Home & Garden1 min ago
Bitcoin. No Clothes. No Emperor.
9 Answers
Just listening to a R4 programme on Bitcoin.
So rather than overthrow capitalism and its cash manifestation (the US Dollar, largely), what you have to do is invent a brand new currency, similarly based on nothing, not even the dubious value of gold, and then persuade people to switch their money (pounds, dollars, whatever) into Bitcoin, and use that for exchange instead.
The Emperor is stark b0ll0ck naked this time. Not a stitch, front or back.
I don't suppose anyone on here has 'invested' in Bitcoins, have they?
Bill B
So rather than overthrow capitalism and its cash manifestation (the US Dollar, largely), what you have to do is invent a brand new currency, similarly based on nothing, not even the dubious value of gold, and then persuade people to switch their money (pounds, dollars, whatever) into Bitcoin, and use that for exchange instead.
The Emperor is stark b0ll0ck naked this time. Not a stitch, front or back.
I don't suppose anyone on here has 'invested' in Bitcoins, have they?
Bill B
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by bainbrig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It sounds like a bubble, but whilst folk trust and have faith, there is wealth to attract to you, from those who may lose out. Even normal currency doesn't have the gold any more, and banks create cash every time they lend the same money to multiple borrowers. It's all based on faith. Worked so far, in a fashion.
I think that'll be the crunch, atalanta - i.e. when government sees people trading in a 'thing' that they can't tax, they'll recognise Bitcoins as a currency, and tax them. It might last a year or two yet, but is Big Capital really going to stand for people moving out of 'their' sort of money en masse? Hardly.
-- answer removed --
To delve deeper into this question and find the answer, I suggest reading an article about cryptocurrency: https:/
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.