Inauguration of Kamala Harris 2021 - Have you ever discussed displeasure against the government and elections? Please state what bank you use and provide your ID.

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Yes? You can't go to the grocery store and buy groceries with ethereum. Bitcoin, the most popular of all, is even not all that useful.

You retards still think I am a janitor, despite me being proven right time after time after time? Then what does that make you? I mean, you were gullible and stupid enough to fall for QAnon stuff, so that must make you a homeless guy who goes through people's trash for cans to put into neckbeard crypto
Don't know about you, but I can buy groceries in Bitcoin from my phone right now because I'm not a backwards janitor who doesn't know how to use technology.

Dedicating this song to HHH.
 
Don't know about you, but I can buy groceries in Bitcoin from my phone right now because I'm not a backwards janitor who doesn't know how to use technology.
But you are such a retard that you fell for QAnon conspiracies and yet you still haven't learned your lesson. Do you still Trust The Plan? I mean, if you think I am a janitor, that must make you even lower than a janitor. There's retarded and then there's a retard who fell for anonymous 4chan posts and took them seriously.

And go to your local grocery store and try and buy groceries with Ethereum. They'll look at you like you asked to buy it using tulips.
 
But you are such a retard that you fell for QAnon conspiracies and yet you still haven't learned your lesson. Do you still Trust The Plan? I mean, if you think I am a janitor, that must make you even lower than a janitor. There's retarded and then there's a retard who fell for anonymous 4chan posts and took them seriously.

And go to your local grocery store and try and buy groceries with Ethereum. They'll look at you like you asked to buy it using tulips.
Lol I've been paying my property taxes in bitcoin for two years now. Get on with the times, boomer.
 
Lol I've been paying my property taxes in bitcoin for two years now. Get on with the times, boomer.
I've been lurking here for a few months now, but HHH strikes me as one of those Reddit fags who reads The Verge and accepts John Oliver as gospel. Therefore xe/xir probably assumes Bitcoin is some tool of alt right terrorists on The Silk Road.
 
I've been lurking here for a few months now, but HHH strikes me as one of those Reddit fags who reads The Verge and accepts John Oliver as gospel. Therefore xe/xir probably assumes Bitcoin is some tool of alt right terrorists on The Silk Road.
Lol nah, reddit and john oliver are stupid. But at least they didn't take Q seriously like our resident retard that you are replying to

Lol I've been paying my property taxes in bitcoin for two years now. Get on with the times, boomer.
You really think all of those cryptocoins are gonna become mainstream currencies? Jesus, you're even more retarded than I thought. I doubt you paid property taxes though since tendies don't require them
 
Lol nah, reddit and john oliver are stupid. But at least they didn't take Q seriously like our resident retard that you are replying to


You really think all of those cryptocoins are gonna become mainstream currencies? Jesus, you're even more retarded than I thought. I doubt you paid property taxes though since tendies don't require them
Behold, the Cope of the No-Coiner.

Now, let me crack an egg of knowledge on that pin-shaped head of yours.
1. https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/11/investing/mastercard-bitcoin-bny-mellon/index.html
2. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/how-...a-is-creating-a-network-effect-214639389.html
3. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-crypto-currency-apple-idUSKBN2A82I4
 
The limitation of crypto is currently that it has to be transferred to fiat in most cases; buying something with crypto often just means you sell off a certain amount of your crypto for fiat, then pay the cost in fiat. Not always, there are places that take it directly; but they are generally sparse, especially outside of city-centers. Banks want to exploit blockchain and temper their competition, and states are looking towards crypto with regulatory ambitions ever since Chyna's efforts to do so.

Still, their main issue is mainly just having to be transferred into fiat. That may improve for some of the big ones as time goes on, but it's an open question with regulation potentially looming (naturally, pushed by a number of the banks and made-irrelevant-by-blockchain clearing houses). Crypto is still effectively "slightly-less-risky" daytrading for all intents and purposes; its long-term value is going to be determined primarily by how governments act, rather than a hard asset like precious metals or a long-term investment like an index fund.
 
The limitation of crypto is currently that it has to be transferred to fiat in most cases; buying something with crypto often just means you sell off a certain amount of your crypto for fiat, then pay the cost in fiat. Not always, there are places that take it directly; but they are generally sparse, especially outside of city-centers. Banks want to exploit blockchain and temper their competition, and states are looking towards crypto with regulatory ambitions ever since Chyna's efforts to do so.

Still, their main issue is mainly just having to be transferred into fiat. That may improve for some of the big ones as time goes on, but it's an open question with regulation potentially looming (naturally, pushed by a number of the banks and made-irrelevant-by-blockchain clearing houses). Crypto is still effectively "slightly-less-risky" daytrading for all intents and purposes; its long-term value is going to be determined primarily by how governments act, rather than a hard asset like precious metals or a long-term investment like an index fund.
Exactly. I can see it going well for the bigger coins like Bitcoin or Ethereum, but the whole point of currency is that you don't want it to be volatile. You want it to be stable. Yes, there's obviously going to be some inflation and sometimes governments fuck up and hyperinflation happens, but for the most part, currency is pretty stable. You don't want to get paid in a currency and then next week find out that it's worth half of what it was when you were paid it.
 
Yes, there's obviously going to be some inflation and sometimes governments fuck up and hyperinflation happens, but for the most part, currency is pretty stable. You don't want to get paid in a currency and then next week find out that it's worth half of what it was when you were paid it.
Yep. The main use of it is that it liquidates insanely easily compared to something like gold (or even shares, because you have to wait for sales to clear). Some people like that fact, but the value is still primarily in its ability to be converted easily and transparently, not in some abiding belief that it will be the money of the future.

I mean, I'm sure some people really think that, but that's a breathtaking level of stupid; at best it's a stable, slowly-growing asset. Which, naturally, grows during an asset bubble.
 
The limitation of crypto is currently that it has to be transferred to fiat in most cases; buying something with crypto often just means you sell off a certain amount of your crypto for fiat, then pay the cost in fiat. Not always, there are places that take it directly; but they are generally sparse, especially outside of city-centers. Banks want to exploit blockchain and temper their competition, and states are looking towards crypto with regulatory ambitions ever since Chyna's efforts to do so.

Still, their main issue is mainly just having to be transferred into fiat. That may improve for some of the big ones as time goes on, but it's an open question with regulation potentially looming (naturally, pushed by a number of the banks and made-irrelevant-by-blockchain clearing houses). Crypto is still effectively "slightly-less-risky" daytrading for all intents and purposes; its long-term value is going to be determined primarily by how governments act, rather than a hard asset like precious metals or a long-term investment like an index fund.
Last year was fairly pivotal to crypto with this whole new DeFi ecosystem, and this year the institutions are buying in. Last hurdle is getting small retailers on board, and that is exactly what Visa, Mastercard and PayPal are going to do. [edit: If you haven't learned anything new about crypto since 2017, time for a refresher course. DYOR.]

Even smaller operations like Telcoin already allow you to purchase TEL directly from your phone using your bank, and that's in Canada. TEL's pretty neat, they just launched a corridor to send remittance payments from Canada to the Philippines at a much lower cost than a traditional remittance transfer. The Telcoin app is already live and integrated into their AliPay-style system there called GCash which can be used for groceries and bills and such. Once the GCash announcement on Chinese New Year happens, TEL will go parabolic.

Anyway, this year is going to be when crypto becomes commonplace everywhere, despite the anguished cries of raging no-coiners like HHH. GME thing was last nail in the coffin of the traditional finance industry.
 
Last year was fairly pivotal to crypto with this whole new DeFi ecosystem, and this year the institutions are buying in. Last hurdle is getting small retailers on board, and that is exactly what Visa, Mastercard and PayPal are going to do. [edit: If you haven't learned anything new about crypto since 2017, time for a refresher course. DYOR.]

Even smaller operations like Telcoin already allow you to purchase TEL directly from your phone using your bank, and that's in Canada. TEL's pretty neat, they just launched a corridor to send remittance payments from Canada to the Philippines at a much lower cost than a traditional remittance transfer. The Telcoin app is already live and integrated into their AliPay-style system there called GCash which can be used for groceries and bills and such. Once the GCash announcement on Chinese New Year happens, TEL will go parabolic.

Anyway, this year is going to be when crypto becomes commonplace everywhere, despite the anguished cries of raging no-coiners like HHH. GME thing was last nail in the coffin of the traditional finance industry.
I really don't care if cryptos take off, but you're delusional if you think more than 1 or 2 will become accepted at many places. People aren't going to want to get their paychecks in some random obscure coins.
 
I really don't care if cryptos take off, but you're delusional if you think more than 1 or 2 will become accepted at many places. People aren't going to want to get their paychecks in some random obscure coins.
I don't even know where to start explaining what is wrong with this statement. But hey, sure, stick to your delusion. Keep working for useless paper money not backed by anything but the word of a retarded corpse.
 
I don't even know where to start explaining what is wrong with this statement. But hey, sure, stick to your delusion. Keep working for useless paper money not backed by anything but the word of a retarded corpse.
Coins are also not backed by anything, at least the governments of the world are backing paper money
 
Coins are also not backed by anything, at least the governments of the world are backing paper money
Utility tokens like pretty much everything in my portfolio have intrinsic value, as in, they are used to keep web3 running. What does your paper money do? Can't even wipe one's arse with it now because most bills are laminated.
 
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