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by MarkPNeyer 3261 days ago
> People like having a central authority that enforces laws around their currency.

I think most people don't give a damn about this or think about it one way or the other. It's too abstract for them to think about. Most people use dollars without thinking about what they are or where they come from.

> People enjoy the benefits of a dollar that doesn't fluctuate wildly in value

Yes, this much is true. Of course, if you hold bitcoin constant, you could claim it's the dollar that fluctuates wildly. If reality itself is unstable, than a stable currency starts to look more like a clever trick than something that is real and maintainable.

If you told people "the dollar is stable, but at the small cost of rapid centralization of wealth under the control of extremely powerful actors who aren't accountable to the law", they might see things differently.

What if all our political stability has, at its root, become a result of volatility moving out of the financial sector and into basically every other facet of human existence?

> . People enjoy the conveniences of modern banking systems.

I think you underestimate how much people hate modern banking, which does not give a shit about consumers. They're sick of paying fees to access their own money.

> At the end of the day advocates of concurrency have tried everything to get people to start using or accepting Bitcoin and no one has, despite no real government intervention.

I don't think you really understand the goals of this group. Many of these people don't give a damn if others use bitcoin for transactions, and they have no real interest in using it themselves. Yes, some people want it to replace the dollar in day to day transactions. Others are content for a store of value that has a tendency to appreciate over the long term.

> The market has said no,

Transaction volume has grown tremendously in the past few years. How is this the market saying "no?"

https://blockchain.info/charts/n-transactions?timespan=all

Do you think "there's just a bunch of greater and greater fools, all passing around a potato that surely will blow up any day now?"

It's honestly hard to understand your perspective here. If it's still around in a few years, will you still think it's all fools speculating? What kind of evidence would change your mind on this?

2 comments

> They're sick of paying fees to access their own money.

The average fee per transaction with bitcoin recently spiked as high as $5.5 USD. That is utterly absurd for a currency that is supposed to solve the fee problem that all of these people are so sick of.

See: https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/bitcoin-transactionfees...

The worst part is that the fees are only going to keep going up, the more popular bitcoin becomes!

Most people don't think about the value of the dollar or the conveniences of modern banking because it's become such a transparent part of our daily lives. That would very obviously change if it went away.

I also lament the "rapid centralization of wealth" but fail to see how Bitcoin or your worldview in general (as the opposite of a "Statist", I'm assuming) would do anything except accelerate this process.

Most people don't hate modern banking. Most people also don't pay fees to access their own money, except ATM fees (which are often reimbursed). This is a problem with banks anyway, aka the free market, not fiat. If banks are "too abstract for [most people] to think about" I don't see how they could figure out managing bitcoin, and would likely defer to private banking institutions for Bitcoin as well. Hell, they people already do store Bitcoin wallets in centralized systems, with often hilariously poor results.

Pro tip: when your arguments are to literally start questioning reality, you've lost. However it is refreshing to see a libertarian actually admit the sort of mental gymnastics their worldview requires.

Also, judging by the wild fluctuations in transactions day-to-day, I'm assuming this is all trading volume. I remember when a few legitimate businesses started accepting Bitcoin (Newegg, and uh.. that one taco place?) and I'm not seeing any real correlation where it should matter.

> Pro tip: when your arguments are to literally start questioning reality

Saying "reality isn't stable" is a description of the dynamics of reality, not a claim that realty doesn't exist.

> However it is refreshing to see a libertarian actually admit the sort of mental gymnastics their worldview requires.

I've yet to see any evidence you think would change your view.

The evidence that would change my view on this is simple: bitcoin fails completely, with a price going to zero.

Is there evidence that would change your view?

If someone found a valid use-case or actual market for Bitcoin outside of speculation that provided real value to everyday people. Or if the myriad of issues I've brought up had a solution and wouldn't just get worse with at scale. Until then, it's Beanie Babies with some cool math.

But I can also think in terms of hypotheticals and don't require Bitcoin fail entirely (or the USD to behave perfectly) to judge it, or tell that it's current value is tied to ideological and/or speculative wishfulness.