In St. Francois County, Missouri, Ryan Cooper is turning ranch life into a sovereignty experiment powered by Bitcoin. Forget sterile conferences — this is grassroots crypto adoption served with eggs, bacon, and black coffee.
Cooper didn’t come up through Silicon Valley or Wall Street. In 2022, with no challengers for local offices, he filed to run as a libertarian for presiding county commissioner. For him, politics isn’t the revolution — it’s just a megaphone.
“Politics can be an amplifier, but the real revolution comes from the soil up.”
At his ranch, that philosophy takes shape:
Picture this: plates stacked with eggs, bacon, and black coffee, plus a side of the orange pill. These “homestead breakfasts” aren’t just about food. They’re onboarding sessions into the crypto ecosystem, delivered in plain language by neighbors instead of corporate suits.
It’s grassroots financial literacy — with bacon grease on your hands.
On September 20, the ranch is hosting the And Bitcoin Conference during the Blues Brews Festival. While music fills the streets, Cooper’s crew will be running a parallel meetup — a patio gathering dedicated to food, freedom, and Bitcoin.
This isn’t your average blockchain summit. No laser lights, no jargon. Just people, conversations, and sats swapping hands.
Cooper frames Bitcoin not as speculation, but as part of a broader sovereignty lifestyle:
As he puts it:
“God did not give me a flight response. There’s a fine line between stupid and courage — but that’s exactly where real change happens.”
Ryan Cooper’s ranch in Missouri is more than a farm — it’s a Bitcoin-powered sovereignty lab. Through homestead breakfasts and grassroots conferences, he’s proving that crypto adoption doesn’t need Wall Street or Silicon Valley. It can grow straight from the soil, with food, faith, and freedom as the foundation.
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