Replying to Avatar Marty Bent

As someone who would like to see the federal government in the US shrunk dramatically, I believe a strategic bitcoin reserve accumulated via a mechanism like Bit Bonds is the only viable path to make a smaller government possible.

This may seem counterintuitive - "if the US government acquires bitcoin it makes them stronger." However, when you take a step back and think of the problem of the ever expanding federal government you realize that a large part of the problem is driven by the need to roll over debt by issuing new debt to pay it back.

This leads to a forced expansion of the federal government that can only be reversed if something new is introduced that can defease the debt without having to issue new paper. As it stands today, bitcoin is the only thing that can practically produce this defeasment.

The beauty of the bit bond idea is that it expedites the debt pay back by enabling the Tresury to issue longer-term bonds at lower rates, which works to decrease interest payments on debt that is being rolled over. An incredible kickstarting mechanism that provides immediate results. Imagine being able to point at the chart of the interest expense on the debt and show that the number is falling.

Bitcoin is for anyone, including governments, and it is a great asset that enables individuals, businesses and governments to think creatively by leveraging the benefits that come with adopting it during its monetization phase.

The path to shrinking the federal government dramatically over the next few decades only exists in a world in which the government adopts bitcoin as a strategic asset to begin paying back the debt.

Maybe there's another way. I think Trump is angling to shrink gov't right now. Tariffs & revenue from energy production on one side & tax cuts on the other side. The idea of an External Revenue Service to fund a much smaller gov't makes sense. The debt, well, with a booming growing dynamic economy, I see paying it off as it comes due. Who knows, we may as a country have enough Bitcoin to pay it off fairly quickly. Then there's DOGE. How much fraud was/is there? That debt may not even be owed by the taxpayer if it was money criminally looted from the taxpayer.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

No replies yet.