People complain about not being able to hold bitcoin in your hands. But why would you want to have it in your hands in the first place?
The reason is that people want to be sure that nobody steals or alters it, that they can do something or notice it, if something happens. We want to feel it in our fingers, to be sure that we are the only ones who can spend it our dollar. If you cannot be sure of the above, even when litterally holding it in your fingers, what is the point of you holding it? Burning it? So, they apply this logic to the dollar.
But here is the catch:
Their very own dollar note they hold in their hands to show that it is touchable and thus better, is not the same dollar as when it was printed. In fact, they don't even own it because the wealth (portion of the dollar economy) can be diminished to the point where it can be safely ignored, on command of the issuer. Even if they know, they can not do anything against it.
Who wants to hold a banknote of the currency from Zimbabwe? I don't think many, because it doesn't make sense. The currency goes to zero while the government is stealing your wealth and there is nothing to do about it, so why even bother holding it?
(On a side note, those same people probably have no problems using a digital credit card to load themselves with invisible debt that is also untouchable.)
#₿itcoin protects against this. Even though you don't hold it in your hands, you can still be sure that it can not be manipulated via supply, on command.
So #Bitcoin provides the same confidence that you would get from physically holding, while not holding physically, whereas any FIAT currency fail to do,
even if you physically hold it.
Let that sink into their minds. Welcome in the #rabbithole.
This could be handy for #orangepilling.
Anybody who can distill this into a nice infograpic?