Michael Saylor is karma.
Bitcoin maxis lucked out and got rich on paper by throwing their greed behind the first crypto asset, which the market chose as its proxy for the whole space so far.
They didn't make an intelligent choice to evaluate Bitcoin's place in the greater digital asset landscape and see long-term value in the "slow and steady" asset, but by luck they greedily aped into one that probably won't be going to zero anytime soon.
Maximalism prevents their greed from making them wander off to other scams where they won't get as lucky.
Enter MicroStrategy.
Saylor exploited a loophole in maxi logic, where it's okay to buy a scammy shitcoin if it's packaged as somehow buying even more Bitcoin than just buying Bitcoin.
Now, just like Bitconnect back in the day, Bitcoin treasury companies let suckers think they can put Bitcoin in and get more Bitcoin out, but packaged in a way that lets them think they're still only invested in the safest high-performing asset in history. It's a perfect scam, really.
Smart maxis will contain their greed and stay away from this obvious scheme. The better ones may even warn others. Good. They deserve to keep their money.
But the greed-blinded will lose out big when the whole thing comes apart.
MicroStrategy: bringing much-needed shitcoiner karma to the greediest Bitcoiners.