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by lgrapenthin
738 days ago
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There is a multitude of governments involved in Bitcoin with different incentives and strategies. If you claim "The government can do X to Bitcoin" you should explain which government(s) and how exactly that would work.
When was the FED a "democratically elected government", by the way? |
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They will put you in jail; withdraw your business licence and suspend your limited liability; deny your bankruptcy claims; tax you into oblivion; and so on. The state has every incentive to destroy a private currency, or a private army, or a private police force.
The only reasons states have take some interest in bitcoin and the like is that they aren't currencies. If there was any viable way of making ordinary daily economic transactions in BTC, it wouldnt exist. Inside the crypto system, "coins" are mere tokens with basically no ability to be traded for any goods or services. To buy anything you need to exist the system into an actual currency. So long as that latter step is required, BTC/etc. isnt a political project in the sense of this article.
"Money" isn't much more than a veil over the good-and-services of a society, an approximate quantitative measure of their marginal value. Governments require control over the money supply to manage this activity (eg., in pandemics) so they can, eg., prevent a widespread economic depression by temporarily exploiting inefficiencies the gap between the notional-and-actual value of money, giving people lots of it. Woe betide anyone who sells cars in BTC when there's a war on; you'll be in prision as a traitor.