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Shire
cdf074e67f0be7e7c7c76033954b2af86f6601ad5e423fb578371aa8bfba9ca0
@ShireHODL (BANNED)and @ShireH0DL on Twitter. shire@nostrplebs.com

I've worked shitty sales jobs.

I know what it sounds like when a group of people have learnt a script and bunch of stock objection responses from each other.

Shitcoiners and fudsters are such low quality bamboozlers.

Replying to Avatar Joe Nakamoto

Reply from my anti-Bitcoin colleague.

Who fancies replying to this? Sats sent of course 🫔

ā€œYeah this is where you’ve lost me now with the central bank conspiracies.

If you’re concerned with the socializing of losses that’s a matter for regulators, which most central banks usually aren’t. The same people who are pushing the narrative at the highest levels of the Fed being the root of all corruption are also the ones who lobbied policymakers to defang regulators and massively deregulate financial markets in the 1990s. They criticize government for being ineffective, and then do everything in their power to make it ineffective. This is a classic playbook of right-wing economic thought which has permeated into the platforms of political parties the world round, from the Republicans to the Tories to Georgian Dream.

Central banks are part of the social contract. They are able to introduce (they aren’t always the wisest, but they are able to) policies that can help mitigate the effects of financial crises. The pandemic relief in the United States is a perfect example. At the order of the government, they were able to provide small benefits to people to help live through the pandemic.

Now crypto people, especially the bitcoin maxis, often froth at the mouth when this example is brought up, as people spending about 1,600 bucks on rent and food is apparently an immeasurable evil and despicable tyranny, despite it being an objectively positive societal good.

If people are truly concerned about the inflation this could cause (CEOs, ā€œfoundersā€ and the beloved ā€œbuildersā€ of the world create far more inflation than small stimuli for food do) there are myriad controls that policymakers can introduce to mitigate inflation, they just never do because of the prevailing political forces that view any sort of proactive move from government, other than a monopoly of violence, as an act equal to tyranny.

Instead (because apparently collective or political action is not viable or legitimate in libertarian thinking) we have to for some reason literally reinvent money in the form of this technological silver bullet (I’m looking at the cotton gin and the gatling gun) to cure the ills that are the result of capitalism as usual.

In end, this idea of a Bitcoin standard doesn’t seem like anything new to me at all. It’d be the late 19th century all over again. Early adopters would be the robber barons of the new era, issuing private money as they please and developing Bitcoin based derivatives. Bubbles and busts would still happen.

What’s more we’d be at there mercy of these feudal early adopters to provide more monetary supply in the event of shocks and crises, which happen with no less frequency in a deflationary system.

The technological silver bullet becomes more fuel for the dumpster fire it was supposed to put out.ā€

OK. Let me try... tell him that his preferred option is for people to make rules and force others to follow them. Bitcoin is voluntary and open to everyone without restriction and you think that's a good thing for the world. A respectful disagreement is best because he's obviously way into his statist ideology and you won't change that.

Replying to Avatar Joe Nakamoto

Reply from my anti-Bitcoin colleague.

Who fancies replying to this? Sats sent of course 🫔

ā€œYeah this is where you’ve lost me now with the central bank conspiracies.

If you’re concerned with the socializing of losses that’s a matter for regulators, which most central banks usually aren’t. The same people who are pushing the narrative at the highest levels of the Fed being the root of all corruption are also the ones who lobbied policymakers to defang regulators and massively deregulate financial markets in the 1990s. They criticize government for being ineffective, and then do everything in their power to make it ineffective. This is a classic playbook of right-wing economic thought which has permeated into the platforms of political parties the world round, from the Republicans to the Tories to Georgian Dream.

Central banks are part of the social contract. They are able to introduce (they aren’t always the wisest, but they are able to) policies that can help mitigate the effects of financial crises. The pandemic relief in the United States is a perfect example. At the order of the government, they were able to provide small benefits to people to help live through the pandemic.

Now crypto people, especially the bitcoin maxis, often froth at the mouth when this example is brought up, as people spending about 1,600 bucks on rent and food is apparently an immeasurable evil and despicable tyranny, despite it being an objectively positive societal good.

If people are truly concerned about the inflation this could cause (CEOs, ā€œfoundersā€ and the beloved ā€œbuildersā€ of the world create far more inflation than small stimuli for food do) there are myriad controls that policymakers can introduce to mitigate inflation, they just never do because of the prevailing political forces that view any sort of proactive move from government, other than a monopoly of violence, as an act equal to tyranny.

Instead (because apparently collective or political action is not viable or legitimate in libertarian thinking) we have to for some reason literally reinvent money in the form of this technological silver bullet (I’m looking at the cotton gin and the gatling gun) to cure the ills that are the result of capitalism as usual.

In end, this idea of a Bitcoin standard doesn’t seem like anything new to me at all. It’d be the late 19th century all over again. Early adopters would be the robber barons of the new era, issuing private money as they please and developing Bitcoin based derivatives. Bubbles and busts would still happen.

What’s more we’d be at there mercy of these feudal early adopters to provide more monetary supply in the event of shocks and crises, which happen with no less frequency in a deflationary system.

The technological silver bullet becomes more fuel for the dumpster fire it was supposed to put out.ā€

You've lost. Honestly, hfsp is the best response to this one

Not sure when I'd use this, but amethyst has a button to create an invoice on a note now. Cool.

lnbc1u1pjr0ahxpp5mf87ax5dh80fkm72evf9mtawgu8n5764fnuqqsz8pg3pcrn4hxvshp5csjt80jtlqapg0wnq60sla56ds27w7l7w8l93mptlwy4035tw0eqcqzpgxqyz5vqsp5edpz36a2pzuzh8fr0v8yx6cxmlw98s7whafkerh382frpt2afxjs9qyyssqre5t9fvftyqdj83tulvh547x36d0vky3wxst2crz20a05r4s70m8nldpwumvs264rtdhlwhtmujukvse3qqep2n0rrsxhq2v5p5v4rqq563m9l

Eth ripped and erased the past two days drop against bitcoin.

Idiots and scammers everywhere.

Trying it now. Not showing the UI on the laptop I'm using. Did you have to enable something?

I'll need more info on your official duties šŸ˜‰

I've got a think pad addiction. I see it, I buy it. This doesn't include the one I gave to my dad and the one I lent to my sister. 😬

65+ year olds own basically all of the inherited wealth from the entirety of human history. It's obvious, but still 🤯 to think about.

Read it here. Good post https://twitter.com/TheBTCTherapist/status/1646370239301533698?s=20