A BTC centric economy absolutely is crucial for it to be a success. Otherwise 100% of it's value would remain speculative.. meaning that it could lose most or nearly all of it's value at any moment.
ac04 said:
a BTC centric economy is not a requirement for bitcoin to be a success. it is better suited as an asset than a currency. when was the last time there was a gold centric economy? you're also giving the US government way too much credit, they can't figure out whether to scratch their watch or wind their ass and somehow they're going to take down a decentralized global network? not likely. what is more likely is that states will lead the way on bitcoin legislation just like they're doing with marijuana. and there are numerous states actively creating favorable legislation for bitcoin.
as for the majority of people who desire to be governed ever harder, they will be the laggards who figure it out too late. just like they do on everything else now.
ac04 said:
again, it is extremely unlikely that BTC will replace USD and it doesn't need to. not sure why some of you are so stuck on that idea.
it is clear that you don't understand why bitcoin has value and you aren't interested in figuring it out so that you can continue with the purely speculative narrative. and that's fine i guess. but that doesn't make it true.
Quote:
the pro-BTC camp is buying what they think to be a commodity with high future value at a current lower value price
CDUB98 said:
As ac04 asked me earlier in this thread, does our conversation here in the digital space make it any less tangible?
TexasRebel said:
As in. Can you literally touch it? Sure. I can physically touch this conversation.
Because an oral conversation isn't tangible in an sense of the word.
You're asking the wrong question. You primary question is really about intrinsic value, not tangibility.CDUB98 said:TexasRebel said:
As in. Can you literally touch it? Sure. I can physically touch this conversation.
Because an oral conversation isn't tangible in an sense of the word.
Good gawd, y'all are hard headed. This is my last response to y'all. Y'all are dug in no matter what.
The point is that whether in real life or in the digital space, this conversation is just as real. Here on TexAgs, it is nothing more than 1s and 0s displayed on a screen. Bitcoin is the same.
I'm not a BTC adopter yet, but I can also see some relevance for it and be open minded. Y'all can keep living like cavemen and never adapting and changing. The rest of society will move on.
It's funny how you equate not agreeing with you as not understanding.ac04 said:
again, it is extremely unlikely that BTC will replace USD and it doesn't need to. not sure why some of you are so stuck on that idea.
it is clear that you don't understand why bitcoin has value and you aren't interested in figuring it out so that you can continue with the purely speculative narrative. and that's fine i guess. but that doesn't make it true.
TexasRebel said:
Weren't you the one who queried the tangibility of this conversation?
I got caught up in the hype and invested a medium sized amount a few years ago.aTmAg said:
Don't worry, I understand it, and I do not invest in it either.
TexasRebel said:
So now it's a horror movie?
hope you have some capital gains to offset those lossesSlyfox07 said:I got caught up in the hype and invested a medium sized amount a few years ago.aTmAg said:
Don't worry, I understand it, and I do not invest in it either.
Finally got tired of watching it circle the drain and liquidated last week with like a 60% loss.
At least now I can put that money into something that will grow.
Fwiw, I've said the same thing on this board as Brandon does in the interview (putting miners on nuclear plant, energy being worthless over time) and come to opposite conclusion specifically because arguments like his never address the base question fundamental value. All these ancillary benefits are cool and hopefully for all of us it works out but what is the fundamental value that necessitates adoption by anyone other than miners?exp said:TexasRebel said:
So now it's a horror movie?
Depends on how you think of symbiotic human flourishing.
Because it was designed to be money and it has shown to be completely terrible at that. So much so that even many proponents who used to claim otherwise now agree with me on it. Meanwhile it has no alternate uses. So that now makes it 100% useless.Buzzy said:
I'm just curious, why do you think bitcoin is a dead end?