Jan3, a digital infrastructure company founded by Samson MOW in 2022, which focuses on accelerating hyperbitcoinization by providing BTC tools, moved a fresh debate on the adoption of sovereign Bitcoin, sharing the brave statement Na X: Bitcoin adoption among national states accelerates. Samson MOW explains how Bhutan leads the way, how Jan3 shaped Bitcoin strategies around the world and why the race warms up after Trump’s executive order. The question is: who is next? “
In the attached MOW film – which has long depends on Bitcoin’s potential to raise economic growth – it presents Bhutan’s success as a perfect example of countries with unused energy resources. According to him, the Philippines and Indonesia can be next in the queue to exploit BTC mining as a tool for building a nation, especially by using geothermal energy reserves.
MOW emphasizes Bhutan’s journey from “a very poor country to the highest country of Bitcoin per capita in the world.” He noticed: “Bitcoin can clearly transform the country very clearly and can simply pull it out of poverty and earn on orphaned or wasted energy.
Using BTC’s influence, Bhutan reportedly began to finance significant infrastructure, including the construction of the airport – a striking development of a country where there was once a lack of funds for such projects. MOW positions this as a powerful demonstration of how mining can transform or “got stuck” into a domestic income stream.
Philippines and Indonesia as subsequent Bitcoin users
Citing, for example, Bhutan as a catalyst, MOW suggests that other countries wealthy in resources can repeat this model. In particular, it points to the Philippines and Indonesia-Zarówno known for its unused geothermal ability-as “main candidates” to accept BTC at the state level. “I think that the Philippines and Indonesia has a great chance to earn on its beaten energy, this geothermal potential,” he notes.
MOW reasoning is straightforward: if Bhutan can direct revenues from extraction towards infrastructure projects, then other nations with gigantic geothermal reserves can do the same. Instead of allowing the surplus or waste -to -access energy, countries can redirect these resources to mining operations, directing all profits to roads, hospitals, airports or other development goals.
One of the factors is the impact of the executive ordinance signed by US President Donald Trump on the Bitcoin strategic reserve, which in his opinion prompted various governments to re -assess their approach to BTC. It is an order, according to MOW, “lit a fire” at international decision -makers who are worried about the US potentially moving first.
He explains that in January, discussions with governments have intensified in the last two years, but there were failures due to events such as FTX collapse, which destroyed Bitcoin’s reputation, even though it is a broader “cryptographic” failure. Since the US is moving forward thanks to executive activities, they say that some government entities that once planned to go to the adoption of Bitcoins in later years (e.g. 2027), are now changing in times, trying first-at least to keep pace with the United States.
However, while some governments seem to follow the Bhutan model, he warns that creating politics is inherently troublesome. Legislative changes often require many rounds of internal approval, public consultation and political entry. “Time framework, time available to implement something is not much, because the governments are moving slowly,” says MOW.
It indicates that each modern regulatory or political framework may last months and even years to materialize – according to the time of technological or market dynamics. As a result, countries aimed at using Bitcoin mining, aimed at a shrinking window, if they are intended to overtake the main economic rights, such as the United States.
“Only when someone actually does not go and does not do the fact that they will click in their heads,” MOW emphasizes, strengthening the view that Bhutan’s success can stimulate a real rush in the case of similar initiatives in Southeast Asia.
Do the Philippines and Indonesia really join the ranks of nation states with bitcoin support.
It should be noted, however, that MOW was actively involved in discussions on the adoption of Bitcoins in Indonesia. Together with the governor of Ridwan Kamil from West Java, MOW participated in events such as Bitcoin 2023, where he discussed the strategic implications of Bitcoin integration with the economic landscape of Indonesia.
During the BTC press it traded at USD 87,282.

A distinguished picture from X, chart from tradingview.com
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