►
From YouTube: Meet Your Delegate | Ep. 8 Ft. ACREinvest
Description
Introducing two of the proposed delegates for MakerDAO Governance, PaperImperium (Chris Cameron) and ElProgreso (Frank Cruz).
Maker Forum: https://forum.makerdao.com/
Maker Chat: https://chat.makerdao.com/
Host - Payton
Forum - Prose11
Chat - Prose11
ACREinvest
Forum - @ACREinvest
Website - https://www.acreinvest.xyz/
A
Hello,
everyone
and
welcome
this.
Is
the
eighth
meet
your
delegate
meeting?
My
name
is
peyton.
I
go
by
pros
11
online
and
I
am
one
of
the
governance
facilitators
here
at
maker
dao.
It's
my
pleasure
to
be
hosting
this
meeting.
This
is
a
series
where
we
get
to
meet
our
kind
of
applicants
for
the
recognized
delegate
position
and
go
over
kind
of
their
platform.
Their
background
ask
questions
that
that
should
hopefully
make
it
easier
for
career
maker
holders
to
decide
if
they
wish
to
get
delegate.
A
So
this
call
is
for
acre,
invest
and
I
will
kick
it
over
to
kianga
here
to
introduce
yourself
and
then
talk
about
what
brought
her
here.
I
guess.
B
Great
thank
you
peyton
good
morning,
good
afternoon,
good
evening
really
pleased
to
be
here
and
super
excited
to
offer
our
platform
at
acre.
Invest
for
your
consideration.
B
B
B
I'm
speaking
to
you
from
hudson
new
york,
that's
in
the
hudson
valley
about
two
hours,
north
of
new
york
city
and
our
mission
is
to
regenerate
the
way
capital
markets
work
and
for
whom,
so
we're
focused
on
web3
infrastructure
tools,
social
incentives
for
dows
governance,
peer-to-peer
stakeholders,
you're
really
looking
beyond
the
horizon,
where
all
of
these
forces
in
our
world
right
now
are
converging
and
what
does
a
does?
An
interesting
business?
B
Look
like
from
a
legacy
financial
markets
perspective,
so
I've
been
in
financial
markets,
my
whole
career,
I
went
to
law
school
initially
and
worked
on
wall
street
and
particularly
have
been
excited
about
what
I've
seen
happen
with
maker.
What
I
see
evolving
in
the
space
from
my
earliest
days
as
a
lawyer,
which
was
the
most
fun
working
with
the
international
swaps
and
derivatives
association,
kind
of
thinking
about
new
markets,
both
from
the
legal
regulatory
but
also
documentation.
B
You
know
how
trading
contracts
and
standardization
of
trading
contracts
could
really
facilitate
new
product
growth,
so
in
law
school.
So
many
eons
ago
I
was
working
on
emu
actually
like
the
launch
of
the
euro
and
kind
of
all
the
implications
of
making
that
successful
the
early
days
of
credit
derivatives,
and
so
that
kind
of
collaborative
work
in
the
context
of
a
trade
association
really
was,
as
they
said,
sort
of
intellectually
interesting,
technically
and
I've.
B
I've
often
thought
you
know
in
later
years
how
how
much,
how
much
fun
I
had
at
that
point
in
my
career,
and
I
definitely
see
my
role
as
a
delegate
and
maker
dow
just
to
sort
of
draw
on
some
of
those
experiences,
so
we're
a
firm
with
our
three
general
partners
and
each
of
us
kind
of
has
our
our
passions
and
special
areas,
chris
lindstrom
his
here
in
hudson
and
involved
in
a
lot
of
initiatives
around
regenerative
economy
and
local
currencies.
B
You
know
he's
sort
of
in
terms
of
like
the
green
money
discussion.
That's
going
to
happen
next.
You
know
I've
learned
a
lot
from
him
in
the
year
that
we've
been
working
together
about
impact
and
regenerative
principles,
and
I've
been
thinking,
of
course,
in
the
context
of
blockchain.
You
know
how
these
two
worlds
can
come
together.
Our
other
partner,
nick
feinberg,
has
been
in
early
internet
infrastructure
from
like
day
one
and
runs
at
a
data
center
here
in
the
hudson
valley.
B
So
we've
got
a
lot
of
experience
and
capacity
around
sort
of
the
physical
internet.
You
know
structuring
of
support
for
for
the
stuff
that
we're
doing
in
the
cloud
just
again,
just
a
little
bit
context
about
me
and
my
perspective,
where
I'm
coming
from
you
know
this
is
how
I
got
online.
Why
was
coming
out
of
law
school
when
I
was
a
young
professional?
B
And
you
know
this
is
where
I,
where
I,
where
I
got
to
cut
my
teeth
at
85,
broad
street,
working
with
the
commodities
traders
and
later
on
at
lehman
brothers,
so
I
was
at
lehman
in
2008
working
with
the
energy
business
and
saw
that
implode
from
the
inside
and
so
for
you
know
a
lot
of
us
in
this
space.
Obviously,
this
is
a
seminal
world
event
and
moment
and
the
you
know,
kickoff
of
bitcoin
and
all
of
our
concerns
about
structurally.
B
Okay,
so
I'm
also
a
lover
of
internet
culture
and
I've
spent
a
lot
of
time
where
I'd
say
the
past
10
years
so
sort
of
after
lehman
brothers.
B
I
took
a
pause
from
wall
street
and
sort
of
try
to
recover
a
little
bit,
and
I
did
a
lot
of
work
in
the
art,
world
and
internet
communications
and
really
actually
have
to
credit
that
experience
with
helping
me
navigate
crypto
in
like
2017
as
an
as
an
outsider,
just
because
I
was
kind
of
familiar
with
you
know,
memes
and
and
some
surfing
and
online
channels
and
and
setting
up
accounts.
B
So
it's
you're,
pretty
nimble
from
my
time,
my
sabbatical
from
wall
street
in
the
art
world
and
my
internet
presence
as
as
such
as
it
is
now
I
like
to
share
and
talk
about.
You
know,
what's
happening
in
the
world
from
a
macro
perspective
socially
politically.
B
Well,
not
so
much
politics,
but
you
know,
there's
politics
underlying
you
know
I
think
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we're
doing
and
and
just
to
try
to
make
it
fun
a
little
bit
more
accessible
for
people,
the
masses,
the
normies
that
we
really
all
want
to
recruit
into
the
space.
So
you
know
this.
This
meme
and
these
memes
amount
work
and
I'm
having
a
little
bit
of
a
delay
here
on
my
screen,
but
have
inspired.
You
know
what
we're
doing
at
acre,
invest
looking
at
disruptions
in
accessing
talent.
B
You
know
business
models
for
companies,
obviously
being
a
dow.
It's
like
turning
all
of
these
principles
inside
out,
so
one
of
the
things
I'm
super
excited
about
is
looking
at
the
whole
structure
from
a
perspective
of
the
governance,
and
you
know
just
how
maker
dao
can
operate
and
be
successful,
this
new
model
and
leaning
into
that,
and,
of
course
you
know
the
regulatory
issues
and
all
all
of
those
things
are
interesting
to
me.
On
top
of
like
the
specific
substance
of
the
collateralized
staplecoin
business
model,
all
right
here
is
a
diagram.
B
B
I
think
for
for
for
me
coming
to
hudson
to
establish
our
headquarters
here.
Just
at
the
beginning
of
the
pandemic.
B
You
know
really
helped
me
to
focus,
and
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
kind
of
outside,
of
the
virtual
realm
and
in
the
real
world
wanting
to
understand
what
are
the
problems
with
adoption
for
the
for
for
our
for
what
we're
working
on
you
know,
it's
sort
of
felt
very
strongly
that
in
that
moment,
as
we
were
shutting
down
the
world
supply
chains
were
breaking.
You
know
from
a
local
food
economy
perspective.
The
vulnerabilities
were,
you
know,
glaring
all
the
things
that
have
been
wrong.
B
You
know
really
began
to
be
much
more
visible
in
ways
that
you
know.
I'm
sure
all
of
us
on
this
call
have
been
thinking
about
for
a
long
time,
but
they
began
to
really
manifest,
and
I
felt
that
gosh,
you
know
if
what
I'm
focused
on
in
terms
of
crypto
and
decentralized
technology
doesn't
make
a
difference
right
now
in
people's
lives.
If
people
aren't
using
it,
if
it's
not
solving
problems
for
business
or
business
models,
then
you
know
what
are
we?
B
What
are
we
really
even
doing
so
have
been
spending
a
large
part
of
this
year
and
last
year
really
anchoring
in
place
and
we're
in
a
region
of
the
country,
that's
very
rich
in
agriculture,
but
small
and
medium-sized
farms,
and
so
this
diagram
was
kind
of
a
way
of
thinking
about
how
do
we
pull
all
these
pieces
together?
What
does
it
look
like?
How
can
we
use
non-functional
tokens
to
map
toward
real
property?
B
What's
a
new
model
for
converting
conventional
land
to
regenerative
agriculture,
so
many
of
these
projects
that
will
have
the
kind
of
impact
that
we
many
people
love
to
see
in
the
world.
Just
don't
have
a
functioning
business
model
and
seems
like
what
we're
doing
in
crypto.
I'm
always
talking
to
people,
and
you
know
they're
like
they're.
These
problems
like
this
doesn't
work.
I'm
like
hey,
I'm
hearing
about
blockchain,
hey,
you
know
what
do
you
know
about
crypto
and
they're
like
what's
that?
B
What's
that
all
about,
and
so
again
it's
like,
I
was
like
okay.
I
can't
just
keep
talking
about
the
potential
like,
let's
see
if
we
can
actually
build
a
product
that
does
all
this.
So
that's
given
birth
to
acre
dows,
which
just
literally
launched
a
week
ago,
very
new
portal
that
we
built
as
a
sort
of
platform
or
structure
for
decentralized
impact
investment
club
and
we're
having
an
open
call
this
month
and
inviting
anyone.
B
For
you
know
the
inherited
wealth
generation
next
generation
like
our
partner,
chris
or
folks,
who
may
have
you
know
thousand
dollars
at
the
end
of
the
year
or
even
less,
that's,
what's
beautiful
about
the
tokens
and
the
token
technology,
but
that
this
is
a
community
for
all
of
those
folks
to
come
together
and
workshop.
B
What
you
know
how
to
make
compliant
investments.
What
the
tools
are-
and
I
definitely
see
you
know,
maker
dao
is
like
so
core
and
have
thought
a
lot
about
how
the
dye
currency
and
other
the
mechanisms
could
somehow
integrate.
With
this
with
this
real
world
vision
that
we
have
just
related
to
that,
there's
a
secondary
sort
of
sponsorship,
pool
that
we've
also
launched
and
using
you
know,
the
newest
tools
in
web3.
B
This
is
like
the
juicebox
platform
that
was
made
famous
by
constitution
dao,
and
I
was
following
that
with
just
glee
and
amazement,
and
so
you
know
this
moment
is
extraordinary
and
I'm
just
thrilled
to
have
the
capacity
now
and
it's
very
aligned
with
our
overall
interest
as
a
firm
in
serving
decentralized
communities
and
figuring
out
the
governance
question,
delivering
investment
products,
and
hopefully
drawing
on
this
community
of
members
within
acre
dows,
to
like
also
expand
our
capacity
right
so
that
it's
not
just
us
as
a
firm.
B
So
I've
been
like
excited
to
dig
in
on
the
source
code
trial
that
that
maker's
been
experimenting
with
we're
implementing
that
as
well
on
acre
dowels
and
even
I'm
proud
to
say
that
one
of
our
early
founding
members,
who's
just
joined
that
community
has
taken
a
real
big
interest
in
maker
dow,
and
I've
been
talking
to
that
person
about,
potentially
you
know
also
contributing
just
by
learning
and
that
they
will
be
able
to
earn
acres
within
the
acredown
platform
for
any
time
that
they
spend
on
something
like
this,
and
that
you
know,
there's
a
huge
pool
of
talent
that
this
person's
already
working
a
young
person
working
in
credit
on
wall
street,
and
I
mean
my
my
view-
is
like
this-
is
much
more
interesting
like
this
product.
B
B
So
I
I
just
want
to
you
know
definitely
like
bring
all
that
we're
doing
to
bear
personally
in
terms
of
delegation.
You
know
I'm
the
person
making
doing
the
voting
and
making
the
decisions.
I
want
to
listen
to
everyone
in
the
maker
community
and
others
that
I
may
be
able
to
recruit
to
follow
along
and
participate,
but
in
terms
of
so,
I
think
it's
a
little
bit
best
of
both
worlds.
B
We
have
some
some
of
the
support
of
an
institution
and
acting
as
an
institution,
but
there's
not
like
an
internal
kind
of
yeah,
like
I'm,
I'm
the
monarch
as
far
as
some,
what
the
actual
votes
are
going
to
be
and
we'll
see
how
how
that
may
evolve
over
time.
B
A
A
Excellent
well
so,
in
your
delegate
platform
you
mentioned
that,
like
compliance
is
one
of
your
three
like
kind
of
top
areas
and
in
the
presentation
just
now,
a
lot
of
stuff
kind
of
pertaining
to
real
world
assets
and
tokenization
of
those.
So
I
was
curious.
A
B
Yes,
it's
a
hugely
important
issue
and
it
ties
in
with
my
other
value
creativity,
because
I
think,
for
all
of
this
to
succeed
in
the
world
really
needs
us
to
succeed.
B
We
are
in
a
larger
context
of
a
tradify
world
and
in
order
to
scale
you
know,
we
need
to
think.
Through
I
mean
these
are
my
views
obviously
think
through
the
existing
regulatory
framework
and
what
what
how
we're
building
will
be
characterized
by
that
legacy
system,
either
sort
of
factually
or
from
a
legal
perspective
or
even
just
sort
of
politically
like
right.
Now,
I
think
there's
there's
congressional
hearings
here
in
the
states
about
stable
coins
and
the
issuers
of
stable
coins,
and
what
I
see
is
a
convergence
of
our
banking
rules.
B
You
know
or
banks
looking
or
this
is
this
sort
of
merger.
That's
eventually,
I
think,
just
going
to
happen
so
there's
a
there's,
a
lot
that
I
see
will
happen,
and
so
the
creativity
is
about
like
being
thoughtful
and
nav
and
structuring
being
very
careful
about
our
words,
thinking
about
the
framing
of
what
we're
doing
in
a
way
that
has
like
kind
of
a
clearer
path
forward,
potentially
or
at
least
preserve
certain
arguments
that
align
with
how
we
want
our
space
to
be
viewed.
B
It's
sort
of
like
some
of
the
earliest
work
that
I
did
in
credit
derivatives
as
an
intern
in
law.
School
met
with
the
central
bank
of
france
met
with
the
bank
of
england
met
with
members
of
the
fed,
and
the
argument
at
the
time
was
that
credit
derivatives
should
be
regulated
because
they're
not
insurance,
right,
their
risk,
they're
sort
of
so
that
you
know,
there's
a
trade
association.
That's
you
know,
has
an
army
of
lawyers
and
a
staff.
That's
writing
position
papers.
B
That's
making
a
legal
argument
that
excludes
our
activity
from
either
excludes
it
or
exempts
it,
and
so
this
is
how
the
derivatives
industries
been
so
successful.
When
I
started
it
was
largely
unregulated.
B
You
know
that's
changed
a
lot
since
2008,
but
there's
always
an
analysis
right,
there's
always
like
an
argument,
so
I
so
I
would
just
be
very,
very,
very
engaged
and
involved
in
thinking
about
you
know
all
the
potential
roadblocks
and
the
sort
of
threats
potentially
and
anticipating
how
we
can
shape
and
define
and
and
language
all
of
our
actions
and
that
that
may
not
solve
all
of
the
issues.
At
the
end
of
there's
gonna
be
some
litigation.
B
There's
gonna
be
new
laws
are
gonna,
be
cases
to
make
a
kind
of
new
law.
We
need
new
precedents
because
what's
happening
is
unprecedented,
so
compliance
is
very
much
like
a
friend
of
what
we
all
want.
I
know
there's
other
views
and
I
think
there's
still
such
an
important
role
for
being
anon
is
an
important
role
for,
like
you
know,
not
worrying
about
the
rules,
and
we
have
to
be
also
careful
because
we're
we
want
we're
doing
something
different.
B
B
A
Yeah
appreciate
the
response
there
and
very
neat
to
kind
of
have
that
credit
derivatives
background.
C
Ready
and
yeah
go
for
it.
I'm
sorry
all
right,
hey
kianga!
Thank
you
for
for
making
this
presentation
and
nice
to
meet
you.
I
was
just
wondering
with
your
background,
how
you
felt
about
delegates
having
the
ability
to
go
up
to
washington,
dc
or
travel
down
to
washington
dc
in
your
case
and
kind
of
do
some
lobbying
work
or
what's
your
thought
on
lobbying,
you
know
being
that
you
have
a
background
and
I
I
believe
you
you
mentioned
you
were
a
member
or
maybe
not
of
asda.
B
C
B
Sure
I
would
say
yeah,
it
was
a.
I
was
a
lawyer
for
ista,
so
I
was
an
attorney
and
sort
of
outside
counsel
for
a
trade
association,
and
I
think
the
the
question
of
lobbying
is
I'm
not
an
expert.
That's
a
that's!
There's
a
lot
of
rules
around
that
activity,
so
I'm
not
sure
something
I
will.
I
will
think
a
lot
about
in
terms
of
the
delegate
role
and
what
exactly
that
would
mean
and
whether
it
actually
would
be
appropriate
for
delegates
to
be
lobbying.
I'm
not
my
initial
thought
isn't.
B
Maybe
maybe
not
I
I
think,
but
that
overall
a
way
that
I
plan
to
hopefully
contribute
to
that
is
through
my
blogging.
Writing
I
mean
I
I
like
to,
and
I
sort
of
have
to
turn
up
the
dial
on
this.
But
it's
a
big
part
of
what
I
want
to
do
in
this
role
is
communicate,
communicate
to
the
a
little
bit
more
of
a
general
audience
about.
B
What's
what's
happening
in
in
non-technical
terms
and
potentially
just
sort
of
putting
that
kind
of
perspective
out
into
the
world
in
an
indirect
way,
can
help
influence
policy
makers
or
those
close
to
the
policy
makers,
because
absolutely
the
dialogue
has
to
occur
at
that
level,
not
sure
again
and
I'm
mindful
of
the
time,
if
that's
the
appropriate
role
for
a
delegate-
and
I
want
to
address
julian's
question
in
the
chat
about
of
how
maker
works,
I'm
learning
I'm
learning
fast
and
we're
fast
liner,
I'm
definitely
going
to
spend
the
holidays.
B
You
know
absorbing
all
all
the
details
and
nuances,
so
you
know
give
us
another
couple
weeks
and
then
by
the
new
year
you'll
see
us,
you
know
kind
of
really
start
to
engage
and
participate.
B
I
think
it's
luckily
a
good
time,
because
I
know
some
things
are
slowing
down
for
the
holidays,
but
I
think
just
last
thing
I
wanted
to
say
I
mean
there
were
some
conversations
last
week
about
you
know:
sharing
power
incentives
skin
in
the
game,
the
different
communities
or
stakeholders
in
maker,
not
all
of
whom
have
sort
of
maker
token
power,
or
I
I'd
love
to
just
continue
to
talk,
and
I
have
some
thoughts
that
I
will
share
in
the
forum
about
how
we
can
think
more
broadly
about
what
skin
in
the
game
means
and
that
whether
the
delegates
having
significant
maker
tokens,
is
and
and
are
aligned
in
terms
of
the
pro
the
short-term
profit
or
or
value
of
the
token.
B
You
know
how
that
might
potentially
be
unhelpful
in
terms
of
having
objective
views
on
voting
that
look
at
the
long-term
value
or
that
look
at
the
the
things
that
might
benefit
other
people
in
the
ecosystem.
That
you
know
may,
in
the
short
term,
not
be
something
that
those
who
have
large
holdings
of
the
token
might
might
like.
B
So
I'd
like
to
contribute
to
thinking
about
these
incentives
and
not
so
much
power
sharing,
but
how
to
change
some
of
the
dynamics
so
that,
regardless
of
your
that
there's
different
ways,
power
can
be
levered
in
the
system.
That's
appropriate!
That
gives
that
kind
of
wonderful
balance.
That
satoshi
was
able
to
figure
out
of
not
having
a
central
party
in
control.
A
A
Nah,
like
I
said,
we
started
a
couple
minutes
late,
so
try
to
be
fair
and
giving
all
the
delegates
30
minutes
awesome.
Seeing
someone
meet
there
yeah,
you
got
a
question,
perhaps
not
all
right,
so
I
will
fire
away.
Then
you
know
and
talking
to
you
and
getting
to
meet
you
you
mentioned.
You
know
how
wonderfully
unique
maker
is
in
in
terms
of
kind
of
being,
at
the
forefront
of
both
dao
and
and
and
all
these
different
types
of
building.
B
Yeah,
I
think
that
the
operations
model
is
is
key,
so
you
know
attracting
talent,
so
I
would
say
that
the
trials
around
source
cred
is
really
terrific.
You
know
how
people
can
be
compensated
monetarily
I
mean,
I
think,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
most
people
can't
afford
to
spend
time
on
something.
If
you
know,
if
it's
that
opportunity
cost
they
have
to
like
pay
the
rent
and
other
things,
and
so
we
don't
want
a
system
where
the
only
people
who
can't
afford
to
participate.
B
You
know
don't
need
to
get
paid
for
their
time.
So
I
think
that
you
know
I'll
just
highlight
again
the
source
cred,
that's
a
beautiful
model
where
someone
anyone
can
just
come
in
register
and
they
can
potentially
earn
something
or
if
it's
not
recognizable
without
you
know
kind
of
having
to
be
a
delegate
or
have
the
capacity
to
do
something
on
a
large
scale.
So
I
think
that
that
model
and
then
maybe
also
the
marketing
like
kind
of
communicating
this
making
maker
a
little
more
sexy,
translating
what's
really
really
difficult
and
complex
stuff.
B
I
actually
love
to
dive
into.
But
that's
that's.
That's
the
product
side
is
just
one
side,
so
I
would
say
that
he's
really
making
it
more
accessible
and
interesting
for
people
to
need
fresh
blood
to
come
in
and
engage
would
be
like
number
one.
A
I
know
and
thanks
for
sharing
those
thoughts
as
we
wrap
up
here.
If
people
want
to
get
in
touch,
ask
you
further
questions
or
what
have
you
what's?
What's
the
best
way
to
do.
B
The
I'm
in
the
discord
acre,
invest,
hashtag,
2401
and
obviously
the
forum
yeah.
Those
would
be
those
would
be
the
best
two
ways,
I'm
also
on
twitter
a
lot.
So
personally,
my
primary
social
tool
is
really
twitter
at
kdavrington,
and
I
also
post
on
instagram.
I
have
a
blog,
I
mean
if
you
saw
the
earlier
slides,
but
really
in
terms
of
like
the
delegate
work.
The
discord
and
the
forum
would
be
just
to
keep
everything
very
consolidated,
and
I
won't
miss
your
your
messages.
B
A
Safely
well,
thank
you
so
much
for
for
doing
this
meeting
for
letting
us
get
to
know
a
little
bit
about
you
for
people
on
the
call
by
the
time
your
next
meeting's
over.
You
should
see
the
acre
invest,
possibility
to
delegate
on
the
voting
platform
vote.makerdow.com
if
you're
watching
on
the
youtube.
It
should
already
be
up.
So
thank
you
so
much
for
this
and
look
forward
to
engaging
and
participating
with
you
in
the
community.