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Author Topic: Rise Of Cryptocurrency Transactions  (Read 5446 times)

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Re: Rise Of Cryptocurrency Transactions
« Reply #10 on: November 10, 2021, 04:28:54 AM »
Once the world goes crypto, then software will be injected into your hand to buy and sell.  Social security number was communist start. You will be a slave.  Technology is ushering in the anti Christ. It is god created by the scuм of the earth. Who owns and controls most social media and technology like your cell phones.  Technology has made life more complicated.  It has populations like zombies.  It is portal to hell.  It might seem nutritious.  It had some good qualities but it contains that drop of rat poison. 

Re: Rise Of Cryptocurrency Transactions
« Reply #11 on: November 10, 2021, 07:18:15 AM »
Crypto doesn't produce anything of value other than it being a decentralized database essentially. It is a huge waste of resources and energy. Advocates for it should read these articles:

https://robertdwoodhouse2.medium.com/bitcoins-seven-deadly-sins-55a32003baa5

https://robertdwoodhouse2.medium.com/bitcoin-is-immoral-1dde5ddb3093

https://old.reddit.com/r/buttcoin

https://zippycatholic.wordpress.com/2016/09/19/cryptocurrency-as-cuck-finance-or-promises-made-by-pokemon/

https://zippycatholic.wordpress.com/2016/09/25/blood-money-digital-fools-gold-and-the-second-law-of-thermodynamics/

No one actually cares about blockchain technology, it's not even that great of a technology, there are others that do what it does a lot better. People are only interested in it because of avarice.


Re: Rise Of Cryptocurrency Transactions
« Reply #12 on: November 10, 2021, 10:33:39 AM »
Once the world goes crypto
The world will never go crypto. Jews would be out of a job.

Technology doesn't need crypto to do any of that.

Re: Rise Of Cryptocurrency Transactions
« Reply #13 on: November 10, 2021, 10:47:18 AM »
I am fairly certain that there are Enron investors who now believe, concerning the prudence of that investment, that it wasn’t so wise to “leave that to the nerds”.  I actually know one in real life.  Land is almost always a good investment and typically one of the best hedges against inflation.  Still, I know several real estate owners who now wish they had done better due diligence as “leave(ing) that to the nerds” hasn’t worked out very well for them.

As no one has answered my original questions, I’ll frame the issue within a different narrative.

There is some national catastrophe.  I tend to think this would happen because of an act of nature, but if having it occur because of “ιnѕυrrєcтισn / gubmnt coup” helps your fantasies, go for it.  Being prudent (I was well prepared) and resourceful (“necessity is the mother of invention”) I set up shop to supply things people need to survive.  The power grid is down but I have a generator and stored fuel for a few weeks, and perhaps have developed solar, wind, perhaps even low head hydro power generation capacity on my property.  Cellular (5G wasn’t actually bad and hadn’t already wiped out the population) and land line phones are knocked out but I have ham radio.  I have chickens for eggs to sell and as the nearby factory farm mega dairy was in total collapse I picked up 10 milk cows to supply fresh milk  I actually have an old Surge portable milking system out in the shop that I used with my FFA dairy project way back in high school, so I’m set to go.  Refrigeration could be an issue if I run short of fuel for the generator or a power source.  However, we in the northern environs (eastern Washington in my case) will have cold temperatures for the next 4 -5 months.

A customer comes in with U.S. dollars (as I live in the U.S.).  Yes, there will be inflationary pressure, that will be true for any tradeable instrument or commodity).  Still, the dollar is a tradeable financial instrument that everyone recognizes and most will have some available to them to use for commerce.  I would accept U.S. dollars (and Canadian dollars, British pounds, or euros if I lived in those economies).

A customer comes in who doesn’t have many or any U.S. dollars but does have a commodity I can use, sell, or trade: dry or canned foodstuffs, coffee, alcohol, fuel, fire wood, ammo, building materials … the list could go on.  These would acceptable instruments for trade or barter and perhaps particularly useful because the traditional supply chains would be disrupted.  Being able to acquire goods locally would be a good thing.

A customer comes in with a precious metal or stone (gold, silver, diamonds, emeralds, etc.) or the representation there of.  First, they would have to arrive with the actual commodity in hand, I wouldn’t at all be open to accepting a “paper or digital certificate” that says this person “owns” an amount of said commodity and that it is safely stored “somewhere”.  I likely would have no way of verifying the legitimacy of this “certificate”, nor if I could access the “storage” place, nor if I could get the physical commodity transported to my location so I could use it.  And then, we will need to “convert the value” (i.e., gold is worth $x an ounce, a gallon of milk costs $y) and I would have to ascertain that I could easily exchange the precious metal or stone for commodities to stock the shelves of my shop.  The main advantage would be for someone who acquired the precious asset some time ago and it has experiences significant appreciation in value, i.e. a hedge against inflation.  This advantage is only realized though if they can easily convert the asset into something they can use or need.

Now, a customer comes in with their “cold wallet” of crypto.  I have absolutely NO way of verifying if this is legitimate and unless I have a “cold wallet” based on the same “crypto currency” how would I receive payment?  The same situation would be present even if the “world wide web” was still operational … how would I verify the legitimacy of someone’s “supposed asset” in a crypto vault somewhere, and how would I receive payment?  If I were foolish enough to engage in such a risky transaction how and where can I spend my crypto to restock the shelves of my shop?  I will absolutely NOT “leave that to the nerds”.

Offline Meg

Re: Rise Of Cryptocurrency Transactions
« Reply #14 on: November 10, 2021, 11:47:44 AM »
Former Bush Admin, Wharton School grad, Banking Analyst, Catherine Austin Fitts explains why we must withdraw from crypto and use cash.

She gives insider info on 9/11 and what Mr Globalist has planned for the economy.

1 hour
https://www.bitchute.com/video/hjfH1jeLpEC6/

I don't have time to view the entire video, but can you sum up what Fitts says regarding why she thinks that crypto is a part of a globalist plan? As far as I can tell, the banksters are not involved in the crypto market. It's too big for them to control. I could be wrong.