Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe that at this point people don’t understand bubbles and boom & bust cycles. OP do you really not understand this? Please stick to index funds until you get a better understanding of the basics.
Insufferable. Your post tells us all you dabble in finance and prob work at a defense contractor or some other lame bro job, but fancy yourself some sort of financial genius. Bitcoin isn’t backed by anything or any intrinsic value. It’s all BS and no rules apply.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe that at this point people don’t understand bubbles and boom & bust cycles. OP do you really not understand this? Please stick to index funds until you get a better understanding of the basics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have realized its value is for drug dealers and kidnappers.
Far more drug dealers and kidnappers use USD lol
how many normal transactions are done in BTC? - I'll wait eagerly for your response
Anonymous wrote:Crypto was built on hucksters and grift.
Lie: Bitcoin protects your money from the government.
Truth: Bitcoin can be tracked, frozen, and seized like any other asset. Failure to pay taxes is a crime.
Lie: Bitcoin will be stable when the US dollar tanks.
Truth: Bitcoin fluctuates like crazy and if the dollar tanks so will bitcoin.
Lie: Bitcoin is decentralized.
Truth: Bitcoin is far more centralized than fiat currency, with a third of all Bitcoins held by governments, ETFs, and MicroStrategy.
Lie: Bitcoin solves problems and if you disagree it's because you don't understand it.
Truth: Bitcoin solves no problem that isn't already solved by electronic funds transfer systems. The blockchain has some interesting potential, but digital currency is one of the blockchain's least useful applications.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have realized its value is for drug dealers and kidnappers.
Far more drug dealers and kidnappers use USD lol
But out of total supply of USD vs BTC, a far greater percentage of that currency is used for illicit activities.
You are funny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bitcoin is engineered money; a revolutionary innovation. It's here to stay and will only increase in value over time.
I don't tell people to buy bitcoin. I suggest that they learn about it and come to their own conclusions.
Here's a starting point, for anyone genuinely interested:
https://youtu.be/YtFOxNbmD38?si=_e94F5L1-yBZLk3A
This presentation argues that **debased currency** is the root cause of modern societal issues, ranging from rising costs to family breakdown. Using a fictional parable of two leaders, the speaker contrasts a **fixed monetary system** with one controlled by a "big red button" that allows for endless money printing. The narrative explains how **government intervention** through currency expansion leads to distorted prices, lower product quality, and increased wealth inequality. This process ultimately forces businesses to cut corners and people to lose their **purchasing power**, creating a cycle of dependency on the state. The speaker identifies **Bitcoin** as the real-world equivalent of "perfect money" because it is decentralized and scarce. By adopting this **incorruptible standard**, he believes society can separate money from state control and restore global prosperity.
I've always found this to be a strange argument by crypto bros when Bitcoin only works (and barely, at that) because it is constantly printing new "money".
Eventually bitcoin will stop being generated i think at 21M coins?
We are at 19M but will take awhile to reach end.
Lost coins are a real problem: about 4% of coins are lost each year.
In 2026, the number of bitcoins lost each year is starting to outpace the number of new bitcoins being mined. This means the "effective" supply of Bitcoin is actually shrinking.
As a currency, a shrinking money supply.
It will come back. Its like land, they aren’t making any more of it!
Anonymous wrote:Why did gold and silver crash?
Anonymous wrote:When it gets to half price it’s a buy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bitcoin is engineered money; a revolutionary innovation. It's here to stay and will only increase in value over time.
I don't tell people to buy bitcoin. I suggest that they learn about it and come to their own conclusions.
Here's a starting point, for anyone genuinely interested:
https://youtu.be/YtFOxNbmD38?si=_e94F5L1-yBZLk3A
This presentation argues that **debased currency** is the root cause of modern societal issues, ranging from rising costs to family breakdown. Using a fictional parable of two leaders, the speaker contrasts a **fixed monetary system** with one controlled by a "big red button" that allows for endless money printing. The narrative explains how **government intervention** through currency expansion leads to distorted prices, lower product quality, and increased wealth inequality. This process ultimately forces businesses to cut corners and people to lose their **purchasing power**, creating a cycle of dependency on the state. The speaker identifies **Bitcoin** as the real-world equivalent of "perfect money" because it is decentralized and scarce. By adopting this **incorruptible standard**, he believes society can separate money from state control and restore global prosperity.
I've always found this to be a strange argument by crypto bros when Bitcoin only works (and barely, at that) because it is constantly printing new "money".
Eventually bitcoin will stop being generated i think at 21M coins?
We are at 19M but will take awhile to reach end.
Lost coins are a real problem: about 4% of coins are lost each year.
In 2026, the number of bitcoins lost each year is starting to outpace the number of new bitcoins being mined. This means the "effective" supply of Bitcoin is actually shrinking.
As a currency, a shrinking money supply.
It will come back. Its like land, they aren’t making any more of it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rubes who would have been buying BTC are buying all things AI, which is also driving up cost of mining hardware and electricity. Lots of headwinds and no greater fools.
Expensive computing makes Bitcoin more valuable, because it's harder to make, not less valuable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have realized its value is for drug dealers and kidnappers.
Far more drug dealers and kidnappers use USD lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People have realized its value is for drug dealers and kidnappers.
Far more drug dealers and kidnappers use USD lol
Anonymous wrote:People have realized its value is for drug dealers and kidnappers.