| > Bitcoin never claimed to replace all uses of USD or gold If Bitcoin is not going to replace USD or get rid of the externalities of USD, then it is a waste of time to argue that Bitcoin is more efficient because it doesn't have those externalities. You are propping up a currency that is less efficient than gold and USD in terms of energy usage, and does next to nothing to prevent the negative externalities of those systems. > but it does reduce the total external costs in many important ways while providing the world with a powerful new alternative Bitcoin in its current form is not an alternative to USD, it is at best a system that complements USD, and I see no evidence at all that the existence of Bitcoin has reduced military presence anywhere in the world. You don't get to act like Bitcoin can subtract the negative externalities of USD from its environmental ledger when it is not currently reducing those externalities. > peer to peer, can be self-custodies, and has a fixed low inflation rate from now to infinity making it harder money than any that has ever existed. I'm not going to get into it, but I disagree that Bitcoin is P2P in the way that most people actually care about P2P; Bitcoin relies on a mostly functioning Internet, there is no way to securely make payments on the blockchain without eventually connecting back to the rest of the network and reaching network consensus. This is in contrast to what people usually think of when they talk about P2P networks, where information often does not need to propagate to the rest of the network at all. The most exciting work in P2P networks are in areas where constant consensus isn't required at all. I also think the inflation claim is ridiculous given that Bitcoin's price fluctuates wildly. And the inflation is not "to infinity", Bitcoin is set to eventually run out of coins on purpose. The inflation is set to eventually reduce to zero. Bitcoin is a deflationary asset, not an inflationary asset. This is actually one of the things that turns out to be bad for Bitcoin as a currency, Bitcoin has been a good demonstration in a lot of ways as to why a deflationary asset is inherently not particularly well suited for transactions. And again, by your own admission, Bitcoin is primarily a store of value, not primarily a currency designed to be regularly exchanged. If you want to talk about Bitcoin like it's an alternative to USD, then I'm going to criticize the fact that its transaction rate and per-transaction environmental costs are garbage and unscalable. |
I agree with this statement to date but in the future as Bitcoin grows in importance I believe we will all see a diminishment of USD petrodollar hegonomy.
> I'm not going to get into it, but I disagree that Bitcoin is P2P in the way that most people actually care about P2P
I wish you would get into it. To my knowledge most internet based p2p networks do rely on the internet. The internet allows for p2p networks that operate between any 2 players on the internet, effectively any 2 of 7 billion people, the very definition of p2p. What am I missing?
> I also think the inflation claim is ridiculous given that Bitcoin's price fluctuates wildly.
The inflation claim is sound and is based on the proportion of Bitcoin created per block not the speculative USD value of the created supply. It is like valuing the inflation of the gold supply based on the speculative nature of gold in USD fiat, rather than the gold supply itself.
> And the inflation is not "to infinity", Bitcoin is set to eventually run out of coins on purpose. The inflation is set to eventually reduce to zero. Bitcoin is a deflationary asset, not an inflationary asset.
I agree with this statement.
> This is actually one of the things that turns out to be bad for Bitcoin as a currency, Bitcoin has been a good demonstration in a lot of ways as to why a deflationary asset is inherently not particularly well suited for transactions.
This is a statement without substance that I fundamentally disagree with. Please provide evidence or back down on such baseless accusations
> And again, by your own admission, Bitcoin is primarily a store of value, not primarily a currency designed to be regularly exchanged.
Agree, but I did provide a couple examples where Bitcoin is a superior medium of exchange today than Gold or USD.
> If you want to talk about Bitcoin like it's an alternative to USD, then I'm going to criticize the fact that its transaction rate and per-transaction environmental costs are garbage and unscalable.
If you are going to focus singularly on the transaction use case, over the store of value use-case, I will call you out as missing the point. The only guarantee of the USD is that by design it will lose 2-8+% of its value per year, every year to infinitity. If you take the lower end of that at 2%, then over a 40 year average career, an income earner loses 40% of their income to an invisible tax. This theft is what Bitcoin’s deflationary asset backed system protects against. Infinity/21 million is better than 1/infinity (exponential inflationary money supply) over the long term. The only reason you don’t understand that yet is that you haven’t sufficiently studied Bitcoin. I encourage you to do so.