Bitcoin is just one crypto, the first ever, and technologically it's the most obsolete. It was just the prototype. Many other cryptos are clones of Bitcoin that just changed a few paramaters but left it mostly the same (like DOGE), but those are each their own networks and they don't interact directly with each other.
They also are not all controlled by the cabal. BTC for sure is, though.
The great thing that Bitcoin provided was the ability to transact freely peer to peer without relying on third parties. Bitcoin single-handedly made central banks obsolete.
But it wasn't perfect. Bitcoin is fully public and transparent, and so governments love it because they can trace it easily. However, they don't like the fact that they don't have default control of all private keys. That's why they took over BTC in 2016/17 and halted development which led to the creation of all the off-shoots.
The are many good cryptos, like Monero, which are fully private and untraceable, or that provide other features like smart contracts. It's a huge world out there.
Basically what blockchain technology gives us is the ability to eliminate human accountability and trust from financial (and other) systems. The energy consumed by miners is what ensures that no one can go back in time and edit transaction records. There is a fixed supply of coins and the math always adds up. That's how it works.
You don't understand what crypto really is.
Bitcoin is just one crypto, the first ever, and technologically it's the most obsolete. It was just the prototype. Many other cryptos are clones of Bitcoin that just changed a few paramaters but left it mostly the same (like DOGE), but those are each their own networks and they don't interact directly with each other.
They also are not all controlled by the cabal. BTC for sure is, though.
The great thing that Bitcoin provided was the ability to transact freely peer to peer without relying on third parties. Bitcoin single-handedly made central banks obsolete.
But it wasn't perfect. Bitcoin is fully public and transparent, and so governments love it because they can trace it easily. However, they don't like the fact that they don't have default control of all private keys. That's why they took over BTC in 2016/17 and halted development which led to the creation of all the off-shoots.
The are many good cryptos, like Monero, which are fully private and untraceable, or that provide other features like smart contracts. It's a huge world out there.
Basically what blockchain technology gives us is the ability to eliminate human accountability and trust from financial (and other) systems. The energy consumed by miners is what ensures that no one can go back in time and edit transaction records. There is a fixed supply of coins and the math always adds up. That's how it works.