LOYAL AG said:
Its Texas Aggies, dammit said:
LOYAL AG said:
Its Texas Aggies, dammit said:
LOYAL AG said:
Its Texas Aggies, dammit said:
LOYAL AG said:
Burdizzo said:
That is a great recap of landmark events during that period. The irony is that the 16th, 17th, and Fed Reserve Act were largely responses to progressive and populist desires to empower the people. Instead what it did was removed economic freedom and shackled middle- and low- income Americans to the Federal Government
Interesting to hear how it was packaged at that time. It's difficult to discern whether the people selling that vision were sincere and just spectacularly wrong or if it was deception. We've known the evils of central banking for a very long time so I have a hard time believing that was just a good faith effort that went poorly. Jefferson said banking institutions are a greater threat to liberty than standing armies. It's not like this outcome couldn't have been predicted.
At this point the entire world is shackled to the federal government. Unwinding this mess would be extremely painful which is why I have zero hope that we'll ever do so willingly. It's gonna collapse because we won't do what's necessary to prevent it.
I don't believe we shall ever have a good money again before we take the thing out of the hands of government, that is, we can't take them violently out of the hands of government, all we can do is by some sly roundabout way introduce something that they can't stop. - FRIEDRICH A. HAYEK
I'm not aware of any history at all where the currency isn't managed by the government. Even the most anti-government founders in history didn't try and create a currency separate from the government they were creating. Not even sure how that would work. Am I misinterpreting that quote?
Something with these characteristics might have a chance:
* Decentralized, peer-to-peer network architecture with no central authority or intermediary required for transactions
* Fixed and verifiable supply cap, making it inherently resistant to inflationary monetary policies
* Borderless and censorship-resistant transfer of value, operating outside the control of any single government or corporation
* Public, immutable, and cryptographically secured ledger that provides transparent transaction history for all participants
* Pseudonymous system that allows for financial interactions without mandatory personal identification
* Programmable monetary policy with rules enforced by code and network consensus, not human discretion
* Global settlement network that operates 24/7, requiring only an internet connection for participation
I assumed that's where you were going. How does that serve the 50% or more of the globe that doesn't have reliable electricity never mind internet? That aside the sad truth is we have no history of governments giving up mechanisms of control and Bitcoin will be no different. The UK just arrested a citizen serf for posting photos of himself with guns, photos that were taken in the U.S. Tyranny is on the rise globally and Trump is just a slowing of that trend here. You have Bitcoin because "they" let you have it but history teaches us that when they want us to give it up we will. Not all of us obviously but the vast majority. See guns in Australia and the UK.
You played dumb. I answered your question. Now you have moved the goalposts. If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry.
I didn't move anything. You offered up a solution that's wholly impossible to implement. A world run on bitcoin is a pipe dream from the side of libertarians that have no understanding of the world as it is. I didn't think I needed to tell you the proposed solution had to be possible but apparently I did. So try again. Never in eleventy billion years will the governments of the world give up control over their currencies to a level sufficient to let the global economy run on bitcoin. It's 100% a ridiculous assumption with zero basis in history to believe otherwise. There will be global warfare before that happens. So let's be practical. What are the options?
I don't know if it will work but I think it is the best shot we have ever had. It comes down to game theory IMHO.
The game theory behind Bitcoin adoption doesn't rely on governments "giving up control" of fiat currency. Instead, it operates on parallel tracks where Bitcoin creates an alternative system that coexists with - and potentially outcompetes - government money over time.
Governments have monopoly power over their currencies, but monopolies can be disrupted when better alternatives emerge. Bitcoin's game theory works through network effects and individual incentives.
As more people adopt Bitcoin: 1) its liquidity increases, making it more useful; 2) its security strengthens (more miners = more computing power securing the network); and 3) its value becomes more stable through broader acceptance
Each new user makes the network more valuable for all existing users - this is Metcalfe's Law in action. The incentive for early adoption is the potential upside if Bitcoin succeeds as a global reserve asset.
Governments face their own prisoner's dilemma: if one major country embraces Bitcoin for strategic advantage (like securing energy exports or attracting capital), others may be forced to follow or risk being left behind. We're already seeing this with nation-state Bitcoin adoption.
The beauty is that no government can stop Bitcoin without shutting down the internet globally - and even then, the network could persist through satellite and mesh networks. The game theory suggests that as adoption grows, banning Bitcoin becomes increasingly costly politically and economically.
Bitcoin doesn't need to replace fiat entirely to succeed. It just needs to become important enough that governments must accommodate it rather than fight it - much like how governments initially resisted but eventually regulated and incorporated the internet.