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RE: What is the inflation rate of Bitcoin? How does it compare with gold?
I appreciate your opinion, but I'll offer some counterpoints:
- Gold being heavy makes it harder to steal large amounts.
- Gold on a blockchain is as difficult to confiscate as Bitcoin if the vault is in a friendly jurisdiction.
- Blockchain makes it easy to send cheaply.
- You have to trust a third party, but companies like Quintric are live-streaming their vault, and I think it's more of a separate use-case for blockchain, as it brings accountability to certificate printers. Totally anonymous currency has its place in a dystopian society, but in a free society, Gold has a very enticing use-case as a stable money with intrinsic value in the market.
- If it's on a scalable blockchain, it's as easy to integrate into shops as Bitcoin or any other crypto, and you won't need a LN.
- With crypto and traditional gold products, you have to pay capital gains on every transaction. If you use Treasury-minted coins, the government can't tax you (save the income and sales tax).
I get the need for a trustless system, but I don't think we'll ever totally get that, even with Bitcoin. I think the ability for blockchain to provide transparency and accountability allows us to have an astronomically greater amount of trust in institutions that will have to actually prove their assets from now on. I like to think of it as a separate, but legitimate use-case. Plus, I'm just excited to trade Bitcoin with a proven non-fiat stablecoin.
Ok so my counterargument :)
I do hope we can get rid of all money but to be realistic i dont think we will ever get there totally but yes i agree that we will have a much better accountability and transparency thanks to Bitcoin. It might not even be Bitcoin that will be THE coin but something will come out of all this sooner or later.
ps. where is the video? i cant see it anymore.