CITIGROUP IS ATTEMPTING TO CREATE ‘CITICOIN’ TO KEEP UP WITH BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY

Time again to make fun of the big banks like you made fun of that kid in school whose mom bought them corduroy pants. So, in the latest Bitcoin news the “Too Big To Fail” banks are trying to adopt Bitcoin anything to attract customers because they’ve gotten some bad PR in the past. Except they’re also “Too Big To Evolve” with new technology. The only thing corporate banks are good at creating is technological redundancies considering crypto-currencies are special because they are the only form of money specifically created for the internet. Companies that are focused on internet commerce can see a bright future with Bitcoin but the dinosaurs should probably take a seat on the bench and wait for the asteroid.

 

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Guest Post By Alexandre Beaudry

A few months ago Goldman Sachs jumped into the Bitcoin market by investing in the Bitcoin startup Circle that is creating a dual currency wallet for users to seamlessly transition their Bitcoins into fiat currencies. This was a game changing move from a traditional bank but it has left other big players to fend for themselves as the bank industry adapts to crypto-currencies and new technology.

Continue reading “CITIGROUP IS ATTEMPTING TO CREATE ‘CITICOIN’ TO KEEP UP WITH BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY”

Mt. Gox’s Downfall Shows the Power of Creative Destructio​n: Erik Voorhees Interview

Mt. Gox’s Downfall Shows the Power of Creative Destruction: Erik Voorhees Interview

Bitcoin evangelist and Coinapult Cofounder Erik Voorhees gives us his thoughts on the demise of Mt. Gox and losing nearly $300K in Bitcoin… why cryptocurrency exchanges are a threat to government and the banking industry… what really happened with China’s “ban” on Bitcoin…and advice for investing in cryptocurrencies.

Here are a few excerpts:

“You know, Mt. Gox was … really the first Bitcoin exchange. They got started by this hacker guy who put it together and was suddenly running a $100 million Bitcoin exchange. That’s sort of a recipe for disaster. … This is the ultimate creative destruction of capitalism. There’s a huge market opportunity for people who know how to do this right, to step in and do it—and already we have exchanges that are better run than Mt. Gox.”

“I think that it will be very common to send digital money over the Internet, just like it’s common to send digital information over the Internet today. … You can’t put the Internet back in the bottle, and Bitcoin is just one more extension of Internet technology changing the way that we interact with each other.”

“I guess [the government] will try the typical tactics of vilification, of trying to associate Bitcoin with black markets and terrorism and money laundering and all that kind of thing. They will try to slander it, but that’s really not going to work. I think there is a certain inevitability of fiat money losing to what I call hard digital currencies, and I don’t see them as being stoppable … they’re just really going to waste a lot of taxpayer money and time.”

“I would say that Amazon accepting Bitcoin will be at the tail end of it. You know, Amazon is a large company, they move slowly. They’re not going to be an early adopter. By the time it’s on Amazon, it will already be widespread.”Sound Money Radio host Andy Duncan speaks with Erik Voorhees about the collapse of the popular Bitcoin trading exchange Mt.Gox and the implications of this for the ongoing future of cryptocurrencies.  Erik is the cofounder of Coinapult, a popular Bitcoin transfer website.

Of Paper Money, Digital Money And Gold

Guest Post by Hugo Salinas Price

The digital “Bitcoin” has bit the dust at Mt. Gox Bitcoin Exchange; over $400 million US has evaporated, or perhaps moved into someone’s pocket. The news is all over the Internet these days.

“Digital money” is accepted world-wide. There exists only a remnant of fiat paper money which is increasingly and deliberately made more difficult to use and transport physically. The reason being, that digital transactions leave a trail of information which governments use to control the behavior of their subjects (we can hardly call them “citizens” any longer) whereas citizens using paper money in their dealings leave no trail.

A bank in Mexico, of which I have personal knowledge, receives millions in dollar bills every week in thousands of individual money-exchange transactions. This presents a problem for the bank. Why? Because not one bank in the US will accept these dollar bills (mostly twenties) for credit to the Mexican bank’s account.

Apparently, it would be necessary to present a lifetime resumé of each of the individuals exchanging their dollar bills for pesos, in order to prove that there is no money-laundering going on. Impossible to do, what with the tens of thousands of transactions.

Only the long-established Mexican banks can remit their dollar bills for credit to the US, and then, only to Bank of America. The bank of which I speak is relatively new – though it has well over 12 million individual account holders – and Bank of America will not receive dollar bills from it. Other Mexican banks of recent creation are in the same fix.

All countries are engaged in hampering the use of paper money. Mexico is engaged in this process; otherwise, the Mexican monetary authority – the Bank of Mexico – would have intervened to assist the Mexican bank of which I speak, to remit its dollar bills to the US for credit to its account.

But, to return to the Bitcoin:

Bitcoin has received a great deal of media attention both in the US and around the world. This is quite suspicious, in my view. Of course, there is no way to prove that the Bitcoin has support in the higher circles of politics.

An interesting point about the Bitcoin is that it is so important for it to have a price in dollars; it has had various prices, all totally speculative.

I should like to point out that when real money – gold – was in use in the world, it had no price. All national currencies were only certain various amounts of gold, with various national names.

The Bitcoin as a “digital currency” is an example of the enormous confusion which reigns in the world, regarding what money is and must be.

Money – authentic money – must be the most marketable of all commodities. This is why gold is money! See here. Silver follows in second place.

The Bitcoin cannot be money because it is digital. Since it is merely a digit, which is as close to nothing as one can get, it cannot settle any debt.

The fact is that the world today is not in the least concerned with settlement. Enormous amounts of digital Bonds which promise to deliver digits, but with an interest rate attached, have accumulated as reserves in Central Banks of exporting countries. The Bonds, which are evidences of debt, are proof that payment – that is to say settlement of trade imbalances – has not taken place.

Settlement of international trade imbalances requires that something be delivered in payment, and that something can only be gold. (Silver has lesser value, but might conceivably be fit into settlement of world trade.)

Suppose that China should come into open conflict with its neighbor, Japan. Japan is an ally of the US. In such a conflict, the US might decide to freeze all Chinese dollar reserve “assets” for the duration.

With a few computer clicks in New York, China would find itself deprived of the use of some $1.3 Trillion dollars of its reserves, which are invested in digital Dollar Bonds.

This is a simple explanation of why the Chinese – among the most intelligent people on the planet – are buying gold hand over fist. Gold in the Chinese Treasury cannot be “frozen” in New York.

On March 4 we read that an advisor to Putin has recommended that Russia dump US Bonds in case of US sanctions against Russia, related to the Ukrainian affair. However, if Russia should attempt to dump US Bonds, it would discover that they had already been “frozen” in New York.

The Bitcoin must have a price, but cannot find it and will not be able to find it, for the following reason:

All digital currencies in use today have derived values. The fiat digital Dollar, for instance, has a value that derives, historically, from the time when the Dollar was 1/20.67th of an ounce of gold, and later 1/35th of an ounce of gold, and from that time to the present, a series of falling values which have each derived from a prior value by a series of devaluations.

The Bitcoin has no history, which is the essential element which makes all digital currencies acceptable, utterly false though they are.

The Bitcoin is simply a childish distraction for a childlike world population incapable of discerning falsity, much to the satisfaction of all the crooks, big and small, who prosper by scamming the public.

I remit to Von Mises, who stated that no fiat currency has ever been successfully introduced into circulation without a monetary value ultimately derived from when that currency was gold or silver money. Bitcoin does not fill the bill; it cannot circulate along with the established fiat currencies of the world because it has no history, no ancestry reaching back to its parent, gold or silver.

KRUGMAN – DISGRACED INTELLECTUALLY CORRUPT STATIST

Paul Krugman On Money: Why Economics Has Become a Disgraced Profession

 http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/

“I write to you from a disgraced profession. Economic theory, as widely taught since the 1980s, failed miserably to understand the forces behind the financial crisis.

Concepts including “rational expectations,” “market discipline,” and the “efficient markets hypothesis” led economists to argue that speculation would stabilize prices, that sellers would act to protect their reputations, that caveat emptor could be relied on, and that widespread fraud therefore could not occur.”

James K. Galbraith


There are several somewhat surprising assertions in this piece below from Paul Krugman, which left me almost speechless. But not quite.

I might be unfair in taking it seriously, or more seriously than one should do with what could be just a politically motivated puff piece. The Western central banks seem to be ‘in a jam’ as it were, and now is the time for all their men to come to the aid of the financial status quo.

First, Krugman is touting the fiat petro-dollar as somehow humanitarian, as compared to apparently the worst mine he could find, in order to throw stones at the gold industry. Or presumably anything real that comes out of or off of the ground for that matter, including natural resources and agricultural products, because one can find abuse of labour in all of them.

This is so off handed hypocritical as to be mind-boggling.

I think we can stipulate that abuses of capital and power can and do exist in any human endeavor, and the proper but occasionally underutilized role of government is to mitigate them.

Considering the carnage that the financial industry and the Banks have wreaked on the real economies of the world, I hope the hypocrisy here is obvious to anyone with any sense of current events whatsoever.  Certainly we have no excuse to blind ourselves to the all too recent and terrible role of crony capitalism in destroying lives around the world in the endless pursuit of power, and the supremacy of greed.  And that power is based largely on the dollar.

This is the great failing in Modern Monetary Theory. It assumes that if we make the creation of money easy enough, it will make the people who hold that power naturally virtuous, because it takes less effort to be good and so they will choose to be good.

This is the Zimbabwe school of public policy, and the John Law Institute of Economic Thought.  The ‘scholar-gentry’ somehow imagine themselves as nature’s virtuous wise men, operating for the objective good, but the serial bubbles and crises in the West over the past twenty years show how this assumption is part of the efficient market hypothesis:  a romantic canard.

Then Paul Krugman takes on Bitcoin. He posits it as based on a great mine located in Iceland that creates bit coins because it is cold there and electricity is cheap. I thought he might be speaking sardonically, but I’m not so sure.

Engineering students I know and their college friends mine bitcoins and litecoins from their dorm rooms, which are not particularly cold, but where electricity is essentially free.  However the amount of electricity used is so minimal that it really doesn’t matter.  But this is besides the real point.

What threw me for a loop was his snarky punch line designed to put the whole idea of Bitcoin to bed.

“we’re burning up resources to create “virtual gold” that consists of nothing but strings of digits…”

If this is not the very description of the modern dollar, except for the burning up resources line, used by Ben Bernanke in his famous speech in which he says that deflation is not a problem for a Fed that ‘owns a printing press,’ I don’t know what is.  I might say misallocating resources to the financial sector rather than burning up resources, but that may be a nicety.

Krugman derides Bitcoin as ‘virtual gold’ but in reality it is much closer to ‘virtual dollars’ because both are created out of essentially nothing but a few key strokes and cycles on a computing machine.

Bitcoin has a limiting factor built in to it.  Gold has a limiting factor in its natural scarcity.

The primary difference is that the dollar is backed by the power of the state, and bitcoins are relatively stateless, which is their weakness.   Gold’s power is that the state cannot create it, merely abuse it.

This whole ‘progress’ concept is just a canard, as is the localizing of the view of gold to a few eccentric gold bugs.

If China and a few other central banks were not buying gold, and in size, there would be no issue here, and the status quo based on the Western dollar would not feel so threatened.    Are China and these others merely ignorant gold bugs?  Or are they reacting to a situation in a way that people have done throughout history?

They are seeking a refuge from the abuse of power by a status quo.

There is a classic policy disagreement about the international monetary system underway, which some have taken to calling a currency war, and most establishment economists are ignoring it, or talking it down.  And this is why the next financial crisis is going to hit them smack in the face, like the last two crises which they aided and abetted, if nothing by their silent acquiescence.

Fiat money has been tried many, many times in the past, especially over the last few centuries. It has ended in the same manner every time.

As Bernard Baruch himself observed, ‘gold has worked since the times of Alexander.’  Baruch understood money and markets.  But he was no servile economist, caught in a credibility trap.

Rather than dealing with reality, and understanding why people throughout history seems to be ‘voting’ in certain ways when there is a choice, and why China and other Asian and Mideastern nations and their central banks are buying gold in sizable quantities, Mr. Krugman just writes this off as some eccentricity, because it does not fit his model of how things should be.

And this is the stance of a statist, and it requires increasing use of force as people reject its falsity.  It appears to be mere sophistry in the service of power, and it is unworthy.   But this is economics today, cheerleaders for their favorite brand of political power.  It is after all a social science more often used to rationalize rather then explain, except in its most basic elements and in its practical microeconomic applications.

Arguing for stimulus without acknowledging and addressing the flaws and obvious policy mistakes in the system that have led to multiple and increasingly destructive asset bubbles is beyond reckless, and almost wanton.  But it is politically advantageous.

If Mr. Krugman were to honestly study what money is, rather than what he wishes it to be, things might be clearer and his thinking might be richer.  Alan Greenspan has done this, but then he subordinated his knowledge to his careerist aspirations.

And perhaps this is what exercised me to write this more than anything else.  As an academic economist and ‘very serious person,’ Krugman is arguing like a Fox news anchor, assaulting knowledge to score his political points.  He is cloaking his policy advocacy in the trappings of his profession, and he thereby cheapens it.  And this is why it has become disgraced.

Let me be clear on this.  I am not proposing that gold become a new monetary standard.  I think that a new international monetary regime will evolve, and that gold will play some part.

But I am saying that the public policy proposals put forward by economists are too often stuff and nonsense, merely rationales used to promote whatever ideology or power group they believe in, or seek to curry favour with, in the first place.   And that the power to create money and distribute it is a deadly power, and has led to failures repeatedly over and over again.  So safeguards must be taken with it.

And if gold is such a dead issue, then why does Krugman need to argue so bitterly against it, resorting to sophistry and ridicule and appeals to authority?    It is because he is trying to force an argument against the will of a sizeable portion of the world’s people.  It is a policy battle, with good points and bad points.  But he chooses not to argue it honestly, exposing the good and the bad, but politically and cheaply.

These economic ‘laws’ are almost always arguments, but not proofs.  But cloaked as proofs they help to overturn common sense all too often, and this has proven to be a tragedy as is so common with all quack scientific theories.

As I noted a few weeks ago:

“Economics is a profession that succumbed almost en masse, whether by individual actions or the complicit silence of careerism, to the pervasive corruption of financial fraud, and of the persuasive power of Wall Street, the Banks, and big money. The only group that approaches their failure is the national political and financial class, including the accountants and the regulators.

For the most part this has not yet changed because of the unreformed state of the financial system, combined with the snare of the credibility trap. And they cover their shame by calling themselves the ‘scholar-gentry’ and tut tutting about the failure of the public in much the same tones that the plutocrats of past colonial empires would agonize over the plight of the victims of their perfidy in terms of the white man’s burden.”

I strongly suspect that some of the Western central banks, led on by the bullion banks, have made some awful policy errors in the disposition of their nation’s resources over the past ten years. They have committed resources to what they considered a just cause without sufficient diligence, things do not rightly belong to them, thinking that they could retrieve them at some future date without too much effort.

And like any other client of the banks, they have been taken. With the inability to return the national gold to Germany as their people requested, they were staring into the abyss. So they seek to cover this up, and thereby keep digging themselves into an ever deeper hole. And this will prove to be worse than the original deed. It will destroy careers.

The would-be ruling class envisions a relatively unconstrained money supply as a tool amenable to the beneficent use of themselves as philosopher-kings.  And it is a romantic falsehood like efficient market theory.  Whose fiat?

Such a monetary authority gives the power to determine and distribute value and worth to a relatively small group of people who act on their own authority, and too often in secrecy.   Well, we essentially have had that for some time, and as Dr. Phil might say, ‘And how’s that been working for you?

Like so many other romantic notions of the past, the implementation of romantic ideals in pursuit of a paradise would quite likely result in a hell on earth.  The resort to force will become increasingly predatory, self-serving, and relentless.

Addendum:  I have address Paul Krugman’s ‘quote’ from Adam Smith in more detail here.

NYT Times Op-Ed Columnist
Bits and Barbarism
By Paul Krugman
December 22, 2013

This is a tale of three money pits. It’s also a tale of monetary regress — of the strange determination of many people to turn the clock back on centuries of progress.

The first money pit is an actual pit — the Porgera open-pit gold mine in Papua New Guinea, one of the world’s top producers. The mine has a terrible reputation for both human rights abuses (rapes, beatings and killings by security personnel) and environmental damage (vast quantities of potentially toxic tailings dumped into a nearby river). But gold prices, while down from their recent peak, are still three times what they were a decade ago, so dig they must.

The second money pit is a lot stranger: the Bitcoin mine in Reykjanesbaer, Iceland. Bitcoin is a digital currency that has value because … well, it’s hard to say exactly why, but for the time being at least people are willing to buy it because they believe other people will be willing to buy it. It is, by design, a kind of virtual gold. And like gold, it can be mined: you can create new bitcoins, but only by solving very complex mathematical problems that require both a lot of computing power and a lot of electricity to run the computers.

Hence the location in Iceland, which has cheap electricity from hydropower and an abundance of cold air to cool those furiously churning machines. Even so, a lot of real resources are being used to create virtual objects with no clear use.  (Paul K. does not understand how Bitcoin works.

The third money pit is hypothetical. Back in 1936 the economist John Maynard Keynes argued that increased government spending was needed to restore full employment. But then, as now, there was strong political resistance to any such proposal.

Clever stuff — but Keynes wasn’t finished. He went on to point out that the real-life activity of gold mining was a lot like his thought experiment. Gold miners were, after all, going to great lengths to dig cash out of the ground, even though unlimited amounts of cash could be created at essentially no cost with the printing press. And no sooner was gold dug up than much of it was buried again, in places like the gold vault of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, where hundreds of thousands of gold bars sit, doing nothing in particular.

Keynes would, I think, have been sardonically amused to learn how little has changed in the past three generations. Public spending to fight unemployment is still anathema; miners are still spoiling the landscape to add to idle hoards of gold. (Keynes dubbed the gold standard a “barbarous relic.”) Bitcoin just adds to the joke. Gold, after all, has at least some real uses, e.g., to fill cavities; but now we’re burning up resources to create “virtual gold” that consists of nothing but strings of digits

Read the entire op-ed here.

Posted by Jesse

ACCORDING TO PLAN

On one of the Bitcoin threads last week I pondered whether TPTB were purposely driving the price of bitcoin to unsustainable levels in order to crash it in an attempt to discredit it as an alternative currency. Make no mistake about it, the bankers and politicians DO NOT like bitcoin. Anything that reduces their power and/or control of the monetary system is considered a threat. They may act unconcerned, but in the smokey backrooms where the real decisions in this country are made, the bankers are worried. This bubble and crash smells like a planned publicized event to scare people away from bitcoin. The MSM will now do their part by scorning and ridiculing bitcoin as a joke. TPTB are becoming a bit predictable.

Bitcoin Crashes, Loses Half Of Its Value In Two Days

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It was inevitable that a few short days after Wall Street lovingly embraced Bitcoin as their own, with analysts from Bank of America, Citigroup and others, not to mention the clueless momentum-chasing, peanut gallery vocally flip-flopping on the “currency” after hating it at $200 only to love it at $1200 that Bitcoin… would promptly crash. And crash it did: overnight, following previously reported news that China’s Baidu would follow the PBOC in halting acceptance of Bitcoin payment, Bitcoin tumbled from a recent high of $1155 to an almost electronically destined “half-off” touching $576 hours ago, exactly 50% lower, on very heave volume, before a dead cat bounce levitated the currency back to the $800 range, where it may or may not stay much longer, especially if all those who jumped on the bandwagon at over $1000 on “get rich quick” hopes and dreams, only to see massive losses in their P&Ls decide they have had enough.

Which incidentally, like gold, is to be expected when one treats what is explicitly as a currency on its own merits in a world of dying fiat – with the appropriate much required patience – instead of as an asset, with delusions of grandure that some greater fool will pay more for it tomorrow than it is worth today. Sadly, in a world of HFT trading, patience is perhaps the most valuable commodity.

As for Bitcoin, while the bubble may or may not have burst, and is for now kept together with the help of the Winklevoss bros bid, all it would take is for another very vocal institutiona rejection be it in China or domestically, where its “honeypot” features are no longer of use to the Fed or other authorities, for the euphoria to disappear as quickly as it came…

Two day chart, showing the epic move from $1155 to $576 in hours:

And longer term chart showing the overnight action in its full glory:

DESTROYER OF THE DOLLAR

Ron Paul Says Bitcoin Could be the “Destroyer of the Dollar”

Personally, I wouldn’t put it that way. The dollar is being destroyed by the Federal Reserve. Bitcoin is merely a preferred conduit through which fed up citizens decide to express their displeasure with the incredibly corrupt corporatist-facist state being shoved down our throats by a handful of insane and greedy oligarchs. Interesting comments nonetheless. From CNN Money:

Imagine a world in which you can buy anything in secret. No banks. No fees. No worries inflation will make today’s money worth less tomorrow.

The digital currency Bitcoin promises all these things. And while it’s far from achieving any of them — its value is unstable and it’s rarely used — some have high hopes. 

“There will be alternatives to the dollar, and this might be one of them,” said former U.S. congressman Ron Paul. If people start using bitcoins en masse, “it’ll go down in history as the destroyer of the dollar,” Paul added.

It’s unlikely that Bitcoin would replace the dollar or other government-controlled currencies. But it could serve as a kind of universal alternative currency that is accepted everywhere around the globe. Concerned about the dollar’s inflation? Just move your cash to bitcoins and use them to pay your bills instead. Tired of hefty credit card fees? Bitcoin allows transactions that bypass banks.

“That’s the holy grail for people who believe in freer markets and currency,” said Adam Gurri, a libertarian economics writer in New York.

There are no middlemen charging fees to move money between users. You can transfer bitcoins — even infinitesimally small fractions of one — directly to others’ digital wallets.

But don’t expect governments and banks to let Bitcoin take over so easily. Financial institutions will lose business if people stop using their payment systems, and central banks like the U.S. Federal Reserve would lose their ability to help slow and speed up economic activity. Paul expects banks to lobby and authorities to crack down.

“Governments absolutely demand a monopoly on money and credit. They’re not going to give it up easily,” Paul warned. “They will come down hard.”

Interesting times…

Full article here.

In Liberty,
Mike

Why Gary North Is Wrong About Bitcoin

Why Gary North Is Wrong About Bitcoin

gary north bitcoin

I like Gary North. I appreciate his work and I spent a very pleasant hour hanging out with him at FreedomFest a few years back. We have mutual friends. I saw the headline for his anti-Bitcoin article but didn’t take time to read it until we got several emails asking about it.

So, with respect that is due, here’s why Gary is wrong, point by point:

Ponzi Economics

I’ll quote Gary in italics, then respond in a plain font. The section titles are his.

… someone who no one has ever heard of before announces that he has discovered a way to make money. In the case of Bitcoins [sic], the claim is literal.

First, whether we’ve heard of him or not is meaningless, and here Gary sets a negative, suspicious tone.

Second, Satoshi didn’t say he could “make money,” he created a program that would verify crypto-currency. That’s not really the same.

He made this money out of digits. He made it out of nothing. Think “Federal Reserve wanna-be.”

Money out of digits isn’t true at all. Bitcoin is money made with cryptography – with mathematics. And as much as I like Gary’s preferred gold and silver, mathematics is eternal, built into the very nature of the universe. That’s hardly a soft foundation. Those who don’t understand mathematics may jump to the conclusion that Bitcoin is “unbacked,” but that position is simply ignorant.

Likewise, to call Bitcoin a Fed wannabe is opposite to the truth. Bitcoin is the Anti-Fed.

The individual who sells the Ponzi scheme makes money by siphoning off a large share of the money coming in… The money was siphoned off from the beginning. Somebody owned a good percentage of the original digits. Then, by telling his story, this individual created demand for all of the digits.

And Gary knows this how? (Suspicion is not a proof.) If fact, he can’t know it, and that’s one of the beauties of the currency – there are no names attached.

And how was the money “siphoned off”? Someone, we don’t know who, started mining bitcoins, a fairly difficult process. In other words, they worked to get it, just like people work to get gold out of the ground. Gold miners and early Bitcoin miners – in identical fashion – made big initial finds. Shall we despise and accuse them for it?

Lastly, Satoshi did NOT “tell his story” or “create demand.” Satoshi disappeared. Gary can guess that Satoshi is working under some other name now, but he has no way of knowing that.

The coins will never be the money of the future. This is my main argument.

“I know what will happen in the future” is very poor logic and is very far from compelling.

The Austrian Theory of Money’s Origins

Gary begins by quoting old definitions of money. There is nothing particularly wrong with those definitions, but are they supposed to negate progress for all time? To freeze the world in place? Should they make any new adaptation evil? I hardly think that was their intent.

Here is the central fact of money. Money is the product of the market process. It arises out of an unplanned, decentralized process. This takes time. It takes a lot of time. It spreads slowly, as new people discover it as a tool of production, because it increases the size of the market for all goods and services.

Bitcoin is nothing but the operation of market forces – there is zero coercion involved.

Bitcoin is utterly decentralized – there is no center at all.

Bitcoin is utterly unplanned – it involves a million people, all doing their own thing.

As for speed, the Bitcoin idea was created in the 1990s and has been implemented for almost five years. How slow is slow enough?

No one says, “I think I’ll invent a new form of money.”

Yes, they do! That’s precisely what the first person to use gold did!

Bitcoins Are Not Money

Admittedly, those who got in early on this Ponzi scheme are doing very well. They will probably continue to do well for a time.

Honestly, this reads like an appeal to envy.

As more people hear about this investment, which is justified in terms of its future potential as money, more people will buy it… [like] late investors in Charles Ponzi’s scheme thought they were buying into the arbitrage potential of foreign postage stamps.

I’m sure some people will think of Bitcoin as an investment (which it is not) or that it is an arbitrage vehicle (which it is not) and will do stupid things. Some people always do stupid things. So what?

I and many others have been saying that Bitcoin is a crypto-currency, not an investment. We’ve also warned incessantly that it is new and has enemies. In a How to Use Bitcoin report we issued just last week, we said “This is not a place for the timid,” and, “There are no guarantees.”

Bitcoins are not an alternative currency. They are something you buy in the midst of a mania, and you will sell at some point in order to get back your money.

Here we see something sad and ironic: a man who hates the Fed, trying to ruin the one tool that can actually slay the Fed.

Bitcoin is not important because its price is rising – it’s important because it takes the control of money away from the cartel.

Concern with the dollar equivalent is a fetish, a distraction. The purpose of Bitcoin – the intent of Satoshi – is not to play price games, but to dis-empower the fiat cartel.

Just Say No

In order for Bitcoins [sic] to become an alternative currency, there will have to be millions of users of the currency.

Umm… there are, or at least soon will be. Everything new starts from zero.

They will have to develop in a market on their merit as money.

Perhaps Gary is unaware, but tens of thousands of people are using Bitcoin precisely because it is better money. Consider sending money to your cousin in Manila via a bank wire or Western Union; then compare that to sending Bitcoin.

What Goes Up, Comes Down

… the market will unravel. It will unravel for the same reason that all Ponzi schemes have unraveled: not enough new buyers. When the new buyers do not show up in great numbers, the holders will start to dump them.

There have been several “crashes” already, and the majority of Bitcoin holders sat firm – because they actually USE the currency and want to continue using it.

Furthermore, “buyers” is mostly a misnomer, applying only to the most ignorant Bitcoin holders.

This mania is going to be the stuff of best-selling books. This is going to be this stuff of Ph.D. dissertations in economics and psychology. This is going to be the equivalent of Mackay’s book, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.

Translation: “People will make fun of you!”

Conclusion

Anytime that anybody tries to sell you an investment, you have to look at it on this basis: “What are the future benefits that this investment will give final consumers?”

Again, Bitcoin is NOT an investment. And the benefit it gives is obvious: it’s better currency.

There is no economic justification of buying Bitcoins [sic] as an alternative currency.

A million of us have learned differently. All you have to do is try: Send a hundred dollars by Western Union, then send them by Bitcoin. Compare.

it was impossible as an economic concept from the beginning. The Austrian theory of money shows why.

I know Austrians who disagree.

I do not invest in capital that has no economic justification other than the greater fool theory.

So, Bitcoin users are “fools”? Hardly a charitable position to take.

My Conclusion

It’s a tragic thing: Precious metals people have been complaining about the Fed and the fiat currency cartel for decades. Then comes a tool that empowers them to both ruin the cartel and to free their precious metals… and they do their very best to destroy it.

I find the arguments in Gary’s piece to be misleading and wholly unconvincing, and I hope my reasoning is fairly clear.

But, all that said, take a look at both and make up your own mind.

Paul Rosenberg

[Editor’s Note: Paul Rosenberg is the outside-the-Matrix author of FreemansPerspective.com, a site dedicated to economic freedom, personal independence and privacy. He is also the author of The Great Calendar, a report that breaks down our complex world into an easy-to-understand model. Click here to get your free copy.]