Bitcoin up 80% from April lows

The price of a bitcoin hit a low of $360 in April and had been hovering around $450 since April 25. But it started breaking away on May 20. It now sits at $665, according to CoinDesk.

The exact reason for this move is hard to pin down. The Bitcoin2014 Conference in Amsterdam drew to a close three days before the upswing started, and it featured some positive outlooks for the cryptocurrency from its 2,000 attendees.

Read More Dish to become largest company to accept bitcoin

"The fact that you have 51 countries (represented at the conference) and all of them have something positive to say about developments in their countriesmaybe this helped show that bitcoin is bigger than just the U.S., China and England," said Micky Malka, a general partner at venture capital firm Ribbit Capital and a board member of conference host Bitcoin Foundation.

Malka said he has seen an increased interest in bitcoin over the past few months in the Silicon Valley venture capital community. An average round of funding for a bitcoin-related company drew in $1 million or $2 million in 2013, he said, but now routinely exceeds $20 million.

"(There is) momentum of serious committed entrepreneurs diving into building something with this technology," he said. "Venture investors are backing them and really starting to believe we can improve people's lives."

Read More Marc Andreessen in bitcoin for the long run

But the increasing acceptance of bitcoin beyond Silicon Valley may also be driving the trend.

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Bitcoin up 80% from April lows

Nidal Hasan, Bradley Manning, Ivan Lopez, Aaron Alexis and …

Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl ... accusations that he was a traitor have put the focus on American soldiers who go rogue. Source: AP

THE United States and its allies have been fighting al Qaeda and Taliban forces since September 11, 2001, but in the past five years a new threat has grown: the enemy who comes from within.

There have been too many examples of Afghan government troopers often in the pay of the Taliban attacking their foreign comrades. Australians, Britons and Americans have all been victims.

But what of the Westerners who turn on their own?

The stories of these soldiers and veterans who go rogue have been brought into focus again this week after the American soldier Bowe Bergdahl, who was held captive by the Taliban for five years, was branded a traitor by some of his former colleagues.

Emails that Bergdahl sent to his parents before his capture which have not been authenticated indicate that he had lost faith in the US efforts in Afghanistan, and that he was ashamed to even be American.

Some have called for Bergdahl to be court martialed for allegedly deserting his post, while others have revealed that six other men died in attempts to find and rescue him. Bergdahl has not yet spoken publicly about his ordeal, and little is known about his state of mind leading up to his capture.

State of mind is key, especially when considering the other soldiers and veterans who have harmed their own in even more drastic and deadly ways.

Their motivations vary, although most are believed to have been suffering from post traumatic stress disorder or other mental health issues. Some were motivated by issues of conscience; others are no longer around to tell us why they snapped.

Nidal Hasan ... killed 13 and wounded 32 others in the 2009 attack at Fort Hood. Source: AFP

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Nidal Hasan, Bradley Manning, Ivan Lopez, Aaron Alexis and ...

We the People Chat #16: Eddy Truther?/Lights!Camera!Fiction!/Coppin’ Cops/Sizzle/Oh Baby!/Pippi – Video


We the People Chat #16: Eddy Truther?/Lights!Camera!Fiction!/Coppin #39; Cops/Sizzle/Oh Baby!/Pippi
Topic 1 No Body Cares interviews Bin Laden #39;s white neighbor aka Agent Drop Out. Here comes the neighborhood. Inside the Mind of Edward Snowden: http://www.nbcnews.com/feature/edward-snowden-int...

By: theadjustedamerican

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We the People Chat #16: Eddy Truther?/Lights!Camera!Fiction!/Coppin' Cops/Sizzle/Oh Baby!/Pippi - Video