| > If economic growth outpaces debt growth then it does not ever have to be paid back. Bernie Maddoff said the same thing. He also tried to create a perpetual motion machine. > Canada has been paying everyone $2000/month this whole time) Canada has been lending everyone $2000/month this whole time. > Bitcoin cannot and will not change the wealth gap when it’s overwhelmingly spoken for already. Again, you don't understand what bitcoin is, nor money apparently. People don't stash money away, not all of it anyways, and specially not when its inflation rate is limited (as in there is not a lot of excess to stash like right now), they use it to buy stuff, to pay for stuff, to invest in stuff, they enjoy it, that is why you want money in the first place! Money is, was and always will be exchanged, which means it changes hands. Odd concept, I know. > backed on an inflation schedule created and managed not by economists or experts but a narcotics smuggler and a bunch of random GitHub contributors. Yes, the "experts" managing the "economy" right now are doing such a great job. > just taking your ball to the BVI isn’t a solution. At some point, sooner rather than later by the looks of it, it will be the only solution. > If you really want to change society for the better, run for office, don’t shill magic beans. Weird advice from someone convinced we'll never have to pay back our debts. |
Bernie Madoff doesn't get to print his own currency, you see why that's different right? You know who does though? Tether.
> Canada has been lending everyone $2000/month this whole time.
Paying. Lending implies that it has to be returned, it does not.
> Again, you don't understand what bitcoin is, nor money apparently.
Incorrect, I know what money is for and how it works. I don't disagree with anything you said about money. What I disagree with is that inflation matters in that context. It does not. I also see Bitcoin as having been spoken for already, and it has. with a worse wealth distribution than a banana republic, which it has.
> Yes, the "experts" managing the "economy" right now are doing such a great job.
Inflation has been in a tightly controlled 1-2% range in the US since the 1970s. They are. So forgive me for not giving a bunch of un-elected, un-accountable randos with commit privileges and a narcotics trafficker the steering wheel lol.
> At some point, sooner rather than later by the looks of it, it will be the only solution.
Agree to disagree.
> Weird advice from someone convinced we'll never have to pay back our debts.
Who is "our" and why does one have anything to do with the other?