Great Awakening needs to hear this… because THIS is CRUCIAL to the GREAT AWAKENING!
(media.greatawakening.win)
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That’s like saying you have to prove Q to every ignorant person who demands proof yet has already decided not to give it a fair shake. We tell them to research it.
I’ve answered this question multiple times on GA, as have others. If he really wants the truth he will research it. If he does, he’s choosing to be ignorant.
Um, close but not quite.
Would you agree that, in order for someone to WANT to give something a fair shake, the initial interaction must be strong enough to overcome any preconceived notions that person holds?
Would you also agree that the strength of the initial interaction must be different for each person you present it to?
Doing a deep dive into any subject (including crypto) requires a basic desire to know more on the topic, because it takes a significant amount of time and effort to perform said deep dive.
So, the bottom line is that your arguments are woefully insufficient to overcome my preconceived notions about crypto.
So with that said, silver and gold have been money since the beginning of recorded history, before the internet, electricity, or even agriculture. No government or central infrastructure is required for me to maintain or spend my precious metals. No person, no government on the planet knows how much silver and gold I have, and it's impossible for anyone to ever find out without my consent. There's no node ID that can be identified as having a certain amount of wealth. When I make my transactions with silver and gold, no one except those involved in the transaction will ever know that a transaction even took place.
There are a ton of reasons I disagree with your assessment that crypto is the way, but the most basic is this: Crypto provides anonymity, but precious metals provide privacy.
Remember a few months ago when the Resident proposed giving the IRS full access to every bank account with a balance over $600? More than anything else, the cabal wants our INFORMATION. Who we are, what we like, what we buy, what we have, who we interact with, who we vote for....
Maybe to begin with, all "they" can see is a node ID that purchased a pound of weed on Silk Road. Then website xyz starts allowing you to use crypto to purchase their products. Now you give your node id to website xyz, along with your email address. "They" already know which human being is linked to that email address (thanks, Google), so now "they" have enough information to link you to that node ID. The fact that the feds found and arrested the silk road guy proves that crypto is not private. The fact that the feds have, on multiple occasions, confiscated crypto from still-anonymous wallets (they don't have to know who you are to confiscate your assets), proves crypto is not private. True privacy would mean the feds don't even know it exists, vs not knowing who owns it.
When I buy a pound of weed from my local dispensary with silver bullion, all "they" can see is that someone bought a pound of weed, and only if they get a court order to examine the dispensary's records.
For those of us for whom privacy is a paramount (rather than anonymity), crypto just doesn't fit the bill.
Really what we're talking about is salesmanship. You have a belief, and you're attempting to sell others on that belief. The problem is, from my point of view, you're a really bad salesman because your pitch doesn't address my primary concern. So, I don't see a clear benefit to investing any more of my time or energy into what you're selling.
You got a number of things wrong and we haven’t even got into the meat of it yet:
Tor said Ulbricht "made mistakes in operational security" and was caught by "actual detective work" rather than exploiting problems with Tor. Indeed, the FBI tracked him down in part thanks to an online post that linked to a Gmail account.
With Tor installed, the Silk Road URL directed new users to a black screen with a prompt for a username and password, as well as the option to sign up. All that was required to sign up for Silk Road was a username, password, and country of origin. "No other information is requested, and the country-location information entered by the user is not subject to any type of verification," Agent Tarbell wrote.
Though bitcoin transactions are tracked via a public ledger known as the Blockchain, it "only reflects the movement of funds between anonymous bitcoin addresses and therefore cannot by itself be used to determine the identities of the persons involved in the transactions," Tarbell wrote. "Only if one knows the identities associated with each bitcoin address involved in a set of transactions is it possible to meaningfully trace funds through the system."
Really? Out of everything I wrote, that’s your response?
I revise my previous comment - you must be the worlds worst salesman.
Go back to school, learn how to debate. You’re a complete waste of my time.
It’s funny you think you can debate when you got your argument’s premise completely wrong.