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Interested to hear what your thoughts are on Jeff Booth's idea: for Bitcoin to stay a store of value it must be used as a medium of exchange moving forward.
He also qualifies this by saying that Bitcoin must also stay decentralized and secure.
I'm keen to get a read of the room. This could go many ways, but when I hear that message I tend to think about the progression of monetization and the functions of money.
Without MoE Bitcoin is not money. It is simply a speculative commodity.
This is exactly what the fiat debt slavery bankers cartel want- to see Bitcoin defined as a speculative commodity where it is both relatively harmless and can be easily captured and controlled.
They have already largely succeeded in this and very few Bitcoiners seem to even notice- dazzled by their speculative commodity gains perhaps- how easily the revolution was slyly diverted.
Sure you can still use bitcoin as a P2P payment protocol but fuck all people do- thus bitcoin is failing to perform the function of money and unless this changes bitcoin poses little threat to the legacy fiat power structures....that are based upon thier hegemony over MoE. Think of SWIFT as an example.
The stronger the bitcoin as a speculative commodity narrative grows the easier it would be to impose a ban on private custody.
The apologists say MoE use will follow SoV- there is no guarantee of that- there is certainty that without strong MoE use Bitcoin is more easily captured and controlled.
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35 sats \ 0 replies \ @siggy47 15h
Exactly đź’Ż
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Does real estate need to be an MoE in order to remain a SoV?
Ich don't think so.
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145 sats \ 0 replies \ @siggy47 15h
Real estate has value for its use: shelter, place of business, land to grow crops. What is bitcoin's use case without MOE?
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Tree OP 15h
Real estate has a liquidity profile. If the liquidity profile of real estate declines fast enough, then it will no longer be a good store of value.
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the SoV of course it's working quite fine without the lightning network
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61 sats \ 0 replies \ @zapsammy 21h
value to me means valor, strength, valuable lessons, knowledge. the money aspect of bitcoin is like a necessary evil, which is better than fiat money, but still not an ideal use case for living a good life.
i want the idea of money to go away forever. i cannot imagine enlightened beings with superior intelligence to ever need money. have the pyramids and cathedrals been built for money, or even with money? nah, there were probably other incentives at play.
at this time, in the age of A.I. bots, i would love for bitcoin to be more like a spam filter, similar to how stacker.news is trying to do it. then, a store of rare knowledge, which can be acquired by staying humble and stacking enough sats to get thru the paywall.
oh yea, a payment is not money. payment is performance according to an agreement.
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309 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 23h
It may be wrong but I hold the view that decentralization is roughly proportional to MoE usage. Running a node mostly matters when it comes time to accept someone sending me bitcoin so I can make sure that when I need to spend it I can send the best Keynesian beauty. If I’m not accepting or spending bitcoin, I’m producing no signal about my preferred consensus. So I run a node and try use bitcoin noncustodially wherever I can, hoping I’m adding my little part to contention over consensus so that when Bitcoin’s most valuable properties are threatened, I’m ready to “fight.”
So I think Booth’s reasoning goes: if we aren’t using bitcoin as MoE, it likely isn’t very decentralized, censorship resistant, and inflation resistant, so it won’t store value very well.
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Obviously wrong that SoV is under threat. Bitcoin works way better as SoV than MoE and always has. I don't see this changing until there's a significant tax exemption and I don't see THAT changing until the dollar fails.
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51 sats \ 0 replies \ @OT 22h
I like how he always brings any question back to "technology trends to zero".
Not sure I've heard much of Jeff talk about Bitcoin being a MoE.
I think it happens later where price has found somewhat of a range and the volatility goes down.
He's definitely right about Bitcoin needing to stay decentralized.
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I disagree with Jeff's Booth idea that it essentially must be used as a medium of exchange. During the high upward volatility in adoption, it is understandable that the MoE side of it is not in wide use. I do think it will eventually in upcoming decades be up for widespread adoption again, but first I think it needs to become universal measure of value (unit of account), when most people start to think in sats around the world, it also makes it easier to pay with sats instead. And I think the MoE think is likely to happen outside U.S. and dollarized countries quicker.
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45 sats \ 0 replies \ @siggy47 15h
I agree with Booth. SOV and MOE seem inseparable regarding bitcoin.
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @j7hB75 21h
I think maybe being a unit of account would make more sense to maintain store of value.
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37 sats \ 0 replies \ @zapsammy 21h
the word "account" always makes be think of the movie Count of Monte Cristo (1975).
the main character was not driven by money, but revenge. in order to bring his enemies to justice, he had to study for years inside a prison, gain freedom thru education, and then fulfill his mission. money was part of the process, but not the focus of the main character; others, however, were mostly focused on his wealth and worldly experiences.
how can people stay accountable if not by acquisition of knowledge of what is right?
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It must stay decentralized and secure, and its use as a MoE is part of that, due to the nature of the protocol: if people don't use it, the tx fees will not fund much security, which will undermine its value proposition as a SoV.
But if we put the tech aspects aside, assuming security, and only consider the monetary properties, I don't think an asset needs to be a widely adopted MoE to be a good SoV. Just the fixed supply and the ability to spend it permissionlessly are sufficient to make it a good SoV, because they're an improvement over other SoVs, and will siphon monetary premia from other assets.
For it to store value it doesn't need to be the money you use to pay for coffee, if you can sell it for something else (e.g. fiat clown tokens) and use that to pay for your coffee. If fiat on- and off-ramping becomes too much of a choke point, merchants can start accepting it directly. As long as people can sell it or spend it, it can be used as a SoV.
An example to prove that would be gold. You can't pay for coffee by shaving off a piece of a gold bar, but it is a SoV, because you can sell it.
Another example would be foreign currencies. The Norwegian krone is not widely adopted on this planet. No restaurant in NYC will accept it. But you can exchange it for dollars and therefore it has value.
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There's a big problem while considering bitcoin the MoE because it's always rising in value. The crooks want us to stick to the crap fiat because that keeps on falling. Choice is in our hands. If you want stay poor, don't use Bitcoin as MoE.
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek 16h
Spend and replace
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Earn, spend and earn again all the while staying humble and stacking sats.
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