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James A Lewis
9a4acdeb978565e27490dca65c83e9f65745eaec1d9a0405a52d198c1489913b
Husband, father, #Catholic #Christian, Amateur Philosopher, Bitcoiner, freedom lover, word nerd #dadstr
Replying to Avatar HoloKat

That last paragraph… what WUT?!

You are a bitcoiner and your task is to explain to the masses why CBDCs are a terrible idea. What compelling arguments will you make?

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If I were to adopt the perspective of a staunch Bitcoin advocate and critique Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), here are some compelling arguments I might present against their adoption:

Centralization Concerns: One of Bitcoin's fundamental attributes is its decentralized nature. CBDCs, by design, would be entirely centralized, allowing governments and central banks to exert complete control over the currency. This centralization might enable them to conduct surveillance, impose financial censorship, and even confiscate funds.

Privacy Issues: CBDCs could potentially allow governments to monitor every financial transaction made by its citizens. Unlike cash transactions, which are anonymous, every CBDC transaction could be traceable. This raises concerns about privacy and the potential misuse of personal financial data.

No Value Proposition over Existing Digital Money: Many countries already have digital money systems (like bank transfers, mobile payments, etc.) that are fast and efficient. CBDCs might not offer significant advantages over these systems but instead introduce new risks related to centralization and control.

Potential for Financial Exclusion: While CBDCs are often touted as a means to increase financial inclusion, there's also a risk they could be used to exclude or punish individuals. Governments might decide to exclude certain people from the CBDC system due to political views, social behavior, or other criteria.

Economic Mismanagement: CBDCs could be used by governments to enforce negative interest rates more effectively, directly debiting interest from individual accounts, or implementing "expiration dates" on money to force spending. Such strategies might be used to manage economic downturns but could have unintended consequences.

Inflation and Devaluation: Like traditional fiat money, CBDCs can be created at will by central banks. This ability might lead to overprinting, devaluation, and inflation – issues Bitcoin was specifically designed to counteract with its capped supply.

Lack of Interoperability: Each country might create its own CBDC with different standards and protocols. This fragmentation could create more complications for global trade and finance.

Security Concerns: A centralized system, like the one CBDCs would operate on, presents a more significant point of failure. If a malicious actor were to gain control or compromise this system, it could affect an entire nation's economy. Bitcoin's decentralized network, in contrast, is often touted as being more secure due to its distributed nature.

Disincentive to Save: With complete control over the financial system, governments could discourage saving by imposing fees or negative interest rates directly on digital wallets, pushing people to spend rather than save.

Moral Hazard: Governments and central banks could bail out failing institutions more easily by instantly creating and distributing funds, potentially encouraging risky behavior.

Loss of Financial Sovereignty: Individuals would have less control over their money. With CBDCs, governments could, in theory, freeze or seize assets with the push of a button, diminishing the concept of true ownership.

Potential for Increased Inequality: There's a possibility that countries with dominant CBDCs could exert financial influence or control over countries with weaker economic standings, leading to increased global financial inequality.

To be fair, not all Bitcoin enthusiasts oppose CBDCs categorically. Some see potential benefits, especially if implemented with privacy and decentralization in mind. However, the arguments listed above are commonly cited by those in the crypto community who are skeptical of CBDCs.

"To be fair, not all Bitcoiners think for themselves"

True... True...

What I mean by it being downstream is that the basic value, even the consideration, that a government exists to benefit it's citizenry is downstream of religion, specifically that individuals have the same basic value as persons regardless of economics, politics, or demographics. That's a religious claim that just didn't exist before Christianity.

If people have the same value as individuals, they should all have equal rights to the basic tools of modern living, which means money too. Bitcoin is a conclusion, not an axiom.

By the nature of kind-1 notes, I don't think this is possible without breaking stuff. Maybe a new kind that is a 're:' of the original kind-1 note and replaces the original, merged on the client-end.

(It would be interesting to extend this with a regex replace. Could make for really entertaining and quirky content styles, or possibly programmatic via regex pairs.)

Optimization is really necessary, especially for older devices.

Performance issues in some clients and excess data usage can make it a poor quality experience and expensive to run on a metered connection.

One feature I'm looking for is a micro node to run in the background of each client device to speed it up and reduce duplicate downloads. I know nostr:npub1gcxzte5zlkncx26j68ez60fzkvtkm9e0vrwdcvsjakxf9mu9qewqlfnj5z is looking into / working on this for Amethyst.

That's roughly 10x. Some things are higher. What did wages do?

What was the triggers for your orange pilled friends and family?

https://youtu.be/5c4NinY3pOk

What orange pilled your friends and family? The logic will eventually get them there, but what's really important is to first know what will make them question the existing system

They only have power insofar as they control the money. Take that power away, and how will they pay for their war on freedom?

I do like and desire to support local growers, but their produce is usually unfortunately significantly more expensive, and I can't always justify the increased cost.

Being a Bitcoiner is downstream of my faith and philosophy. It is anti-tyranny freedom tech, as opposed to fiat currency, which is a deceptive monetary technology which lends itself to tyrants.

This is exactly what happens when you invent fractional reserve lending and inflate a currency.

First, you make borrowing money for certain assets easier, so people begin to borrow more for the eligible assets, ballooning those prices against the rest of the economy.

Then, the debasement of the currency begins to build a preference into the eligible assets which will hold their true value against inflation.

Then you breed an economy and legislation that favors investment in said assets, creating what we know of as the real estate industry, the value in which is deceptively mixed, being both real and artificial.

That will correct itself when the debt banking paradigm is dissolved and hard money is reestablished. In the meantime, however, it would be foolish to resist the system and not invest in real estate. Recurring income can't be beat.

"Now the whole group of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one claimed private ownership of any possessions, but everything they owned was held in common, even their vast library of memes." - Acts 4:32, definitely translated word-for-word verbatim

Only non-food-producing plants allowed 😑 just more evidence of the tyranny, not a benevolent powerful authority. You're not allowed to become less reliant on the system.