I worked for a wage for 20 years. I stored my some of my savings in bonds, which always provided a return greater than inflation. I stored the rest in stocks and real estate, which provided a return significantly greater than inflation. Then I took that savings and used it to start a company, which has provided a return far in excess of inflation. I could easily retire before 50 and want for nothing for the rest of my life, which in my family averages another 40 years. No Bitcoin required.
Bitcoin in no panacea for storing value to avoid inflation and there are dozens of time proven ways that already exist to do exactly that. As I've said before, Bitcoin to protect against inflation is a solution in search of a problem. As I've also said before blockchain has value in some areas, its just that its fanboys seem unaware that in specific areas like moving currency and protecting against inflation there are plenty of other solutions that work equally well or better with none of the downsides.
Jeff Booth is a great sales guy, hence his success as an entrepreneur. He's clearly never taken a macro class and knows nothing of macro economics, but again he's great at selling a book about why deflation is a good thing with absolutely no rigor whatsoever behind it. He does a great job implementing a sales technique that is probably as old as history. It basically goes like this. Imagine you walk into a Chevy dealer wanting to buy a 5 year old Impala to be a reliable commuter for your 20 mile daily drive to work. You end up walking out with a Corvette. How did that happen?
First, list a bunch of things that no one likes. Do you like it when your car won't start in the morning? No! How about when it needs expensive repairs? No! What about when it smells bad after you leave fast food in it overnight? Hell no.
Then he switches to his product and describes how it doesn't have most of those things. This brand new Corvette will start up every time the first time (forget to mention so will the Impala). It can be repaired at any Chevy dealer (as can the Impala). And it looks really cool and the chicks will dig it and it does 0-60 in 3 seconds and.... lists a bunch of things irrelevant to what you wanted which was a reliable car at a decent price to commute with. And forgets to mention the handful of things that the Corvette actually doesn't fix, like smelling bad after the fast food. Or the fact that it costs 10 times more and solves a bunch of "problems" you either never had or could have easily been solved by your initial choice.
And you walk away thinking how much everything sucked then Mr. Corvette man made it better and what a champ you are for buying the Corvette. And woe to the guy who points out you were kind of suckered into it, because no-one likes to think of themselves as a sucker.
Any time you find yourself thinking "yeah, that does suck" when someone is trying to convince you of something, stop for a minute and realize the technique they're pulling on you. Then apply that doubly when a sales guy tries to convince you of something that runs contrary to basic economics, by telling you its basically all a conspiracy of the world's economists, bankers, and governments.
So no, I wasn't convinced. The guy left me thinking how sad it was he decided he needed to troll gullible folks with faux theories that don't hold up to even the most basic examination instead of sticking to starting and running companies, which provides a lot more value in the world. And sad that there's an hour of my life I'm never getting back.
Great.
Michael Saylor video explains that you have an opportunity that other people from outside of where you live do not
Are you going to ignore that someone from El Salvador, or Africa, or Turkey do not have the same choices that you do in investing/saving their income outside of their highly inflationary system? Apple stock or Amazon Stock is not available to them, nor the US index ETF's
Are you going to ignore Simon Dixon explaining to you that debt-based monetary system is designed to enslave everyone by inflating away their blood and sweat?
Are you going to ignore the arguments made by Jeff Booth that given the technological innovation we've had, we could have been working much less hours today, possibly as little as 15 hours a week?
or perhaps we do not have to take massive risks as starting a business in order to make it out of the rat race early in life, maybe retiring at age 50 would be normal?
Bitcoin offers property ownership that is global and decentralized and if it's not for you, fine, but El Salvador has chosen it as a solution for them
For your sake and your family, you should consider tail risks of what ifs that could ruin you or your family's quality of life no matter how tiny that probability is, but I digress
Politicians from Paraguay and Brazil are changing their profile pictures to laser eyes and posting support of Bitcoin
The genie is out of the bottle
