture the crypto community will bring to the island, no doubt.
While #RestartWeek ran a series of volunteer programs, which included bringing art supplies to the local Boys and Girls Club and cleaning up the beaches, crypto enthusiasts seemed all too unaware of what constitutes a basic human need, the kind of you might have after living through the worst natural disaster in the islandâs history.
And it was another kind of woe-is-me white suffering that got the most airtime at the event.
âBanking here in Puerto Rico is ridiculous, for everyone, and [for people in the] the crypto space, itâs pretty much impossible.â
The comment from an audience member piqued my interest. The man sounded irritated, and while the panelists reassured him, heâd already started a movement. One after the other, men stood up during the Q&A session not to ask questions but to whine about the indecency of the island as a habitable place for crypto businesses.
Supposedly the airports are shit. Instead of a normal three-hour layover for a connecting flight, one guy had to wait eight hours. The indignity.
And then, the ultimate insensitive complaint:
âIf I had to choose between electricity and internet, Iâd light a candle.â
Is there no empathy in this space anymore? None?
By some estimates, more than one-third of the Puerto Rican population is still without electricity. And this jackass was saying heâd take internet over electricity.
Raul Vidal of Omnia Economic Solutions, a consultancy that specializes in Puerto Ricoâs Act 20 and Act 22, said, âIt will get better. Four months ago this place was a wreck.â
He continued:
âWeâre not xenophobic. We want all you Americans here.â
I wouldnât.
***
Elsewhere at the event, hypocrisy was in fashion â even the conferenceâs line-up had a number of speakers, some of whom lived on the island, who didnât seem to understand anything about the commonwealth.
Yaron Brook, an entrepreneur and chairman of the board of the Ayn Rand Institute (excuse the massive eye roll) used his time onstage to make the case for making Puerto Rico more closely resemble Hong Kong.
âPeople ignore what made Hong Kong, Hong Kong,â Brook said. âIt was a little fishing village. What did the British do to bring about this vibrant place ⦠to make it what it is today? [They] established the rule of law, protected contracts and left people alone.â
Thereâs just so much wrong with that statement, and the whole premise of this talk generally.
Itâs an apples-and-oranges comparison first of all. And it overlooks some serious nuance in the history and growth of both places â like the fact that Hong Kongâs growth has caused serious waste and pollution problems.
âWe know how to get rich,â Brook continued.
Itâs not giving tax breaks to some and not to others (âbut please keep the tax breaksâ he said, laughing), âitâs about the government staying out of the way.â
More cheers.
âFree markets. They work. They work everywhere theyâre tried.â
Whoo hoo. Clapping. More cheers.
Cringe.
A question from the audience: âHow do you make sure the wealth gap doesnât grow between all the local Puerto Ricans and these entrepreneurs coming here?â
Damn. And I was about to lose all faith in humanity.
Brook began, âLowering the income tax would be a good place to start.â He continued, âIâm looking for a research analyst right now. I would love to hire a Puerto Rican. When we come here, we will employ people.â
One person? One research analyst?
Later in the day, Rose is talking about how, by virtue of having an internet-based business, her whole team is dispersed throughout the world â the chief technology officer, in fact, lives on a beaver farm in Canada.
âIt doesnât really matter where youâre at, just matters that you are connected to other awesome human beings,â she said.
So youâll have to excuse me that I donât buy this âentrepreneurs will bring jobsâ bullshit.
Brook concluded with something that for me, someone who despises mass consumerism and the adoration of money above all else, was the last straw. Donât come here because you pity Puerto Rico or to provide charity, he said, âYou should want to come here for your own profit.â
Fuck this. Iâm going to the beach.
Itâs amazing how calming the ocean can be. After a couple hours bobbing in the cool water and drying off in the sun, I decide to give the conference another go.
âWere you just here to make a lot of money or actually here to affect change?â
Nail meets head as Melinda Moore, co-founder and CMO of iConsumer, takes her panel to task. âWhat if [the crypto markets] lost another 50 percent, would you still be here?â
The answer was pretty clear.
Theyâre here for the tax incentives, because the government is stroking their egos, because theyâre fucking rich.
And letâs face it, thatâs who Pierce has brought to the island. The guy has had one foot in questionable activities since he stopped acting. Not least of all, he was business partners with a man who would later do time after admitting to luring five minors across state lines for sexual purposes.
Itâs a well-detailed story. Without laying out the whole fucked-up scenario as many people have, Brock Pierce helped found Digital Entertainment Network (DEN), an online streaming service, with Marc Collins-Rector and Chad Shackley.
According to Buzzfeedâs June 2014 in-depth report of âThe Hollywood Sex Abuse Scandal,â DEN was run out of Collins-Rectorâs Los Angeles mansion, and it was here where the three men would host lavish parties where Collins-Rector and allegedly others sexually assaulted dozens of teenage boys.
Pierce himself was named in one such sexual-assault lawsuit (although the case was eventually dropped).
Not long after Brock Pierce joined the Bitcoin Foundation as a board member, a number of other board members resigned in protest to these past dealings.
His response to the controversy in 2014: âItâs 15-year-old news at least as it relates to me. And anyone can sue anyone for anything they want.â
Still, thatâs the way Pierce operates â always evasive.
(Pierce was contacted by multiple people at CoinDesk several times for comment on a whole host of topics related to cryptocurrency in Puerto Rico but did not return requests.)
Cut to present day and Pierce has made himself a revered figure in the cryptocurrency space, primarily by cutting checks. Lately, though, it seems heâs more about cutting loose.
Whether itâs backing the latest questionable blockchain project, EOS, investing in a project called Tether thatâs been accused of propping up the crypto economy, or his association with a cryptocurrency conference that Wired exposed for dosing attendees with marijuana, there seems to be a high correlation between Pierce and controversial projects.
In Puerto Rico, it seems heâs applying the strategy now to full-on municipalities.
And that might be the fate of what Pierce and crew were calling âPuertopia,â a phrase the Times pointed out translates to âeternal boy playground,â by moving to the Caribbean island to build their businesses.
If it werenât for the fact that Puerto Rico is a U.S. commonwealth, the venture would seem exactly like colonialism â the policy or practice of acquiring full or partial political control over another country, occupying it with settlers and exploiting it economically. Wait, no, actually itâs still colonialism.
âYouâre Puerto Rican? So weâre gonna talk later, because now I am too,â said Crystal Rose after a question from the audience.
I nearly choked.
Rose is not Puerto Rican, and saying that she is just because several months ago she moved to the island for the tax benefits is offensive.
Later on, I summon the courage to query the locals for their thoughts.
Iâm talking to the waiter about life in Puerto Rico and he makes it clear that he believes being under U.S. rule is âmore like an occupation.â They donât get to vote for the president, they deal with silly regulations â The Jones Act for one â that tend to hurt their economy and foremost, theyâre just very different culturally than mainland Americans.
I decide nowâs an alright time to ask about cryptocurrency. And he passes our conversation to the bartender.
The bartender had done pretty well for himself, investing in ether when it was only $27 (itâs currently around $395, according to CoinMarketCap). But he studied finance in college and thinks heâs in a better position to understand cryptocurrency, at least more so than some others he knew.
âThey didnât know what they were doing,â the bartender says, alluding to bitcoinâs correction, where the price dropped below $7,000 after nearly eclipsing $20,000 back in December.
This has always been true, though, in the cryptocurrency space. Some people get in not knowing what the fuck theyâre doing and have lost big money because of that.
Itâs not necessarily the industryâs fault, although they sure do herald cryptocurrency as the savior of all the things. But maybe whatâs more irritating about this whole âcrypto is gonna save Puerto Ricoâ narrative is not that some will get burned because they donât know what theyâre doing.
The most irritating thing is that crypto entrepreneurs with fat pockets are waving cash in front of the faces of Puerto Ricans (who still donât have electricity or running water) and pretending like all they have to do is invest in crypto and voila, theyâll have the personality of the âsleepy creepy cowboy from the future,â sipping expensive wine on the rooftop of monasteries and living the life.
Later, during dinner, a middle-aged white man who came to the island to help rebuild (he puts up telephone poles) starts up a conversation.
He needs some advice from two young women, close to his daughterâs age. See, he heard his daughter was stripping and he wants to either shut off the electricity back in the mainland neighborhood where the strip club is or send her $5,000.
My partner in crime here on the trip, Sam, is against it and so am I really, but Iâm having trouble articulating why. As I suck down the last of my margarita it hits me. âMoney doesnât actually solve problems,â I say. âIt just enables people to do what they already want.â
Put another way, money only intensifies peopleâs existing inclinations. It doesnât change them.
Iâve struck a chord there, as Sam and I discuss what we would have done with $5,000 several years ago when our inclinations were not to travel the world and understand life in its crazily diverse perspectives.
The man rouses me, asking, âDo you think thatâll work here?â
âWhat? Crypto?â
âYeah.â
âWell, it depends what you mean by work. But ultimately, no,â I say.
âI agree. You have to be comfortable to invest in something like that,â he says, adding:
âIf you donât have running water or electricity, youâre not comfortable, how do you invest in that?â
Iâm willing to be proven wrong.
That said, some people were more positive than me (surprise).
Take Josue Acquino, a certified public accountant and director of Ataraxia Technologies, who expressed his view that events like Blockchain Unbound could really help make a difference in Puerto Rico.
âWe are very happy to have the event in the island and to build Puerto Rico as a center of excellence for blockchain technology with the help of the crypto community,â he said.
But in conversations over drinks, many of the people I spoke with voiced concerns over the real reason crypto entrepreneurs were flooding to the island, and whether their efforts will really help fix the economically dire situation.
I thought about covering the conference straight. I thought about excluding all the history I know about Brock Pierce and all the ridiculous antics Iâve seen over the past five years. I did, because Iâve watched as a whole host of people call out the crypto industryâs bullshit and nefarious characters and yet those projects and people are still around, still being glorified.
And it makes you think: Will this even make a difference? Will it change anything?
I thought this through while having a glass of wine in the Airbnb. There were only a couple channels we could get on the TV there â but one was Comedy Central so Sam and I were watching âRick & Mortyâ reruns.
Maybe I should just be agreeable, likeable, I thought. Maybe then Iâll get invited to the commune.
On the screen, Rick clinked a glass. Season two, episode 10. Heâs at Birdpersonâs wedding and is about the give the best man speech. I remembered liking this speech.
âWhen I first met Birdperson he was uh ⦠â
Rick trailed off. I looked up from my laptop; this is where it gets good.
âLook, Iâm not the nicest guy in the universe. Because Iâm the smartest. And being nice is something stupid people do to hedge their bets.â
Ahh fuck it then.
Thatâs how these people thrive. They count on us to be polite.
CoinDesk was not invited to the commune.
Correction:Â An earlier version of this article misidentified the organizers of Blockchain Unbound. The conference was hosted by Blockchain Industries Inc., in partnership with the Department of Economic Development and Commerce of Puerto Rico. The local âburnersâ merely attended.Â
Puerto Rican flag on bitcoin image via Shutterstock, and Vanderbilt Condado lobby view image via CoinDesk.Â