But does BTC remain the same?

Yes, hyperinflation, but look beyond that, also lend or sell are distractions, you're focusing on the noise.

BTC is currently valued at around $95K, but the dollar is an abstract amount.

We all agree that $10 today is worth less than it was last year or even 10 years ago.

Currency is the supply of money.

Money is the measure of wealth.

Perhaps we need to make that distinction clear and stop confusing currency (dollars, pounds, euros etc..) with money and use a better measuring tool.

For example BTC.

That would be the Bitcoin standard.

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Well, that's what I'm saying.

BTC has a market value of X, which is the amount of goods that THE MARKET says it can buy. It doesn't matter how you denominate it: USD, GBP, tons of gold, oranges or paper clips.

Say that the USD Govt holds BTC worth 1/10 * X, and wants to borrow 10 * X.

If the market believes the USD Govt can leverage that BTC 100 times, then good for them. They'll be able to borrow. But the VALUE of BTC will continue to be X.

If then the Govt turns around and decides to hyperinflate the USD to repay, it definitely can. Lenders will get rekt, the economy will completely collapse, and probably whoever did the hyperinflating will end up hanging by the neck.

What may happen then is that because the USD stops being a usable unit of account, people decide to simply switch to BTC for that purpose.

But BTC keeps buying X amount of goods. That doesn't change.

When BTC will hit 1M USD the dollar will be worth 1/3 less than it does now

Mike Maloney covers this distinction well in his 'Hidden Secrets of Money' series (free on Youtube).

I watched that years ago.

He's a gold guy I think.

He is, mainly. Open to bitcoin, but got sucked in to hedera hashgraph, having prioritized transaction speed over DLT and a fixed supply.