The future of money is crypto but I really dont think it will be bitcoin. At least on a national scale. I dont think bitcoin will disappear but a nations currency must have a tangible manifestation and must be linked to physical metals with a stable value unaffected by death cult fed bank constructs and manipulations like inflation. People already link their private keys to physical items but this needs to be an actual coin of some sort that is uniform across the spectrum.
A currency does not have to be tangible, nor does it need to be linked to physical metals. The reasons certain metals, gold in particular, was used as currency for so many years is because it has a high stock:flow ratio, meaning there exists a high amount of stock and a small inflation rate (flow) relative to the existing stock. Gold is very difficult to mine, which is why its flow ratio is so small. It unfortunately still has a 1.5-2% inflation rate, which, even at 1.5% is still a loss of 25% of your purchasing power over 15 years. Gold cannot be created out of thin air or easily created/discovered. Gold is durable and lasts many, many years with minimal wear and tear.
Because of properties such as these, gold has been an agreed upon currency for many societies. I say agreed upon because anyone can use anything for currency. I can trade you apples for goats if we agree upon it. Historically, many things have been used as currency until someone else co-opted it either by force, creation, or various other measures.
Comparing Bitcoin to gold, Bitcoin's inflation rate will be lower than gold's by mid-April of this year and will continue to be cut in half every 4 years until it hits zero. This alone is unprecedented. Purchasing power of the currency is preserved much better than gold. Bitcoin cannot be forcefully taken from your (if you're not absolutely retarded), unlike gold. Traveling with metals is incredibly cumbersome, especially with large amounts of value, and requires large transaction fees to move them (guards, planes, pallets, forklifts, smelting for verification, etc). You can transact with Bitcoin for fractions of a penny, instantly. Bitcoin is decentralized. To kill it, you'd have to kill every computer in the world that is running the software - all at the same time. No one can force you to use/run a different version of the code (which could potentially alter supply or other properties). This also makes it very durable.
Bitcoin removes the two essential government funding requirements: forced taxation and forced inflation.
Because of Bitcoin's absolute scarcity, which is unheard of, simple supply and demand drives its price/value/purchasing power. What this does is turn the world upside down. Instead of expecting the price of goods/services to increase year after year, the opposite happens. EVERYTHING will get cheaper every year - and we have been watching this happen since its inception.
Bitcoin is repricing the world and slowly limiting/removing government. It is inevitable. Those who say otherwise are simply uneducated or miseducated, which is not surprising considering the government has taught most people everything they know.
"It unfortunately still has a 1.5-2% inflation rate, which, even at 1.5% is still a loss of 25% of your purchasing power over 15 years."
Which doesn't track with the real world, see the "oz of gold still buys a nice suit in 1900 and 2000" argument.
"Comparing Bitcoin to gold, Bitcoin's inflation rate will be lower than gold's by mid-April of this year and will continue to be cut in half every 4 years until it hits zero."
Small amounts of natural inflation are good, the unrecoverable nature of BTC means there will eventually be 0 BTC available for transacting due to deaths of people with memorized cols wallets, destroyed HDDs, etc.
"Traveling with metals is incredibly cumbersome, especially with large amounts of value, and requires large transaction fees to move them (guards, planes, pallets, forklifts, smelting for verification, etc)."
People regularly carry around jumbo sized phones, take for instance an Iphone 13, at 6 oz that's $13,000 worth of gold, nobody regularly carries that in today's world. And somehow, they didn't need to "verify" and smelt coinage when it was pre-stamped with mintage marks.
"Bitcoin cannot be forcefully taken from your (if you're not absolutely retarded)"
Be honest with people about what that means. The keys to your coin wallet are EVERYTHING, and since there is no take backs on the chain, if your BTC is taken, you are FUBAR, permanently. The generally accepted practice for significant amounts of crypto is 1: fully memorize your 15-16 word seed phrase and NEVER write it down in any fashion, and 2: use a permanently offline computer to sign transactions. Anything else is open to compromise, despite being "absolutely retarded" or not
The future of money is crypto but I really dont think it will be bitcoin. At least on a national scale. I dont think bitcoin will disappear but a nations currency must have a tangible manifestation and must be linked to physical metals with a stable value unaffected by death cult fed bank constructs and manipulations like inflation. People already link their private keys to physical items but this needs to be an actual coin of some sort that is uniform across the spectrum.
Tell me you don't understand Bitcoin or money without telling me you don't understand Bitcoin or money.
So enlighten me instead of being a sanctimonious prick.
A currency does not have to be tangible, nor does it need to be linked to physical metals. The reasons certain metals, gold in particular, was used as currency for so many years is because it has a high stock:flow ratio, meaning there exists a high amount of stock and a small inflation rate (flow) relative to the existing stock. Gold is very difficult to mine, which is why its flow ratio is so small. It unfortunately still has a 1.5-2% inflation rate, which, even at 1.5% is still a loss of 25% of your purchasing power over 15 years. Gold cannot be created out of thin air or easily created/discovered. Gold is durable and lasts many, many years with minimal wear and tear.
Because of properties such as these, gold has been an agreed upon currency for many societies. I say agreed upon because anyone can use anything for currency. I can trade you apples for goats if we agree upon it. Historically, many things have been used as currency until someone else co-opted it either by force, creation, or various other measures.
Comparing Bitcoin to gold, Bitcoin's inflation rate will be lower than gold's by mid-April of this year and will continue to be cut in half every 4 years until it hits zero. This alone is unprecedented. Purchasing power of the currency is preserved much better than gold. Bitcoin cannot be forcefully taken from your (if you're not absolutely retarded), unlike gold. Traveling with metals is incredibly cumbersome, especially with large amounts of value, and requires large transaction fees to move them (guards, planes, pallets, forklifts, smelting for verification, etc). You can transact with Bitcoin for fractions of a penny, instantly. Bitcoin is decentralized. To kill it, you'd have to kill every computer in the world that is running the software - all at the same time. No one can force you to use/run a different version of the code (which could potentially alter supply or other properties). This also makes it very durable.
Bitcoin removes the two essential government funding requirements: forced taxation and forced inflation.
Because of Bitcoin's absolute scarcity, which is unheard of, simple supply and demand drives its price/value/purchasing power. What this does is turn the world upside down. Instead of expecting the price of goods/services to increase year after year, the opposite happens. EVERYTHING will get cheaper every year - and we have been watching this happen since its inception.
Bitcoin is repricing the world and slowly limiting/removing government. It is inevitable. Those who say otherwise are simply uneducated or miseducated, which is not surprising considering the government has taught most people everything they know.
"It unfortunately still has a 1.5-2% inflation rate, which, even at 1.5% is still a loss of 25% of your purchasing power over 15 years."
Which doesn't track with the real world, see the "oz of gold still buys a nice suit in 1900 and 2000" argument.
"Comparing Bitcoin to gold, Bitcoin's inflation rate will be lower than gold's by mid-April of this year and will continue to be cut in half every 4 years until it hits zero."
Small amounts of natural inflation are good, the unrecoverable nature of BTC means there will eventually be 0 BTC available for transacting due to deaths of people with memorized cols wallets, destroyed HDDs, etc.
"Traveling with metals is incredibly cumbersome, especially with large amounts of value, and requires large transaction fees to move them (guards, planes, pallets, forklifts, smelting for verification, etc)."
People regularly carry around jumbo sized phones, take for instance an Iphone 13, at 6 oz that's $13,000 worth of gold, nobody regularly carries that in today's world. And somehow, they didn't need to "verify" and smelt coinage when it was pre-stamped with mintage marks.
"Bitcoin cannot be forcefully taken from your (if you're not absolutely retarded)"
Be honest with people about what that means. The keys to your coin wallet are EVERYTHING, and since there is no take backs on the chain, if your BTC is taken, you are FUBAR, permanently. The generally accepted practice for significant amounts of crypto is 1: fully memorize your 15-16 word seed phrase and NEVER write it down in any fashion, and 2: use a permanently offline computer to sign transactions. Anything else is open to compromise, despite being "absolutely retarded" or not