Las Vegas Bitcoin Conference Extends Invitation To Roswell, New Mexico Mayor And City Council

The post Las Vegas Bitcoin Conference Extends Invitation To Roswell, New Mexico Mayor And City Council appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Bitcoin Conference 2025 in Las Vegas, scheduled for the last week of May, includes several notable political figures slated as speakers, including returning guest and Bitcoin advocate Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY). Also appearing are Trump’s so-called “A.I. and Crypto Czar,” David Sacks, and Bo Hines, the “Executive Director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets at the White House.” This year, a less-expected and almost otherworldly contingent will possibly make an appearance as well — at least in the audience, if not beamed up and looking straight into the stage’s spotlights. Like fire from the skies, an unexpected $3,000 bitcoin donation which nobody asked for crashlanded in Roswell, New Mexico, earlier this year, leaving city council members wrestling with whether to once again answer history’s call, by establishing the United States’ first strategic bitcoin reserve — at the city level or otherwise — before other U.S. states or even the U.S. Congress itself acts definitively (following President Donald Trump’s executive order). Roswell is home to a few things you might not expect — world-renowned dairy farming and one of the world’s largest mozzarella cheese factories; aerospace and aviation industries with a famous “aircraft graveyard” which once housed Elvis Presley’s personal small plane, “Hound Dog II,” for 35 years; a vibrant arts, museums and cultural scene — but also a thriving tourism industry, largely built around what Roswell is really known for: flying saucers. But Roswell is really known worldwide for the 1947 “UFO incident.” In early July 1947, a presumably once-flying object of unknown origin crashed and was destroyed, landing roughly at nearby Corona, New Mexico, recovered later and brought to the now-defunct Roswell Army Air Field’s 509th, a World War II-era military base, still housing the United States’ only nuclear bombs at the time as well…

May 3, 2025 - 03:00
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Las Vegas Bitcoin Conference Extends Invitation To Roswell, New Mexico Mayor And City Council

The post Las Vegas Bitcoin Conference Extends Invitation To Roswell, New Mexico Mayor And City Council appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.

The Bitcoin Conference 2025 in Las Vegas, scheduled for the last week of May, includes several notable political figures slated as speakers, including returning guest and Bitcoin advocate Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY). Also appearing are Trump’s so-called “A.I. and Crypto Czar,” David Sacks, and Bo Hines, the “Executive Director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets at the White House.” This year, a less-expected and almost otherworldly contingent will possibly make an appearance as well — at least in the audience, if not beamed up and looking straight into the stage’s spotlights. Like fire from the skies, an unexpected $3,000 bitcoin donation which nobody asked for crashlanded in Roswell, New Mexico, earlier this year, leaving city council members wrestling with whether to once again answer history’s call, by establishing the United States’ first strategic bitcoin reserve — at the city level or otherwise — before other U.S. states or even the U.S. Congress itself acts definitively (following President Donald Trump’s executive order). Roswell is home to a few things you might not expect — world-renowned dairy farming and one of the world’s largest mozzarella cheese factories; aerospace and aviation industries with a famous “aircraft graveyard” which once housed Elvis Presley’s personal small plane, “Hound Dog II,” for 35 years; a vibrant arts, museums and cultural scene — but also a thriving tourism industry, largely built around what Roswell is really known for: flying saucers. But Roswell is really known worldwide for the 1947 “UFO incident.” In early July 1947, a presumably once-flying object of unknown origin crashed and was destroyed, landing roughly at nearby Corona, New Mexico, recovered later and brought to the now-defunct Roswell Army Air Field’s 509th, a World War II-era military base, still housing the United States’ only nuclear bombs at the time as well…

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