Quote from achilles28:
Split hairs much? Technically, America is a republic too. Get over yourself.
Tuna cans and honey buns aren't swapping hands in prison at the tune of 55 Million USD a day![]()
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Quote from achilles28:
Likening an episode of OZ to 55 million a day changing hands proves you were dropped on your head as a child.
Go read a book on tulip bulbs and get back to us
Quote from Pekelo:
Anybody who hates offtopic material.You keep bringing up RE as an alternative to trading or Bitcoin using. It is not. I can start trading with a 5K account, I can buy BTC with an account of few hundred bucks. Can I do that in RE?
Of course not, so stop talking about it, it is irrelevant and offtopic. And being overly detailed is not helping either, who cares about the details??? You made money in RE, that is fully noted, we are glad about it, now let's get back to BTC.
Also if you want to talk about your son's bond trading, that is more interesting, but still offtopic in this thread....
Quote from gip3:
No, I'm likening it to the tulip bubble. The tuna can thing is to show you that 'bankless currency' is not in itself novel.
How about you (1) address the fact that most of the volume is speculative trades rather than economic transactions, and (2) how this is not like the tulip bubble.
I'm sorry - how old are you? You don't seem able focus very well.
Quote from Wulfrede:
I have to say, maybe bitcoin, being one implementation of a global digital currency isn't here to stay, but the concept is truly groundbreaking and will have traction. I think the Fed should heed this new development.
As far as trading vs transactional volume is concerned as far as being a defining characteristic of a currency, I'd argue that the USD is traded far more than actually used to buy goods. Think about all the money shoveled among the Fed and the banks on things like repos, etc. on a nightly basis.
/Wulfrede
Quote from Wulfrede:
I think bitcoin's appeal is that it is the first truly global currency with no particular owner or "backer". It can't be manipulated to fit someone's economic position and thus isn't subject to regional inflationary/deflationary pressures.
Quote from gip3:
Same for tulips right? No government 'owned' the tulips. You can grow it in your yard.
It seems to me that the bitcoin is backed by emotions (and hatred for the current state of the world) - much like achilles' outburst there.
I suspect people like achilles (and maybe you) do understand that there's little substance to bitcoin. But it offers them some feeling over control over what they see as a hopelessly world: sort of joining a cult. So they get very emotional invested in it. And when they can't defend the economics of it, they fall back to the political arguments, which are even more hollow.
I mean, if the world's govt falls apart because of monetary policy lunacy, do you really really think bitcoins will have ANY value whatsoever? In that case, we are back to guns, ammos, and cans of tuna fish (now there's a great currency).