
In a segment, Fox News contributor Lara Trump —wife of Eric Trump, son of US President Donald Trump—interviewed Michael Saylor on the increasingly pivotal role of Bitcoin in the global financial landscape. Often hailed as a “Bitcoin evangelist,” Saylor recounted his initial skepticism towards BTC, explained why he ultimately chose to bet on it as digital gold, and provided a vision for how wider adoption could reshape economic systems, both in the United States and internationally.
Lara Trump Meets Bitcoin Bull Saylor
During the discussion, Saylor traced his introduction to Bitcoin back to 2013, when he regarded it as “an oddity.” It was not until 2020—amid what he described as an “existential crisis” at his company—that he turned to Bitcoin as a means to preserve and potentially grow corporate value.
Explaining his perspective, Saylor noted: “I realized that I was either going to have a fast death or a slow death or I needed to take a risk and transform the business. So what we did is we looked around for something like digital gold that we could purchase on our company’s balance sheet that would save the company and give us a future.”
Although MicroStrategy is primarily known for enterprise analytics software, Saylor pivoted to a Bitcoin strategy at a time of heightened uncertainty in global markets. This move, he said, was driven by a belief that the standard fiat-based financial system offered insufficient protection against economic shocks.
A significant portion of the interview centered on why Saylor considers Bitcoin a logical improvement on physical gold. He underscored the asset’s fixed supply—capped at 21 million coins—its portability, and its verifiable ownership through decentralized networks: “How do you make gold better? You make it digital so I can send it from New York to Tokyo in a few minutes. […] There’s only 21 million bitcoins—21 million forever. You can take it with you. Nobody can take it away from you.”
Saylor argued that Bitcoin functions less like a speculative investment and more like a savings vehicle—akin to putting money in a bank, but without intermediaries who can freeze or withhold funds. “What if you just wanted to take your life savings and put it into a bank in cyberspace that promises to never freeze your funds, that isn’t run by humans, it’s run by incorruptible software?” he asked.
He described Bitcoin’s creation by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto as “a reaction to the great financial crisis” of 2008–2009, when trust in traditional banking and government-backed currencies wavered. This historical context underpins Saylor’s view that Bitcoin, unlike earlier attempts at digital currencies, has successfully established itself as “sovereign money” outside the control of any single entity or government.
At one point, Lara Trump asked Saylor to clarify how he singled out Bitcoin among the sea of alternative cryptocurrencies. Saylor noted: “When I first started looking for digital gold, I saw there were 10,000 different crypto networks. […] What’s the winner? What’s the safe one? […] The largest, most valuable one appears to be bitcoin. Has it been copied? Can it be copied? Well, it had been copied 10,000 times and they had all failed.”
According to Saylor, Bitcoin’s market dominance and transparent monetary policy make it the “secure choice.” He also highlighted the singular moment when its creator, Nakamoto, effectively disappeared, relinquishing any claim to control or ownership. In Saylor’s words, “It is my gift. It is sovereign money.”
Saylor’s appearance at the White House Crypto Summit was also a focal point of the interview. Saylor emphasized the summit’s importance in guiding US policy to embrace emerging digital asset technologies: “If we want to make America great again, we have to do it with creativity, with imagination, with innovation, with inspiration. […] This administration […] believes we can grow and innovate our way to a better world. We can create digital tokens that 40 million businesses can issue overnight and they can raise 10 trillion dollars in order to engage in capital creation and innovation.”
Speaking on the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve order by President Trump, Saylor stated: “If the United States government begins to hold it in a strategic reserve, the beneficiary will be America.” Saylor also urged the creation of clear legal pathways for US companies to issue digital tokens, digital securities, and digital currencies—arguing that such frameworks would transform the United States into “bankers to the world.”
When asked what he would tell President Trump to do for the crypto sector, Saylor responded that the former President had already “done the first thing” by “highlight[ing] Bitcoin as a store of value, as digital gold.” But Saylor also wants federal endorsement to extend further: “The second thing is to support the creation in law of a legitimate path for issuers in the United States to issue digital tokens, digital securities, and digital currency.”
Asked about the future five, 10, or even 100 years from now, Saylor expressed confidence that major tech firms—Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon—will integrate Bitcoin custody and transactional capabilities into their software and services. He predicted: “I think that banks are going to embrace Bitcoin […] Families will increasingly begin to see it as their savings account. The yoga studio, the restaurant, the hotel chain—they’ll be able to raise capital in order to improve their business and to innovate.”
At press time, BTC traded at $83,226.

