Ban/cripple/hamper whatever......they simply need to make it hugely crippling painful to use and useless for crime & gambling......on ramps / off ramps shut down for crime proceeds..........taxes on crypto gains to put on foot with other assetsIf you can't answer my question, then maybe you can ask 'the authorities' to answer it. ...i.e. how does the G7 banning bitcoin/crypto fix the ransomware issue?
That's completely and utterly unrealistic. It would have to be shutdown in EVERY nation on the planet - every last one - with no exceptions. You have not thought this through - and more alarmingly, you're prepared to trample over innovation along the way. We talk about bitcoin - it's just one project - this measure that you're proposing would include all decentralised crypto projects -and all the use cases that they are being developed to serve.Ban/cripple/hamper whatever......they simply need to make it hugely crippling painful to use and useless for crime & gambling......on ramps / off ramps shut down for crime proceeds..........taxes on crypto gains to put on foot with other assets
So you've already said and I vehemently disagree with your appraisal. I suggest we park it up there.The value of crypto and its adoption to date.........has blinded folks like yourself @tecate i think who have a kind of utopian view of whats happening in this space really..........its endearing but ultimately your naive on how puss filed this space really is............my supposition is once the gamblers and criminals leave or are forced out of the network.........the true underlying economic/societal value that underpins 'the BTC network' is very low.......the gamblers, speculators and criminals abandon it......and BTC is back to a couple of bucks a coin.........I believe the experiment is being run right now and we'll find out in time
@tecate that interview (love in) with Ross Stevens was truly gut wrenching, I could only stomach 40 mins of it.
You can't help yourself, Duke....from the guy who told us that his plan is to have blind faith in central bankers and hope they can figure things out on that basis. The 'In God We Trust' cult.Don't tell me this isn't a cult.
FIAT currency has been purposefully and willfully debased since the time of the Romans (when they paired away gold / silver from the coins). In the past 12 months, many of the central bank high priests behind the leading fiat currencies have magic'ed up more $ than has been issued over the course of decades - combined. Are you also a holocaust denier because that's in this territory.Bitcoin is not volatile. Why? because anyone is free to use it as their Unit of Account in which case it would be the dollar that is volatile.
Once again - the Duke tries to defy proven logic. Bitcoin is perfectly finite. Gold is not. If the cost of gold goes up, then mining becomes more lucrative. If a gold prospect isn't viable today, it may become viable tomorrow should the price go up. We saw this play out with oil - with fracking technology having been developed as a direct consequence - resulting in far more oil being exploited today. If the price of bitcoin goes up, there is no way to extend the supply. Only a prejudiced crank would try to deny that.Gold has not a limited supply, if its price went to $100k the miners would come out in their masses and increase the supply.
Never said it had to be or will be shut down in every country - i AGREE that is unrealistic...........it simply will be choked off......the same way company ownership secrecy is choked off to a couple of backwater tax haven islands these days.....even the Swiss were pressured and driven out of their bank secrecy position by the G7 who saw its externalities for society......this movie has been played before.........take a look at the market cap of Credit Suisse .......to see what happens when a significant portion of your users/customers were scumbags and criminals leveraging your superior widget for the proceeds of crime.........the same faith awaits BTC / crypto equivalents.....99% fall in value from BTC's all time high is my bear caseThat's completely and utterly unrealistic. It would have to be shutdown in EVERY nation on the planet - every last one - with no exceptions. You have not thought this through - and more alarmingly, you're prepared to trample over innovation along the way. We talk about bitcoin - it's just one project - this measure that you're proposing would include all decentralised crypto projects -and all the use cases that they are being developed to serve.
(1) Is your supposition that Bitcoin/Crypto has ZERO incremental benefit in the masking of identify, as compared to cash/bank wires in the pursuit of crimes? Please answer.
and every day this week the authorities back me up
Then you understand that in no way shape or form will banning bitcoin/decentralised crypto have the desired effect that you started out with i.e. preventing it being used by those that carry out ransomware.Never said it had to be or will be shut down in every country - i AGREE that is unrealistic...........it simply will be choked off......the same way company ownership secrecy is choked off to a couple of backwater tax haven islands these days
You have not in any way thought this through. First of all, you're talking about a moving target. As regards the countries that it may be traded out of, how on earth do you think that the US or whomever is going to bring that about? Lets say you drive it to failed states - then what? The US are going to fix all those failed states?the same way company ownership secrecy is choked off to a couple of backwater tax haven islands these days.....even the Swiss were pressured and driven out of their bank secrecy position by the G7 who saw its externalities for society......this movie has been played before.........take a look at the market cap of Credit Suisse .......to see what happens when a significant portion of your users/customers were scumbags and criminals leveraging your superior widget for the proceeds of crime..
I expect an 80% fall from all time high this cycle on the basis that we still have not arrived at that all time high yet. However, my expectation is that this innovation continues to develop - just like it has done in previous cycles. Price action is price action. It does serve some purpose in reeling in new entrants into the eco-system. However, developers get their best work done during bear markets and it's building out the tech and eco-system that is of far greater importance.99% fall in value from BTC's all time high is my bear case
.......take a look at the market cap of Credit Suisse .......to see what happens when a significant portion of your users/customers were scumbags and criminals leveraging your superior widget for the proceeds of crime.........the same faith awaits BTC / crypto equivalents.....99% fall in value from BTC's all time high is my bear case
........take a look at the market cap of Credit Suisse
Well you didn't previously in this thread entirely agree with your new hero. You have admitted that bitcoin is volatile (down 11% today) something to do with a voyage of price discovery, I think you explained (please don't ask me to source). Ross states that bitcoin is not volatile, it is the dollar which is volatile. Have you changed your mind and now agree with the guru?For sure - it must have been incredibly painful watching for someone who has been diametrically opposed to bitcoin/decentralised crypto before he even approached said discussion 4 years ago. Somewhere within that discussion was mention of a 'beginners mind' - that's not something you bring your dukeness.
You can't help yourself, Duke....from the guy who told us that his plan is to have blind faith in central bankers and hope they can figure things out on that basis. The 'In God We Trust' cult.
FIAT currency has been purposefully and willfully debased since the time of the Romans (when they paired away gold / silver from the coins). In the past 12 months, many of the central bank high priests behind the leading fiat currencies have magic'ed up more $ than has been issued over the course of decades - combined. Are you also a holocaust denier because that's in this territory.
Once again - the Duke tries to defy proven logic. Bitcoin is perfectly finite. Gold is not. If the cost of gold goes up, then mining becomes more lucrative. If a gold prospect isn't viable today, it may become viable tomorrow should the price go up. We saw this play out with oil - with fracking technology having been developed as a direct consequence - resulting in far more oil being exploited today. If the price of bitcoin goes up, there is no way to extend the supply. Only a prejudiced crank would try to deny that.
All the same old stuff from the guy that when challenged to put the price of a couple of pints at risk on a wager re. bitcoin once again exceeding $20,000, all we heard was crickets. That's the level / strength of conviction you have in this nonsense.
You seem to be struggling with comprehension difficulties so let me help you out. Stevens is saying that if the measure is going to be a conversion from btc to fiat, then given that we've established that fiat has and continues to be debased since the time of the Romans, then of course there will be volatility.Well you didn't previously in this thread entirely agree with your new hero. You have admitted that bitcoin is volatile (down 11% today) something to do with a voyage of price discovery, I think you explained. Ross states that bitcoin is not volatile, it is the dollar which is volatile. Have you changed your mind and now agree with the guru?
You didn't answer my questions. I answer yours. Good night (possibly not in Dodge).You seem to be struggling with comprehension difficulties so let me help you out. Stevens is saying that if the measure is going to be a conversion from btc to fiat, then given that we've established that fiat has and continues to be debased since the time of the Romans, then of course there will be volatility.
I didn't - because knowing your past form on this subject area, I knew that there was a high likelihood that he didn't say what you claim or in the way that you claim. And sure enough, once again Duke you fail to disappoint. Are you so entrenched in your views that you can't help yourself?You didn't answer my questions. I answer yours. Good night (possibly not in Dodge).
These last two sentences from the article you quoted from, Wolfie:US inflation, reasons to be worried
Here is one for the CB cultists. The language in this says it all. But due to the life-long indoctrination, the faith, it passes for reasoned logical comment.
Not so much the commentator him but rather the comments from CB.
The interviewer sums up this theory by observing that “reproduction is important”.“Ross Stevens” said:We have a Darwinian propulsion to want sound money. Think of it with unsound money we have no food, no shelter, no mate, no reproduction.
The interviewer sums up this theory by observing that “reproduction is important”.
I kid you not Wolfie.
Another heroic try Wolfie. Believe me if bitcoin was the mainstream currency of choice we would be in a far far worse condition. We have learnt that a fixed money supply is not fit for purpose (meeting the needs of technology driven superfast growing economies) just as we have learnt that the horse is not fit to be the transport of choice.Yes I watched it. It was in the context of philosophising about money. What it is and what it does. He wasn't specifically referring to bitcoin with the exception of describing it as hard money (something that holds its value over time) being of greater value than soft money (that what loses value over time). Bitcoin is hard money.
In a modern context, in Ireland and other developed economies, no food, shelter, mate, reproduction, is manifesting itself in unaffordable housing prices, extortionate rents, negative interest rates on deposits, subdued wages increases, reduced family size, delayed family planning.
"Slumming it", the "long commute", living in digs etc, is no longer the preserve of the 20-somethings, it is firmly embedded into a significant portion of the 30-something population. That portion of the population who had realistic expectations of starting families etc are being put on the long-finger. Instead they are living at home sustaining the pension fund of mum for longer and longer.
By themselves, or even with a partner, they cannot sustain an affordable independent lifestyle that puts food on the table, providing shelter and starting a family.
CSO Average age of mothers
We have learnt that a fixed money supply is not fit for purpose
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