Win / GreatAwakening
GreatAwakening
Sign In
DEFAULT COMMUNITIES All General AskWin Funny Technology Animals Sports Gaming DIY Health Positive Privacy
Reason: None provided.

Sort of wrong way of thinking. The idea of digital gold has been around for a long time, Satoshi was just able to put it all together into an actionable system.

What is digital gold?

What is the purpose of it?

What is Bitcoin? (Alternatively, what is cryptocurrency?)

Who benefits from it?

Who loses from it?

Who or what is Blockstream?

When did Blockstream get the keys (to what?)?

What does that access allow you to control?

How was Bitcoin strangled?

When did the banks go from against to then shilling to the moon?

What is a digital asset (in the context of cryptocurrency)?

Why is crypto treated more as a stock than as means of exchange?

What is Tether?

Who holds Tether accountable for their backings?

What is the Federal Reserve?

Who holds the Fed accountable for their backings?

No, those agencies didn't create Bitcoin and spawn this movement, but you can sure as hell bet they're doing their darnedest to sabotage and control it. They didn't create it, they constantly tried to downplay it early on and then when they slithered into control, then, and only then did they start pushing it, and crippling it at the same time.

There's a lot of cool crypto projects out there, but there are also a lot of scams and or pointless projects.

Look at Bitcoin Cash. Look at Monero. What are they? CASH. MONEY. GOLD. There are probably more, but these two projects seek to give the sovereignty of money back to the individual.

There's three scenarios that are most likely for the future of money, two of them involving crypto (real currency not some amalgamation).

  1. Fed collapses first and then people move to crypto to transact.
  2. People move to crypto to transact now and then Fed collapses.
  3. NWO gets its way, economy collapses and they bring about their currency chimera.

Precious metals are valuable, and will still be important for wealth building and security, but you cannot send silver or gold to make purchases across the world on the internet so that you can buy mugs and tshirts.

tl;dr Bitcoin (among many other cryptocurrencies) is (most likely) not the creation of any government agency, rather, the creation of an individual or group of individuals outside of government influence, who sought to give financial sovereignty back to the people after witnessing the corruption in the system for themselves. However, after a certain point and due to a certain series of events in Bitcoin's history, the powers that be have essentially hijacked the narative and are left unchecked as they continue to steal all value from the private individual to further enrich themselves.

No need to create when you can just buy the right people off and hijack the project a la Trojan Horse.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Sort of wrong way of thinking. The idea of digital gold has been around for a long time, Satoshi was just able to put it all together into an actionable system.

What is digital gold?

What is the purpose of it?

What is Bitcoin? (Alternatively, what is cryptocurrency?)

Who benefits from it?

Who loses from it?

Who or what is Blockstream?

When did Blockstream get the keys (to what?)?

What does that access allow you to control?

How was Bitcoin strangled?

When did the banks go from against to then shilling to the moon?

What is a digital asset (in the context of cryptocurrency)?

Why is crypto treated more as a stock than as means of exchange?

What is Tether?

Who holds Tether accountable for their backings?

What is the Federal Reserve?

Who holds the Fed accountable for their backings?

No, those agencies didn't create Bitcoin and spawn this movement, but you can sure as hell bet they're doing their darnedest to sabotage and control it. They didn't create it, they constantly tried to downplay it early on and then when they slithered into control, then, and only then did they start pushing it, and crippling it at the same time.

There's a lot of cool crypto projects out there, but there are also a lot of scams and or pointless projects.

Look at Bitcoin Cash. Look at Monero. What are they? CASH. MONEY. GOLD. There are probably more, but these two projects seek to give the sovereignty of money back to the individual.

There's three scenarios that are most likely for the future of money, two of them involving crypto (real currency not some amalgamation).

  1. Fed collapses first and then people move to crypto to transact.
  2. People move to crypto to transact now and then Fed collapses.
  3. NWO gets its way, economy collapses and they bring about their currency chimera.

Precious metals are valuable, and will still be important for wealth building and security, but you cannot send silver or gold to make purchases across the world on the internet so that you can buy mugs and tshirts.

tl;dr Bitcoin (among many other cryptocurrencies) is (most likely) not the creation of any government agency, rather, the creation of an individual or group of individuals outside of government influence, who sought to give financial sovereignty back to the people after witnessing the corruption in the system for themselves. However, after a certain point and due to a certain series of events in Bitcoin's history, the powers that be have essentially hijacked the narative and are left unchecked as they continue to steal all value from the private individual to further enrich themselves.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Sort of wrong way of thinking. The idea of digital gold has been around for a long time, Satoshi was just able to put it all together into an actionable system.

What is digital gold?

What is the purpose of it?

What is Bitcoin? (Alternatively, what is cryptocurrency?)

Who benefits from it?

Who loses from it?

Who or what is Blockstream?

When did Blockstream get the keys (to what?)?

What does that access allow you to control?

How was Bitcoin strangled?

When did the banks go from against to then shilling to the moon?

What is a digital asset (in the context of cryptocurrency)?

Why is crypto treated more as a stock than as means of exchange?

What is Tether?

Who holds Tether accountable for their backings?

What is the Federal Reserve?

Who holds the Fed accountable for their backings?

No, those agencies didn't create Bitcoin and spawn this movement, but you can sure as hell bet they're doing their darnedest to sabotage and control it. They didn't create it, they constantly tried to downplay it early on and then when they slithered into control, then, and only then did they start pushing it, and crippling it at the same time.

There's a lot of cool crypto projects out there, but there are also a lot of scams and or pointless projects.

Look at Bitcoin Cash. Look at Monero. What are they? CASH. MONEY. GOLD. There are probably more, but these two projects seek to give the sovereignty of money back to the individual.

There's three scenarios that are most likely for the future of money, two of them involving crypto (real currency not some amalgamation).

  1. Fed collapses first and then people move to crypto to transact.
  2. People move to crypto to transact now and then Fed collapses.
  3. NWO gets its way, economy collapses and they bring about their currency chimera.

Precious metals are valuable, and will still be important for wealth building and security, but you cannot send silver or gold to make purchases across the world on the internet so that you can buy mugs and tshirts.

tl;dr Bitcoin (among many other cryptocurrencies) is (most likely) not the creation of any government agency, rather, the creation of an individual or group of individuals outside of government influence, who saught to give financial sovereignty back to the people after witnessing the corruption in the system for themselves. However, after a certain point and due to a certain series of events in Bitcoin's history, the powers that be have essentially hijacked the narative and are left unchecked as they continue to steal all value from the private individual to further enrich themselves.

2 years ago
1 score