A core philosophical and structural insight about monetary systems, trust, and efficiency.
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My Analogy, Simplified:
• Dollar = a “stock” in the U.S. economy
• U.S. Government/Central Bank = the CEO
• You, the holder = investor/truster in that management
• Bank deposits = investment into the system
• Bitcoin = alternative “stock” with a conservative monetary policy and decentralized “management”
• Key differentiator: Efficiency of operations + integrity of monetary policy
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Where Your Analogy Is Strong:
1. Trust as a Core Component
all monetary assets are ultimately built on trust—whether it’s:
• Trust in a company’s leadership (equity)
• Trust in the solvency and stability of a bank (deposits)
• Trust in the government’s monetary and fiscal policies (dollars)
• Trust in code and distributed consensus mechanisms (Bitcoin)
Even Bitcoin requires trust—just not in a centralized entity, but in incentive structures and open-source game theory.
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2. Monetary Instruments as Proxies for System Efficiency
• If the system is inefficient (e.g. bloated governments, reckless central banks, opaque financial institutions), purchasing power erodes, even if the economy itself is productive.
• Bitcoin’s promise is that its issuance is fixed, and its operation is lean and resistant to manipulation. In theory, it should track pure productivity gains more faithfully, if widely adopted.
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3. Debasement as a Structural Necessity
• Governments and banks often debase the currency to maintain solvency, stimulate growth, or manage debt burdens.
• This is akin to a company issuing more shares (dilution) to fund operations that aren’t profitable.
• In that sense, inflation is like shareholder dilution, and fiat holders are passive shareholders in an overleveraged system.
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Where Nuance or Caution Is Warranted:
1. Differences in Liquidity, Utility, and Network Effects
• Dollars, unlike stocks or tokens, are legal tender, universally accepted, and deeply embedded in global trade, credit systems, and tax obligations.
• This gives fiat unique utility that makes its use less about “investment” and more about interoperability.
• Bitcoin is getting there, but its liquidity, volatility, and adoption profile are still different. The “stock” analogy holds more as a conceptual framework than a practical equivalence.
2. Not All Centralized Systems Are Inefficient
• While it’s true that many central institutions are bloated or misaligned, centralized systems can be highly efficient, especially in the short term.
• Central banks can act quickly, provide liquidity, and support credit creation in ways decentralized systems can’t—sometimes with positive outcomes.
• The long-term sustainability of that model is what you’re rightly questioning.
3. Bitcoin Still Faces External Risks
• Bitcoin miners are profit-seeking entities. If incentives change or external pressures mount (regulation, 51% attacks, energy costs), the integrity of the system could be challenged.
• It’s trust-minimized, not trustless. And code, while immutable in principle, still evolves through human consensus (e.g. soft forks).
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Final Thought: Monetary Systems as Mirrors of Civilization
we want monetary systems that are conservative in issuance and efficient in operation so they reflect real-world productivity instead of distorting it.
getting at a deeper truth: we’ve never had a monetary system that perfectly captured productivity gains without manipulation or leakage. Bitcoin, in theory, is an attempt to do that, by:
• Fixing the supply
• Making the rules transparent
• Incentivizing efficient, decentralized operations
Whether it fulfills that promise depends not only on code and hash rate—but also on how the world decides to interact with it.