great video for identifying who you can orange-pill, and who you can't
(for me, 2 more men in the last 2 months)
"Injections of liquidity" aka money printing.It's very lazy, shallow thinking to blame the Federal Reserve for all (or most) of our economic/financial woes. Anyone who is familiar with the history of banking in the United States understands perfectly well why the Fed was created. It was not a conspiracy by wealthy WASPs and Jews to steal the labor of every hard-working American. It was simply an effort to prevent full-scale economic collapse triggered by systemic banking crises, which occurred with shocking regularity after Andrew Jackson dissolved the Second Bank of the United States in 1836. These crises were not theoretical. They were fixtures of the nineteenth and early twentieth century American economy. With the Federal Reserve acting as the lender of last resort, the sort of banking panics that once typified the American economy became a relic of the past, providing stability which helped the economy expand even further.
Educate yourselves on what happens to a banking system without a central bank to provide injections of liquidity during a crisis:
A feature and not a bug. Such flexibility is what makes fiat currency an extremely powerful invention. Since money is itself nothing but a social fiction to facilitate commerce, and has no actual value in and of itself, the ability to create money on demand - and to thereby stem the sort of panics that inevitably emerge when people suddenly start believing that money is scarce and must be hoarded - is a very useful property."Injections of liquidity" aka money printing.
You can also call fire departments and public roads communism under the same logic. And yet if your neighbor's house catches on fire and it threatens to spread to yours - through no fault of your own - you would probably be glad to see that "communist" fire truck headed your way, driving down the "communist" road. Banking panics, like out of control fires, end up harming people who had nothing to do with their origin, which is why it is in the public interest to stymie them as much as possible.Why should money lenders be bailed out by everyone else? They took the risk, they should realize the losses. This is communism.
And yet the vast, overwhelming majority of credit money in our financial system is created by private banks issuing loans, not a state-owned central bank. In addition to educating yourself on the history of banking, I suggest you also research the history of communism and its implementation. I think you will quickly realize that actual communism, especially as practiced in the Soviet Union, was a much more overarching and totalitarian economic system than anything we've ever seen in the West. In no way does our banking system even begin to approximate the level of total economic control and oppression that the communists wielded over their populations.Plank 5 of the Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx:
"5. Centralisation of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with State capital and an exclusive monopoly."
Because look at the fortunate lives we have and live in spite of the Federal Reserve and a (((rigged))) economic system that bails out (((crooks))). The Rothschild's and jews became monopolistic trillionaires but allowed 25 million Americans to become millionaires in the process (not out of benevolence but because they need us in order to survive and have their trillions mean anything). And despite inflation, a million dollars still means something in terms of one being able to "buy one's own version of freedom" in 2026. So (((The System))) sucks within the globohomo blackpill frame but within the US Dollar Chad Frame we keep going to work and chugging along (no matter what the fear mongering MSM says tomorrow's gas prices will be). We can thank our (((enemies))) for the lives we have while still wanting to eradicate them from our government and bring (((them))) to justice for taking more than their fare share off the sweat of our brow.Why should money lenders be bailed out by everyone else?
You know fiat currency was part of the reason for he collapse of the Roman empire (they kept diluting their gold and silver coins with increasing amounts of copper a.k.a. Money printing).A feature and not a bug. Such flexibility is what makes fiat currency an extremely powerful invention. Since money is itself nothing but a social fiction to facilitate commerce, and has no actual value in and of itself, the ability to create money on demand - and to thereby stem the sort of panics that inevitably emerge when people suddenly start believing that money is scarce and must be hoarded - is a very useful property.
You can also call fire departments and public roads communism under the same logic. And yet if your neighbor's house catches on fire and it threatens to spread to yours - through no fault of your own - you would probably be glad to see that "communist" fire truck headed your way, driving down the "communist" road. Banking panics, like out of control fires, end up harming people who had nothing to do with their origin, which is why it is in the public interest to stymie them as much as possible.
And yet the vast, overwhelming majority of credit money in our financial system is created by private banks issuing loans, not a state-owned central bank. In addition to educating yourself on the history of banking, I suggest you also research the history of communism and its implementation. I think you will quickly realize that actual communism, especially as practiced in the Soviet Union, was a much more overarching and totalitarian economic system than anything we've ever seen in the West. In no way does our banking system even begin to approximate the level of total economic control and oppression that the communists wielded over their populations.
Money cannot fulfill its primary function (medium of exchange) if it is being hoarded. The other two functions of money (store of value and unit of account) are secondary, and can only be realized if the money is primarily utilized for commerce/exchange. I think your biggest hangup is that you simply do not understand the purpose of money. You think that money is something that is supposed to be valuable in and of itself as a means of storing labor value through time, which is why Bitcoin appeals to you. Because there are only 21 million units, Bitcoin is inherently rare and therefore must have value. Ok, that's at least a reasonable position, in the sense that Bitcoin is theoretically a scarce asset that should rise in value indefinitely (this belief focuses only on supply and totally ignores demand, but we'll ignore that for now). But it is precisely this same property (scarcity) which makes it completely unworkable as money, because people are prone to hoard rather than spend it. Money is to the economy as blood is to the body: if it stops flowing or otherwise becomes too scarce, the organism dies."hoarding money" also known as saving, is not harmful -- it is a measure of generosity
It is a measure of a person's limited time, given to others in excess of time demanded from others
all of us have a finite time on earth, why should we measure it with infinite money? its illogical
why support those who take more than they give?
You have brainwashed yourself by consuming a voluminous amount of pro-Bitcoin and anti-fiat material. You know all the arguments in favor of Bitcoin and against fiat, but you remain ignorant of the history of banking (and thus how and most importantly why our banking/financial system developed the way it did). This ignorance has led you to presume that our entire economy can and should be run on a Bitcoin standard, and that centuries of trial and error and and experimentation using fiat currencies should all be tossed out the window in favor of a wholly untested (and transparently unsuitable for no shortage of reasons) cryptocurrency. You would endanger the lives of billions of people by upending the financial and banking system, the bedrock of the global economy, simply for the chance to test out your fringe libertarian theories and pump your bags. No, sir, I'm not the one who is brainwashed here.the biggest debtors (governments and banks) have brainwashed you into thinking their counterfeiting and usury scam is necessary in order to have roads...this is just stockholm syndrome
It's quite a stretch to claim that currency debasement was a cause of the collapse of the Roman empire. In reality it was more of a symptom of imperial decline and overreach. If currency debasement had not been possible, their collapse simply would have accelerated. Let's not derail any further with talk of Rome though.You know fiat currency was part of the reason for he collapse of the Roman empire (they kept diluting their gold and silver coins with increasing amounts of copper a.k.a. Money printing).
There's nothing wrong with fractional reserve banking as long as you have a system in place to discourage panics/bank failures and to alleviate them when they do inevitably occur. Fractional reserve banking allows banks the freedom to create money (via loans) in direct proportion to the economic needs of the local community. In a strict gold-backed monetary system, there is often simply not enough money available to meet the needs of a growing economy. You can make theoretical arguments for why this is not the case and how deflation is actually a good thing until you're blue in the face, but the history of banking has demonstrated over and over, in practice, that you are simply wrong, and that societies which are able to properly harness fiat currency and fractional reserve banking (which should be viewed as an invention/form of technology) are able to enjoy greatly accelerated economic growth and development.Also banking panics happen because of fractional reserve banking. You can have a gold backed currency but if you have fractional reserve banking (rather than full reserve banking) then you will have periodic banking panics.
I can only speak to the US dollar and my 50+ years of using it everyday, day in and day out. And the one thing I can tell you for certain is that it is not collapsing. This is an indisputable fact of today, and you have no other facts to the contrary except "tomorrow I'm pretty sure the whole US economic system is going down the sh*tter."Bitcoin won't collapse fiat currencies: they were collapsing before bitcoin even existed.