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by throw_nbvc1234
1604 days ago
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Jon Stewart got an ex-Fed CEO to describe the US economy as a faith based system [1] when trying to get him to explain why the USA can't just "print money" to pay off the national debt. There's a lot of "trust us" in the foundation of millions/billions of peoples lives; ironically "In God we trust" is literally written on USD bills. I'm assuming the ex-CEO didn't exactly mean what he said but Jon's response is pretty relatable. HN comments are 'worried' that Tether (and other Stable coins) injecting money into the bitcoin/crypto markets are artificially inflating prices and makes the whole thing a scam. Yet that's pattern is the underlying premise of Quantitative Easing that kept the stock market from crashing (or inflated the bubble depending on your point of view) for the past 2 years. I'm open to a conclusion that both are a scam. I'm also open to a simple and understandable explanation for how these two approaches are fundamentally different from each other. But if someone's viewpoint is one approach is better then the other because a) USD has worked fine for USA up to this point or b) USD is back by USA govt and it's military, then i think they should realize that those are factors are not some unalienable truth that's guaranteed to continue forever. An anti-fragile system would consider hedging against them. [1] https://youtu.be/psSYiidw-v0?t=279 |
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So yes, USD, Tether and my poker chips at home do share a fundamental characteristic of any method of exchange, a subjective belief about their worth that is ultimately decided by collective agreement. That does not mean they are anywhere close to the same thing, or scams.