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1. Post 66830902 (unedited backup) (by justdimin) (scraped on Sat Jun 13 13:16:55 CEST 2026) in TradeFi advisers want stablecoins, tokenization over Bitcoin: Bitwise:
I don't find them as real threats. But it's understandable for some to prefer stablecoins when moving value across centralized and compliant platforms, even peer to peer transactions, or even across borders. For one, it's consistently cheap. It's also fast. Most of all, especially involving large amounts, the risk of volatility isn't there.
Yeah, this is not bad as those exploits that we read almost every day with tons of money that are lost. Besides, stablecoins were still a crypto and the other crypto may still benefit on them even if not totally direct. The facts that you spit there about stable coins were true but when it comes to larger amounts, we may get questioned too and potentially hold the transaction. So for this one, a lot of also prefers Bitcoin.
But if we go beyond these factors, which are basically about convenience, Bitcoin remains the better option. Tether alone has already intercepted billions of USD in transactions. Circle has also its fair share. Thousands of wallet addresses have been blacklisted, many of which considered arbitrary. Censorship is a huge risk Bitcoin doesn't implement.
This is what I am talking about but freedom is also about convenience I believe. Bitcoin is decentralized but I remember now that there were also some decentralized stablecoins. Then there should be decentralized and more private alts or tokens on the side, if they still have a reason to not use bitcoin.
2. Post 66830123 (unedited backup) (by SPIDERMAN008) (scraped on Sat Jun 13 06:29:50 CEST 2026) in Is expected value more important than win rate in sports betting?:
Why are we betting, in the first place? I believe sports betting isn't just picking who wins or who loses. It's not just about being right and wrong in terms of picks. It's about whether you're profitable or not. What's the point of winning 8 out of 10 when you're losing in terms of money?
If whether your guess is right or wrong is what matters, then you don't have to go into sports betting. You just have to make a guess. That's for free. But since you're staking money, what truly matters is that it gives you returns. In which case, it's secondary that you only won 3 out of 10. What matters most is that despite that, you're profitable.
You are speaking very realistically. In fact, gamblers see profit in the end. Because if they do not make a profit after gambling regularly, they feel upset mentally. Since I myself bet for entertainment with a small amount, then if I lose regularly and notice that I do not make a profit at the end of the week, then I also feel bad. And those who bet with a very large amount, if they do not see a profit, their mental state becomes bad. Therefore, it does not matter how many matches they win or lose, but if they do not make a profit at the end of the day, it really has an effect in real life. I have noticed that many gamblers are losing consistently, but they are hoping for a big jackpot where they will get all the money they lost at once and will be in a profitable state.
3. Post 66830090 (unedited backup) (by Kasabus) (scraped on Sat Jun 13 06:04:07 CEST 2026) in Is expected value more important than win rate in sports betting?:
If whether your guess is right or wrong is what matters, then you don't have to go into sports betting. You just have to make a guess. That's for free. But since you're staking money, what truly matters is that it gives you returns. In which case, it's secondary that you only won 3 out of 10. What matters most is that despite that, you're profitable.
But the question is, are many people really aware of what they are doing?
I mean, some are just running a business and putting in capital without even looking at the financial statement.
Many gamblers think like that too, and their way to justify it is, why would I check? I am just doing it for fun.
Business means being serious.
Gambling means fun.That
should (is) be their mindset.
4. Post 66830075 (unedited backup) (by Kasabus) (scraped on Sat Jun 13 05:55:44 CEST 2026) in Are “safe bets” really safe, or just overpriced?:
Otherwise, you won't have any safe bet.
But is this "safe bet" a real thing? ( considering you did all what you said).
5. Post 66829881 (unedited backup) (by Abiky) (scraped on Sat Jun 13 02:49:25 CEST 2026) in Vision for New Financial System Under Bitcoin Standard:
So, money can't be separated from the state? That's another topic, though.
Is it possible to use a new breed of fiat, centralized money that's issued by banks but backed by Bitcoin? But I'm not sold to the idea of fractional reserve. It should be backed 1:1. The only reason banks issue another currency is convenience. Fractional reserve, to me, is the new monetary system's road to perdition. But I remember even Hal Finney predicted fractional reserve Bitcoin banking. Perhaps I just don't understand how fractional banking properly works with Bitcoin.
Backing Fiat with Bitcoin has been an idea proposed by some governments for a while now. But for many economic experts, this would become an impossibility. Because there are only 21m BTC in existence, while Fiat's supply is much larger. For instance, the US has a $36T national debt, which greatly surpasses the current market cap of Bitcoin. Backing the USD completely with BTC seems nothing but impossible.
Instead of backing Fiat with BTC, the ideal solution would be to replace Fiat entirely with BTC. Like people relying on Bitcoin as a standard unit of account. But again, governments will never allow this to happen. At least, it's better to have something than nothing.
6. Post 66828613 (unedited backup) (by Rubuchi) (scraped on Fri Jun 12 20:41:14 CEST 2026) in Evil Vs good or both for a better economy?:
I certainly don't agree that "good is only valued when evil is experienced." Can one appreciate abundance only because of deprivation, for example? Or is it possible abundance is appreciated for itself? Is peace not beautiful in itself? Should we first experience the terrible realities of wars to appreciate peace?
I appreciate a better economy. Indeed, one reason is that I've long been fed up with the evils of a bad one. But I don't think a good economy is desired because of something evil.
it is in fact a dangerous analogy to use especially for leaders who are leading people to think this way. What one will be saying if it means that for every good thing that will happen, a bad would have happened or experienced. It is an excuse tl breed corruption, maladministration and all forms of bad governance and that's why I would totally frown against it in all ramifications. Meaning everybody who is enjoying now actually passed through some evil experiences and all who are facing troubles to say they must enjoy? Life on this earth is not a script, neither is it some piece of words written on paper. It is dynamic and works how it has been written or designed to work by its creator so any thing can happen to anybody anyhow God wants it to, more reason why you've been advised on several times not to envy one and the other because it will never change anybody destiny in life.
7. Post 66828606 (unedited backup) (by OgNasty) (scraped on Fri Jun 12 20:40:02 CEST 2026) in [Boxing]Tommy Fury vs Eddie Hall - June 13:
I have seen their face off, and Eddie Hall is not that huge compared to Fury's body. Eddie Hall is a lousy boxer. There are so many loopholes in his boxing skills, but Tommy should still watch out; Eddie's big arm can knock him out, but if Tommy imposes his boxing skills, it's going to end with a stoppage.
I don't think Eddie Hall can match Tommy's boxing skills.
Tommy himself is a lousy boxer. It's just that Eddie Hall is built differently. But, yeah, look at those arms. Those arms must be packed with so much power they could send Tommy to sleep. But the problem must be whether they will land perfectly or not. I doubt Eddie's speed. Other than his slow punches which I believe Tommy could easily dodge or parry, it seems he can only throw a handful of powerful ones. The rest would be as slower as they are much less powerful. Those arms must be heavy.
He will used a lot of energy early if that punch doesn't hit the target. Below is the video of the final face-off,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBpsCVv4JVQWe can see the different in weight and height. But it looks like Fury might have gain some weight as well. Eddie Hall is a boxer, he might be big, but it can work at a disadvantage in boxing as he needs to carry that big weight all throughout and it looks like he doesn't have that cardio to last at least 2-3 rounds.
I'm honestly not sure what to expect from this fight. Obviously if Eddie Hall catches Tommy Fury with a big shot it is over right then and there. Eddie Fury is pretty slow though. In any other type of fight I think he wins easily but I'm not sure if he'll actually be able to land shots on Tommy. I think this one will either go very quickly with Eddie getting a KO, or it will be a long painful fight to watch with Tommy winning by decision.
8. Post 66826618 (unedited backup) (by coinrifft) (scraped on Fri Jun 12 09:21:55 CEST 2026) in [Boxing]Tommy Fury vs Eddie Hall - June 13:
I have seen their face off, and Eddie Hall is not that huge compared to Fury's body. Eddie Hall is a lousy boxer. There are so many loopholes in his boxing skills, but Tommy should still watch out; Eddie's big arm can knock him out, but if Tommy imposes his boxing skills, it's going to end with a stoppage.
I don't think Eddie Hall can match Tommy's boxing skills.
Tommy himself is a lousy boxer. It's just that Eddie Hall is built differently. But, yeah, look at those arms. Those arms must be packed with so much power they could send Tommy to sleep. But the problem must be whether they will land perfectly or not. I doubt Eddie's speed. Other than his slow punches which I believe Tommy could easily dodge or parry, it seems he can only throw a handful of powerful ones. The rest would be as slower as they are much less powerful. Those arms must be heavy.
He will used a lot of energy early if that punch doesn't hit the target. Below is the video of the final face-off,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBpsCVv4JVQWe can see the different in weight and height. But it looks like Fury might have gain some weight as well. Eddie Hall is a boxer, he might be big, but it can work at a disadvantage in boxing as he needs to carry that big weight all throughout and it looks like he doesn't have that cardio to last at least 2-3 rounds.
9. Post 66824687 (unedited backup) (by Emitdama) (scraped on Thu Jun 11 19:33:55 CEST 2026) in The long perseverance of early investment:
Perhaps proper discernment is the key. I'm not sure if there are overriding factors in their decisions, but my observation is that most simply don't have it. Many investors are impulsive. Many just copy what their friends or workmates are doing. Many commit without considering other factors. Many don't even consider the long term. Some get the wrong timing. Others are wrongly inspired. Finally, perseverance isn't a skill most have. Even with Bitcoin, an asset that has more or less a solid track record, many can't hodl.
There is surely an overriding factor on why they decide to do that (sold early than expected) and I think it was mostly those negative factors you listed there. If not, then the case can be rare because we might have save enough money outside and the only reason for us to sell is if our money outside is still not enough to pay for something.
In a long-term investment, an investor can also liquidate their assets once it has matured already even if they don't need the money yet because they might miss the opportunity and then it does not make sense to just invest forever and not selling. There are still some factors that you said there that is not bad but it is only about preference and then nothing is perfect even though some already did their best.
10. Post 66822971 (unedited backup) (by Tręvoid) (scraped on Thu Jun 11 11:23:49 CEST 2026) in Escrow jurisdiction :
I'm sure such an escrowed amount comes with a detailed contract.
And if an instruction is given to the escrow that the fund is pretty much for all users who have valid claims, then the refund is probably done on a "first come, first served" basis, although it must be a pain in the neck for the escrow when he/she's holding only $20,000 and the first claimant has a valid $30,000 claim.
But I don't think it's wiser to collect all the claims first within a certain period of time before deciding who gets how much. It must be messy.
how would you prevent the scammer from reclaiming their own escrow fund via fake victims and fake valid letter of guarantee ?
11. Post 66822216 (unedited backup) (by Abiky) (scraped on Thu Jun 11 04:42:13 CEST 2026) in Vision for New Financial System Under Bitcoin Standard:
This is likely the case in the long term. Supposing Bitcoin becomes a mainstream financial system, it's likely functioning underneath separate layers. Bitcoin would serve as the base layer where final settlements happen. Bitcoin itself can't function as everyday money. Your cup of coffee gets cold before your payment is confirmed.
As to fractional reserve, I wonder why this appears almost a natural tendency when it comes to banking. Even the gold standard eventually ended up adopting this. If Bitcoin were to be adopted as a mainstream financial system in the future, would it also follow the same route? It might be the convenient path in the name of liquidity, but this is so susceptible to irresponsibility, abuse, incompetence, negligence, and whatnot that for me it's a bane rather than a boon to a new order.
You're right about that. The core Blockchain network can't function as everyday money. That's why sidechains and L2s were invented. To help solve the "scaling problem". I mean, they're not perfect, but they at least do the job when it comes to making payments at a fraction of the cost. It's what some merchants and businesses are doing these days. Accepting BTC payments on the Lightning Network. Exchanges are also getting on-board.
If we combine multiple scaling solutions, Bitcoin can achieve the capacity to replace the existing financial system. It's just that governments won't allow something as decentralized as Bitcoin to take over the economy. The world is and will always be dependable on Fiat as the standard unit of account. I'm fine with that as long as Bitcoin stays true to its roots of decentralization and censorship-resistance.
12. Post 66822104 (unedited backup) (by colinistheman) (scraped on Thu Jun 11 03:22:55 CEST 2026) in Do you track closing line value, or ONLY WINS AND LOSSES?:
Anyway, I'm generally just concerned whether my bets win or not.
Makes sense.
This theory of yours is perfect for betting just for fun or as a hobby, there is no loss. But if you really want to earn a lot of money in your pocket by playing this casino game seriously then keeping CLV and all the other metrics in mind will make a big difference. Expected Value is one of them.
In my personal betting life, I track both win/loss and closing line value. It support me stay honest about whether my estimation is really suitable or if I am merely conveying lucky. So, I have been keeping a close eye on whether I am beating the closing line over time and I am improving my results a lot.
13. Post 66820751 (unedited backup) (by Zadicar) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 19:51:19 CEST 2026) in Do you track closing line value, or ONLY WINS AND LOSSES?:
There were times when I intentionally placed my bet early. There were also times when I put off placing my bet. The consideration was speculating on the movements of the odds. But I think I didn't really gain significantly from it. And you won't always get your timing right.
If you're focused on taking advantage of +EV, it might generally be right to grab it while it's still there, because the bookmaker will likely adjust the odds sooner rather than later.
Anyway, I'm generally just concerned whether my bets win or not.
Anyone who took gambling as a source of income are the people who could likely be tracking their records while gambling, it is actually good so that it wouldn’t make you gamble irresponsibly. But the important thing there is gambling for fun and maybe you don’t have something else to do at the moment one could used that to spare their time. And yes you are right, if someone places their bet on time there is higher tendency for them to have big odds and if someone places bet just few minutes to when the game starts you would see them having smaller odds unlike the first person who placed their earlier.
On the moment that you are really that serious on tracking out on how much you are winning or losing, it doesnt mean that you are already addicted or someone whose really that aiming for making income with gambling. There are really just that those people who are really want to tracking anything and thats not a bad thing and rather this is recommended because you would really be t hat wary on how much you are losing and winning or simply this is that part of risks management on which considering that we are dealing up with gambling then loses are inevitable. This is why its really that best that you should be wary about on how much you are spending with gambling and thats the best on having the tracking so that you would be ableto stop when you do saw yourself spending up that much or you wouldnt care up that much since you are still on the safe side?. It will really be that up to you on how you would be handling up your finances specially on dealing up with gambling.
14. Post 66819698 (unedited backup) (by HashRate Hero) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 14:34:26 CEST 2026) in The "Mirror Trap" in Human Interaction (Beyond Machiavelli) & [btc] World:
Whales can't actually "force" retail investors to sell. At most, they can only attempt to cause them to panic. Whether they're successful or not ultimately depends on each one of us.
I think Machiavelli's biggest lesson is understanding human behavior.
Agreed. Whales manipulate noise, but our emotional reaction validates it. Self-control is the only true edge in this market.
15. Post 66819508 (unedited backup) (by PepeLapiu) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 13:35:01 CEST 2026) in Total BS: "Bitcoin cannot be controlled by governments":
Very interesting. I scanned the thread for the word "money" and none of you refer to bitcoin as money. The only times you all refer to money is when talking about fiat.
In the end, the Bitcoin that's made way less popular remained as it is, uncontrolled, decentralized, borderless, seizure-proof, censorship-resistant, and so on.
Most importantly, Bitcoin is money.
It's not censorship resistant dickbutt.jpeg.
It's not seizure-proof fake pubkets.
It's not borderless runes or rare sats.
You people can not understand the problem because you are the problem.
Guess what? The world doesn't have a borderless dickbutt.jpeg problem. The government is not after your stupid Bitcoin stamps.
If you don't honor bitcoin as money, all your retarded shitcoinery will kill bitcoin along with your useless rare sats.
16. Post 66819107 (unedited backup) (by Bastketsrus) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 10:57:55 CEST 2026) in Total BS: "Bitcoin cannot be controlled by governments":
How do you define control? In the specific scenario that you provided, in what way did the US government control Bitcoin? The number of users isn't Bitcoin. The price of BTC isn't Bitcoin. The level of support, whether retail or institutional, isn't Bitcoin.
As a matter of fact, what is Bitcoin? If the new altcoin that's created is named Bitcoin by way of a law, if Bitcoin is equated with decentralization, then what they have won't ever be considered Bitcoin. And it's next to impossible to make the real Bitcoin centralized.
In the end, the Bitcoin that's made way less popular remained as it is, uncontrolled, decentralized, borderless, seizure-proof, censorship-resistant, and so on.
I agree. Governments can regulate exchanges and businesses, but they can't change how Bitcoin itself works. The network doesn't care about borders or politics, and that's one of its biggest strengths.
17. Post 66818990 (unedited backup) (by legiteum) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 10:16:31 CEST 2026) in Total BS: "Bitcoin cannot be controlled by governments":
snip
Bitcoin is open source; you can't control the software. It's an impossible task. Suppose the United States makes paperweights called Bitcoin, what's the difference? Would they control Bitcoin because of that? It's absurd. From the moment you fork the Bitcoin code, it ceases to be the original, and the US will never have the power to confiscate all the unguarded private keys.
You don't seem to understand how Bitcoin works. Most users wouldn't notice any difference at all. Your keys would still work, as would all of the tools you use. The blocks would be copied. The only thing that matters is the set of servers that the tools point at, and when ever major tool like the brokers, the wallets, and ETFs and the major holders all point at the US government-approve network, then most people won't even know anything changed, and they wouldn't care.
Meanwhile, the original network would be declared illegal, and anybody who offered a tool that pointed at and still called their product, "Bitcoin" would be prosecuted in the same way that they would if somebody created their own fork and called it "Bitcoin".
As soon as laws are passed that harm these companies, they'll flee the country, I assure you.
These companies would be faced with losing all of their money or simply complying with the new law. It's obvious what choice they would make.
I myself care about the value of my life savings that's into Bitcoin, but I don't think everybody, except 0.00002% of them, would leave Bitcoin if your scenario becomes real. I don't think Bitcoin's decentralization has no value today.
Of course they wouldn't leave "Bitcoin". They would leave the now-illegal thing that can no longer be called "Bitcoin".
They would choose the network where their coins were the most valuable.
One network would have the major holders, the US president, Elon Musk, Michael Saylor, CoinBase, Binance, Robinhood, Blackrock, all of the ETFs, and basically the entire US financial system there to help keep it trading and valuable.
The old fork would have... a bunch of pissed off Bitcoin hardcores who only cared about the religion and not the money.
In other words, 99% of the money would be on the US government fork. Duh.
As far as I know, anybody who self-custodies Bitcoin can still send Sats to anybody regardless of his/her race, nationality, religion, political beliefs, and whatnot until today, and could rest assured that his/her Bitcoin kept in a self-custodial storage remains safe from any government agency that wish to seize it.
Um, self-custody does not protect you from a government anymore than hiding a stolen car in your garage or gold coins in your basement does.
Also, believe it or not, ~99% of Bitcoin is probably
not used for criminality and tax evasion, it's simply an investment for most people.
Besides, people who want to do criminal stuff and keep their money from the government use
Monero these days. Bitcoin is an open ledger and traceable--sorta lousy for doing crime.
How would the Bitcoin architecture be changed?
In another thread, we discussed how the Bitcoin network could be scaled to handle everyday payments, which would make it much more useful, and probably much more valuable--but it would require dropping PoW and making the architecture much more centralized.
Anyhow, that wasn't the point of the OP. The point was that it's not "impossible" that Bitcoin be taken over by the US government. In fact, it's already been heavily regulated, and taking over the network itself would be trivial since it's the US government that enforces the trademark, "Bitcoin".
How significant is Bitcoin that the US government would be ready to go to war with other countries just so they can denounce Bitcoin and accept the new fork?
"Denounce"? They would be
improving Bitcoin, at least in their own opinion.
Simply increasing the hard cap to 50 million will make investors lose trust in Bitcoin,
So they wouldn't do that.
I'll give you a hypothesis where if the US tries to bully other countries to accept its fork, China and Russia (even though I don't rate them much in this kind of scenario) would oppose it, and would back many other countries.
So what. Almost all of the market cap from Bitcoin comes from the US financial system. And they don't need to own it all in order to effectively blackmail everybody else into accepting their fork.
Are you saying the control of Bitcoin is worth going to war over? For an asset that may lose its value while you are fighting for it?
China and Russia didn't even go to war with the US over Venezuela and Iran.
Why would China or Russia care what the US did with Bitcoin? Especially if their own holdings were perfectly safe and still tradable? If the Russian government hated it, they could just sell their Bitcoin and buy some other crypto, or gold, or whatever.
I know y'all love The Bitcoin Religion a lot, but nobody is going to go to war over it

.
Be careful with what you write on this forum. You might trigger all the Bitcoin maximalists and fanatics.

Gee I hadn't noticed

.
Maybe Bitcoin has become "too big to fail". Any form of direct government intervention would crash the BTC price and many investors and corporations, that hold BTC would lose a lot of money. No government in the world wants to cause damage to wealthy people, because, you know, wealthy people are the ones, who donate money to the politicians(not just donations, but bribes as well). The US government is pretty much OK with the current state of Bitcoin, so there won't be any government backed forked version of Bitcoin. There are hidden forms of manipulation, that can achieve the goal without having to openly attack and impose direct control over a technology or an industry.
That's a very good argument for why the US government would not
want to do this. But that's not the point of the OP. The point was that the US absolutely
could do this if they wanted to.
And that means that Bitcoin is absolutely
not impervious to government control like the hardcores keep saying it is.
The US government hasn't taken over the Bitcoin network because they don't feel like it, not because it's impossible.
I would call that an illogical theory, because a fork is a fork and it cannot replace the main coin or its blockchain,
A Bitcoin fork using the same chain data could create a fully compatible product that would preserve everybody's coins. There have already been many projects that do this. They aren't called "Bitcoin" like the US government's would be called, but they work exactly like Bitcoin, including using the same blockchain.
Besides, why would companies and individuals such as Michael Saylor be interested in something like that when they know this is only going to cost them since they are making so much money through Bitcoin right now?
The OP is not asking why they would do it, only pointing out that's its entirely possible and not even that hard for them to do. So please stop saying, "Bitcoin cannot be taken over by governments" when it absolutely can be.
If it was that easy for the US government to erase Bitcoin by creating a version of it and imposing it on people then they would have done this a long time ago,
No, they wouldn't have. Bitcoin has been defacto legal for at least 10 years now. There are gigantic public companies who own Bitcoin, as does the president of the United States. The reason the US government hasn't taken over the Bitcoin network is because they haven't found a reason to do so. But they easily could.
This is exactly how the trademark of Bitcoin works today .
The reason why somebody can't come out with a new memecoin and call it "Bitcoin" and use the BTC symbol for it is because of trademark protection, and that protection comes from... the US government.
Another factual error, I am tried of counting your utopian theories.

Governments enforce trademark laws, they do not create trademark rights out of a vacuum.
Insofar as "nobody" owns the trademark "Bitcoin", then it's a public thing, and therefore
governments will define it. Today, if you came out with a fork and called it "Bitcoin" and it didn't use the network they think it should use (e.g. the one everybody uses right now for instance), then the US government would prosecute. But that definition is completely up to the US government since there is no original owner. If Bitcoin is not a trademark, then the problem is still there: the US Congress needs to define "what is Bitcoin" in order to defend against fraud. Today that definition is implicit, but it could be made explicit, and it could be anything they choose it to be, and they could change it over time as well.
18. Post 66818903 (unedited backup) (by Perfectbaby) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 09:45:26 CEST 2026) in Do you track closing line value, or ONLY WINS AND LOSSES?:
There were times when I intentionally placed my bet early. There were also times when I put off placing my bet. The consideration was speculating on the movements of the odds. But I think I didn't really gain significantly from it. And you won't always get your timing right.
If you're focused on taking advantage of +EV, it might generally be right to grab it while it's still there, because the bookmaker will likely adjust the odds sooner rather than later.
Anyway, I'm generally just concerned whether my bets win or not.
Anyone who took gambling as a source of income are the people who could likely be tracking their records while gambling, it is actually good so that it wouldn’t make you gamble irresponsibly. But the important thing there is gambling for fun and maybe you don’t have something else to do at the moment one could used that to spare their time. And yes you are right, if someone places their bet on time there is higher tendency for them to have big odds and if someone places bet just few minutes to when the game starts you would see them having smaller odds unlike the first person who placed their earlier.
19. Post 66818709 (unedited backup) (by Fiatless) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 08:22:37 CEST 2026) in The long perseverance of early investment:
Perhaps proper discernment is the key. I'm not sure if there are overriding factors in their decisions, but my observation is that most simply don't have it. Many investors are impulsive. Many just copy what their friends or workmates are doing. Many commit without considering other factors. Many don't even consider the long term. Some get the wrong timing. Others are wrongly inspired. Finally, perseverance isn't a skill most have. Even with Bitcoin, an asset that has more or less a solid track record, many can't hodl.
There is so much information around that one shouldn't make decisions without accessing them. A simple search using artificial intelligence tools would offer comprehensive information about an investment. I still wonder why people still fall victim to scams and other failed investments when they should just do their research.
We can get an idea about an investment from friends and family members, but we have the responsibility to research it.
20. Post 66818402 (unedited backup) (by legiteum) (scraped on Wed Jun 10 04:22:25 CEST 2026) in Total BS: "Bitcoin cannot be controlled by governments":
Believe me, the day bitcoin decentralized core will succumb to the control of the government, then will result a starting point of bitcoin crash.
We discussed this in
another thread. Many people think the price of BTC would go down, but others think it might go up since it would have so much more utility.
But nevertheless, all the fingers pointing on the financial technology and the aim of the government taking control of it are fairy tales. Absolutely impossible to happen.
Did you know that the trademark for the name "Bitcoin" and the Bitcoin symbol are protected by... the US government? That means the US government decides who can and cannot use that name to describe their fork. That doesn't sound very "impossible" to me...
If they were comfortable, they wouldn't pursue mixers, sue exchanges, or create special regulatory frameworks. Comfort is similar to what they do with Apple stock: stable regulations, not constant legal battles.
LOL, Apple and every large company is in
constant legal battles. That's part of being a large company. That's why they spend $billions in political contributions.
Second, you would control the price and accessibility, but you don't control the network. The United States is just one country; although it can pressure others to follow its rules, it can't control Bitcoin. Bitcoin miners would simply migrate to other permissive countries. If you have your BTC in a non-custodial wallet, the government can't touch it. They can make it illegal to spend it, they can imprison you, but the ownership remains yours.
Sure, you can do whatever you want with your fork. If you call it "Bitcoin" then you'll be prosecuted by the US or its allies who join the pact (and why wouldn't they?). It would be no different than if you created a fork today and called it "Bitcoin" and used the BTC symbol to describe it.
And finally, you say Bitcoin is just code, but you're omitting the fact that Bitcoin is a generic term like "email" or "internet." In trademark law, you can't register a name that's already in common use.
You have no idea what you are talking about.
Tell you what: fork the Bitcoin codebase in Github and create your own coin, and call it "Bitcoin" and use the BTC symbol when you market it. Let us all know how that goes for you

.
Your scenario requires the US to own the world... it's the typical mistaken thinking of Americans who think that America is everything, and they omit the rest of the countries; it's an ingrained concept, not reality.
The US doesn't own everything, but they certainly own most of Bitcoin. I'm not talking about football or Champagne here. I'm talking about an industry that lives mostly in the USA--and that's more than enough to blackmail the market into following whatever they do.
How do you define control? In the specific scenario that you provided, in what way did the US government control Bitcoin? The number of users isn't Bitcoin. The price of BTC isn't Bitcoin. The level of support, whether retail or institutional, isn't Bitcoin.
Correct:
The $1 trillion+ in tradable value is Bitcoin.
Imagine somebody whose life savings is in BTC: all they are going to care about is that their investment is safe.
For almost all holders of BTC, Bitcoin is an investment. The value of that investment is based on a market price. Any entity that can massively control that market price--which the US government absolutely can do--can control almost all holders of BTC's actions insofar as they care about their money.
If you want to debate what the 0.00002% of humans who
don't care about money would do, be my guest

.
In the end, the Bitcoin that's made way less popular remained as it is, uncontrolled, decentralized, borderless, seizure-proof, censorship-resistant, and so on.
Sure, and Coca Cola started off as cold medicine. Strategy used to be a software company that did web log analysis.
Things evolved into something entirely different sometimes. Bitcoin has already changed a lot since it started, and can change a lot more. (And it's actually none of those things you mentioned anymore, really, except for "borderless").
If governments forced people to use things like Wrapped Bitcoin tokens on altcoin blockchains, it's no longer bitcoin, and these altcoin blockchains and wrapped tokens are truly centralized so that governments can do their jobs well and easy. Fortunately, these chains and tokens are not actual bitcoins, what happen with them is not responsibility of Bitcoin.
The US government determines who to send to jail who uses the word, "Bitcoin" and the BTC symbol to describe their product. Therefore if the US Congress passed a law that dubbed a certain codebase was the only thing that could be called, "Bitcoin", then it would be called Bitcoin and nothing else legally could be. Every broker, app, financial institution, Michael Saylor, Donald Trump, Elon Musk, all of the ETFs, and realistically almost every single holder of BTC would switch to the fork that was legal and wouldn't dare touch a fork that was declared illegal.
Yes, nothing will physically stop people from protesting what the US government did, and they could use the old fork, but they would be irrelevant, money-wise.
21. Post 66816764 (unedited backup) (by dezoel) (scraped on Tue Jun 9 19:10:43 CEST 2026) in The real inflation problem is in asset inflation.:
My point was simply that when the purchasing power of money weakens, everything becomes more expensive, not just food and other basic services. Of course, the wealthy benefit from it one way or another. As mentioned, those who own properties, for example, gain from it because their assets get more expensive. But, again, this isn't selective. This is simply inflation. The rich man's sprawling mansion appreciates in value but so is the lemonade glass sold by the poor boy.
In the process, of course, the rich get richer and the poor poorer. That has always been the rule since time immemorial.
Wealthy does it because they increase the price of their own products as well. The guy who builds a toy, still gets a salary, so if he is making 1000 dollars a month, he still makes 1000 dollars a month, and most likely they will be getting once a year increase in salary.
The guy who owns that factory that makes the toys, could be selling it for 100 dollars, then to 110, then to 120, as you can see, same period, the owner made 20% more, while the salary worker is still making the same.
22. Post 66810590 (unedited backup) (by Don Pedro Dinero) (scraped on Mon Jun 8 05:01:31 CEST 2026) in The real inflation problem is in asset inflation.:
Could be unintentional, but today's monetary policy may widen inequality by inflating assets at a higher proportion to wages, consequently transferring wealth to the ownership class!
It's not unintentional, it's actually called the Cantillon effect, you might wanna search and read about it but basically means that those close to the money printer benefit the most from it. So, when inflation is created those closest to the money supply can borrow at low interest rates and invest in assets, whilst everyone else – mainly workers – first face rising prices and then, if they’re lucky, a pay rise, but this always comes later and is often lower than the actual rate of inflation.
What's actually the issue?
That the majority of the population is becoming poorer.