- Banned
- #281
wintersoldia
FNG
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2022
- Messages
- 62
hopefully tomorrow is betterI have had a great week rough day today, though.
hopefully tomorrow is betterI have had a great week rough day today, though.
People over 60 had parents that were kids during the Great Depression. They grew up hearing stories firsthand of how bad hunger and economic conditions were. They’ve heard their parents tell stories about what happens when the banks and the economy shut down.But I bet that was bought by people 60+. For the majority, my generation (under 40) doesn't have any desire to buy gold or silver. There isnt a way to obtain financial freedom from gold or silver. Were in a time where things have to move very fast or interest is lost. Hell there are kids in their mom and dads basements that are outperforming wall street money makers. I'm all about investing in narratives and gold or silver aint it. My generation and younger will sell it as soon as they inherit it.
I'm very aware of that and the writing is on the wall that we are gonna witness something very interesting happen in our life time. BTC has doubled, tripled or quadrupled enough you can pull out your initial investment and not be over exposed. Over the last few cycles it was very common to put money into BTC rotate out after a few X's, put it in other crypto and 20x-50x your money. You could of paid off debt, retired themselves and their spouse or buy land. If you would of bought gold at the same time you would of lost money. And when (not if) things go down I would rather of bought land, food and ammo rather than gold.People over 60 had parents that were kids during the Great Depression. They grew up hearing stories firsthand of how bad hunger and economic conditions were. They’ve heard their parents tell stories about what happens when the banks and the economy shut down.
That’s why they might be inclined to buy physician gold. It’s protection against the world going to hell. It’s physical protection as much as it’s an investment.
Given the extreme fecklessness of our political and institutional leadership, don’t bet it can’t happen here. And if it does happen, are you willing to bet everything that electronic networks will be operating to the degree they are today.
In addition, I would make the observation that when one invests in narratives, one is investing in tulip bulbs.
You’d think the depression era kids would have passed on the information that the federal government confiscated gold near the beginning of the depression in exchange for paper. Gold remained illegal to possess, aside from collectible coins, for 40 years.People over 60 had parents that were kids during the Great Depression. They grew up hearing stories firsthand of how bad hunger and economic conditions were. They’ve heard their parents tell stories about what happens when the banks and the economy shut down.
That’s why they might be inclined to buy physician gold. It’s protection against the world going to hell. It’s physical protection as much as it’s an investment.
Given the extreme fecklessness of our political and institutional leadership, don’t bet it can’t happen here. And if it does happen, are you willing to bet everything that electronic networks will be operating to the degree they are today.
In addition, I would make the observation that when one invests in narratives, one is investing in tulips
I literally met with a couple last week and projected to gain them an extra $300,000+ just in social security planning alone. They will probably get a 7 figure benefit from working with me.
It isn't wise to pass judgment on people in online forums. (I'm not saying you aren't wise lol I guess that would be hypocritical if I did) The point is, if you had a conversation in real life with one of the 'doomer boomers' your opinion of their ego and their intellect would change significantly one way or the other and you can't predict how.It's obvious some of you can't get past your ego to put an hour of your time studying bitcoin.
But Bitcoin is actually a commodity... and recognized as such by the CFTCIt isn't wise to pass judgment on people in online forums. (I'm not saying you aren't wise lol I guess that would be hypocritical if I did) The point is, if you had a conversation in real life with one of the 'doomer boomers' your opinion of their ego and their intellect would change significantly one way or the other and you can't predict how.
For my part, I'm certainly not a boomer, much younger. I've owned, traded, and studied Bitcoin in a serious manner since 2020. I've come to the conclusion that it may or may not have utility in the long term, but it is not money. Only a commodity can be money.
I don't buy the distinction between specie money and fiat 'money'. I prefer the terms 'natural money' and 'counterfeit credit' when referring to gold and the dollar respectively. Bitcoin is also counterfeit credit to the extent that its promoters try to simulate natural money (golden token symbol, 'mining', "it is digital gold", "it will demonetize gold" etc.)
In my view, Bitcoin may have a future, but it isn't going to demonetize gold. It is very, very different from gold and humans will, accordingly, utilize it very differently, if at all.
Saying digital things don't exist is not relatable to me.What definition of commodity would include something like Bitcoins, which are non-entities?
They don't actually exist. The ledger exists, but the Bitcoins don't. The ledger is the real thing and it is a complex financial agreement/arrangement between many parties.
But, again, what definition of commodity would include a financial ledger, let alone the non-entities represented by the numbers on the ledger?
Edit: I've never looked up the definition of commodity but I'll take a stab at it:
Materials traded in markets or utilized in the economy
Materials exist physically. Bitcoins and dollars exist the way ideas exist. They are represented by paper or by numbers on a digital ledger, but they are ideas not physical entities
You are correct, electrons are in fact real. They are also free to anybody that wants some.Saying digital things don't exist is not relatable to me.
Does Rokslide not exist?
When you jump on a commercial airline and fly across the world does the code that lives on silicon chips that control the fuel nozzles in the jet engine not exist? Do you trust it? With your life?
Bitcoin exists on 100's of thousands of individual physical nodes across the world, It's mined and created only by expending energy in the real world on computers that are built and operated in the real world. Transactions are broadcasted to the bitcoin network over the internet. Is the Internet real? Electrons are in fact real and they travel on the actual digital gold that is silicon chips.
Gold is a shiny rock and nothing else. Its physical nature is what it has been manipulated and seized in every single instance over the history of developed human civilization.
The Bitcoin monetary policy is set in stone. It's predictable and immutable.
The equation is simple... Everything divided by 21 Million
Don't overthink it
You are right, I was wrong in saying that bitcoins don't exist. Thank you, sincerely, it helps me clarify my thoughts.Saying digital things don't exist is not relatable to me.
Greatest asset EVER to humanity?It's obvious some of you can't get past your ego to put an hour of your time studying bitcoin. Bitcoin has more applications than money. It's a beacon of hope and freedom. The price in fiat doesn't matter. Gold was money for 5000 years and you all sit at the corner stone of time were bitcoin takes over. Yet you refuse to learn and you sit and watch savages like me hoard the greatest asset humanity has ever known. If you're offended in any way with this post, that's your pride messing with you. Good luck to my fellow bitcoiners. And good luck to the doom and gloom boomers who refuse to learn. "If you don't believe it or don't get it, i dont have time to try and convince you, sorry."Satoshi Nakamoto. God bless.
Electrons in a useful form are not free. Bitcoin mining requires the same basic factors of production as other more familiar production processes: tangible capital goods (e.g., computers), consumable inputs (e.g., electricity), and human labor. The value of the inputs, however, does not determine the value of the output. Some would say Bitcoin miners are wasting resources doing the equivalent of digging a hole then filling it back in; others would say they're producing a valuable intangible commodity. I'm in the latter camp.You are correct, electrons are in fact real. They are also free to anybody that wants some.
Bitcoins are not “mined”. Bitcoins are really complex software algorithms moving free electrons through silicon based processors and memory chips.
Is your bank account a thing? Have you seen a stack of cash sitting in a bank vault with your name on it? Or are you just trusting some electrons on your bank's computer chips?There is no such thing as a “bitcoin wallet”. What passes for a bitcoin wallet is simply free electrons on silicon chips.