No, I am a heretic against the True Faith. I'm probably in the pay of the NWO or MSM.
And now we see the poor persecuted victim.And here we have two fine examples of narrative building and misrepresentation. On the first one, the guy takes a reasonable assertion and tries to pass it off as if its the Inquisition via smug, derisory commentary, bolting on more fiction with a follow up sentence. Will you be making up any more stuff that adds nothing to the discussion at hand today - or are you all done?
As for you Duke, we both know that this (in the way that you've bastardised it) is not what Ruchir Sharma said.
No. What we see is more narrative building and misrepresentation - with a strong serving of delusion and wishful thinking. So I'll pose the question a second time. Will you be making up any more stuff that adds nothing to the discussion at hand today - or are you all done? Because my interest is in the topic - not what you're going on with.And now we see the poor persecuted victim.
That was not the original link.As for you Duke, we both know that this (in the way that you've bastardised it) is not what Ruchir Sharma said.
As usual you don't give a str8 answer but I take it that, like me, you do not agree with $90bn man.$90bn man Richi Sharma" said:Down through the ages we have had changes in the international reserve currency. Before the US$ the £. Before that the French currency, before that the Spanish.
They last about 100 years. There is always something around the corner.
Unusually there is no alternative today. The Chinese currency would be the natural successor but nobody trusts the Chinese government.
So a window of opportunity opens for bitcoin.
It will need to make gains as a transactional currency before it replaces the US$ as the World's reserve currency.
I think it will achieve that.
jas I can assure you that our bromance has ended
That was not the original link.
The relevant bit is about 80% the way through.
My shorthand isn't great but this is as faithful a transcription as I could manage:
There is a false premise to your dishonset question. Maybe you should return to your childish comments about 'big jobs'.No. What we see is more narrative building and misrepresentation - with a strong serving of delusion and wishful thinking. So I'll pose the question a second time. Will you be making up any more stuff that adds nothing to the discussion at hand today - or are you all done? Because my interest is in the topic - not what you're going on with.
Nothing dishonest in the question - quite the opposite. Nothing derisory or smug in the 'big job' mention - it was an analogy related to the topic (which is where I believe the focus should be).There is a false premise to your dishonset question. Maybe you should return to your childish comments about 'big jobs'.
That's wonderful - we can now file that away under mutual disagreement.I disagree.
You can and very much should interpret information as you see it (but in this instance too, when it comes to your conclusion, that ends in mutual disagreement). And as I said, the analogy pertained to the topic (which is where the focus should be).And an analogy can still be a childish comment
So do you agree with me that it was childish to talk about 'doing big jobs' within that context?That's wonderful - we can now file that away under mutual disagreement.
You can and very much should interpret information as you see it (but in this instance too, when it comes to your conclusion, that ends in mutual disagreement). And as I said, the analogy pertained to the topic (which is where the focus should be).
Asked and answered -> (but in this instance too, when it comes to your conclusion, that ends in mutual disagreement).So do you agree with me that it was childish to talk about 'doing big jobs' within that context?
I can't see your answer so indulge me please. I'll pose the question a second time. Do you agree with me that it was childish to talk about 'doing big jobs' within that contextAsked and answered. (but in this instance too, when it comes to your conclusion, that ends in mutual disagreement).
I don't question the growth. I am questioning your assertion of exponential growth. What is the growth factor for the increase in payments?'Everything' about Bitcoin and its ecosystem has grown exponentially. I take the development of the tech such that it goes from 7 transactions/sec. to 1 million/sec. as part of that exponential development when it comes to payments. I take going from no payments to going to " to be part of that exponential development.
I don't question the growth. I am questioning your assertion of exponential growth. What is the growth factor for the increase in payments?
Also, you say that there are "considerably more payments" ... do you have any link / data supporting this?
In what way did I b*st*rdise what $90bn man said?As for you Duke, we both know that this (in the way that you've bastardised it) is not what Ruchir Sharma said.
finally admit? I do apologise if my responses are not landing fast enough for you. As regards 'admitting', you mean I expressed an opinion? lolyou now finally admit
I didn't and he didn't. I said talk to me if/when Bitcoin reaches a trillion dollar market cap. maybe it might be a contender - but pointless spending time talking about it until then. It appears to me that Sharma is taking a similar view. All he is expressing is that in principal, Bitcoin has the potential to fulfil such a role - but until it A. becomes less volatile (which he talked about and he sees as likely) and B. starts to expand market cap.) then I don't see it as a realistic option. That Duke is what I said.that you agree with him that bitcoin has a good chance to be the world's next reserve currency.
China says internet bad. China bans internet. China tries to suppress internet. Internet succeeds in spite of China.With the leaders of 3 billion people calling it an utterly worthless make-believe and everybody else in authority (except Bukele and whatever dude is in charge of the CAR) saying it has a very good chance of going to zero, that is one heck of an act of faith, on a par with any other cults' fantasies.
lol. Well, when your views are 100% ideological and 0% pragmatic, I'm not surprised you come out with this sort of tripe.that is one heck of an act of faith, on a par with any other cults' fantasies.
Doesn't look great for its chances of being the World's reserve currency, which is the current rabbit hole which I thought I had escaped from.@Duke of Marmalade : India has banned bitcoin, unbanned bitcoin, banned bitcoin, unbanned bitcoin, banned bitcoin, unbanned bitcoin. Probably by the time that I've finished this post, they'll have banned it and unbanned it again.
Same point, really can't understand how $95bn man thinks it can be a reserve currency with every central bank in the World against it.There isn't a central bank in the world that hasn't come out with bile and vitriol where Bitcoin is concerned.
I wouldn't have expected it but the cult wallowed in making such a find in the DG of the BoE.How would you possibly expect a central banker to have any good thing to say about Bitcoin?
If pigs started to fly I would think again about my advice to these guys who jump off tall building flapping their arms that it won't work. That was clever wasn't it? You ask the hypothetical - if bitcoin attains the attributes to be a world reserve currency would I change my mind? Now I really must escape this rabbit hole before I lose my way out.Answer me this - if Bitcoin reached a trillion dollar market cap and if Bitcoin became much less volatile (exactly as Sharma talked about) - in those circumstances, would you still throw your toys out of the pram re. Bitcoin being a global reserve currency?
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