Gives me a new caption for bitcoin -
utterly worthless make-believe.
@tecate please don't be so totally predictable as to call me a Hindu Commie.
I don't mind you quoting central banks or authoritarian, freedom suppressing, surveillance states and you coming up with
utterly worthless make-believe as some sort of tar and feathering catch phrase, Duke. It kind of makes my point for me so I'll help you and bold it out.
I did think that it was worth highlighting that you've relied upon the Chinese - and it's not because they're communist. It's the authoritarian, freedom-suppressing,
censorship-loving, surveillance state that they're running that is just a tad problematic when you call their review of Bitcoin credible. You do realise that this is what you're doing every time you quote them in calling Bitcoin
'utterly worthless'? It's complete validation for Bitcoin Duke - because Bitcoin is the opposite of freedom suppressing, the opposite of authoritarian. So please do continue to quote them in your desperation to scramble some sort of an attack on the decentralised crypto.
As for your Indian friends, well at least they're just another garden variety central bank. Turkeys don't vote for Christmas, Tell me, how many times has India banned Bitcoin, unbanned Bitcoin, re-banned Bitcoin, unbanned Bitcoin, etc? Why is that precisely? If it's such 'make believe' money, wouldn't it be easy for them to stick with their first decision? Did they say, 'this is make believe money, we haven't changed our minds but we are unbanning it now'? Why would they do that Duke?
Also, lets not let the CBI get all the plaudits here. A shout out to the Indian government who recently added some penal tax on crypto transactions - a million thank-you's to it for driving the use of decentralized exchanges (DEXs). That's truly an advancement for crypto in India (and by implication, further afield also).
Of course,
Deputy High Priest at the Bank of England, Jon Cuniffe, must be quite the rare turkey indeed. But no matter. Whereas you have to 'have faith' in these high priest central bankers in their alchemy, I don't. Programmable decentralised rules-based money doesn't need faith in clowns that you wrongly put on pedestals.
Do you have any other marketing ideas for sovereign monopoly money? I'd love to hear them.
