In this episode of
Crazy Wisdom, host
Stewart Alsop speaks with
Paul Sztorc, CEO of
Layer2 Labs, about Bitcoin’s evolution, the limitations of the Lightning Network, and how his ideas for
drivechains and
merge-mined sidechains could transform scalability and privacy on the Bitcoin network. They cover everything from
Zcash’s zero-knowledge proofs and “moon math” to the
block size wars,
sound money, and the economic realities behind crypto hype cycles. Paul also explains his projects like
Zside and
Thunder, which aim to bring features like Zcash-style privacy and high-speed transactions to Bitcoin. Listeners can try Layer2 Labs’ software or learn more at
layer2labs.com/download.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversationTimestamps
00:00 Stewart Alsop opens with Paul Sztorc from Layer2 Labs, discussing the connection between Bitcoin and Zcash and how privacy could be added through zero-knowledge proofs.
05:00 Paul critiques early Layer 2s like Rootstock and Lightning, calling many “not real” or custodial, and compares the current scene to the .com bubble.
10:00 They explore media hype, Silicon Valley culture, and crypto’s cycles of optimism and collapse, mentioning Theranos, FTX, and fake-it-till-you-make-it culture.
15:00 Conversation shifts to sound money, government spending, and how Bitcoin could improve fiscal responsibility, referencing Milton Friedman’s ideas.
20:00 Paul questions Bitcoin treasury companies like MicroStrategy, explaining flawed incentives and better direct ownership logic.
25:00 They move into geopolitics and
The Sovereign Individual, discussing borders, state control, and the future of digital sovereignty.
30:00 Paul explains zero-knowledge proofs, Zcash’s “moon math,” and the evolution from sapling to Halo 2 for better privacy.
35:00 The topic turns to drivechains, BIP300, and Layer2 Labs’ projects like Zside and Thunder, built for real Bitcoin scalability.
40:00 Paul explains why Lightning fails, liquidity limits, and why true scaling requires optional L2s with large block capacity.
45:00 They discuss the block size war, merge mining, and how miners and nodes interact in Bitcoin’s structure.
50:00 Paul breaks down the Merkle tree, block headers, and SHA-256 puzzles miners race to solve for proof-of-work.
55:00 The episode closes with how L1–L2 coordination works, the mechanics of slow withdrawals, and secondary markets in drivechains.
Key Insights