What’s your dollar worth? You give your life energy to generating it, is it doing the same for you in return? If you’ve been paying attention to what’s happening around you, your answer should be a resounding HELL NO.
If you’re in your 20’s, 30’s, 40’s, or even 50’s, you’re probably looking into investing for the future or looking towards creating abundance in your retirement.
I’m dedicating my energy to helping you understand and maybe even convince you that there is no better vehicle for value than Bitcoin.
#Bitcoin #btc #FinancialFreedom #value
@dotkrueger Haha the infighting is incredible.
Julian did a piece on this.
Y’all are retarded. Used to look up to you guys in my early days of if this Bitcoin journey.
So with that bid you farewell, and fuck all yall.
Why do you think it is a scam? I ask this question because 99.99% of people can’t argue coherently or in a logical way as to what aspect of BTC is a scam?
Is fiat a scam? A dollar from 2015 is worth roughly 30% less today. Same amount of work, just devalued.
And clearly it’s not worth zero because major financial institutions that thought it was a scam are now allocating Bitcoin.
Maybe you ought to read about the history of money and what it actually is.
I’m saving this post in a folder I made for people like you.
Am I missing something here? The thesis has changed.
Bitcoin’s thesis of being a peer to peer electronic cash system is still being played out in real time, while simultaneously pulling an alternative thesis as a store of value (which some may argue is also still being played out). Given its tokenomics, it’s easy to say why, but the thesis of tokenization for ETH has not played out at all.
Across all tokenized funds, Ethereum still holds 55-60% of on-chain activity. The latest data puts total tokenized RWAs around $34 billion, with Ethereum commanding roughly $19 billion of that.
Here’s the breakdown for the big players:
• BlackRock BUIDL (~$2.5B): Live on nine chains including Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, Aptos, and others. Ethereum remains the biggest single holder but has lost share to the cheaper chains.
• Franklin Templeton BENJI (total ~$2.5B across variants): Heavily on Stellar — that’s their retail-friendly home and holds the majority, around 60%+. They’ve expanded to Ethereum, Polygon, Solana, Avalanche, Base, Aptos, Arbitrum, and BNB Chain.
• Ondo USDY and OUSG (~$2.8B combined): Primarily Ethereum, but also Solana, Arbitrum, and several others for DeFi integration.
• JPMorgan’s funds (MONY, JLTXX): Launched on Ethereum, with some activity on Base.
Ethereum’s edge is security, compliance comfort, and DeFi composability for institutions. The other chains are grabbing the growth in high-velocity use cases
This is why BlackRock, Franklin Templeton, Ondo, JPMorgan, and others still anchor their funds on Ethereum (or its L2s) for the core, conservative capital.
If you’re core thesis was that ETH replaces everything and is the end all be all , and that hasn’t happened yet because you don’t believe in the direction of where things are going then I get it. Your ROI as a unit of time hasn’t worked out well for you.
But you go on to say you’re bullish on Ethereum, which to me implies that building on this chain has not and will not stop for a while, so how do you capture that value? Why don’t you think Glamsterdam captures any value back to ETH holders?
Something isn’t right, I’m seeing this FUD all pop up at the same time, the triggering event being departures at the EF. Ethereum has had one of the best track records of execution in the crypto industry. Again, not sure why you sold your ETH as we haven’t seen halftime yet.
Across all major tokenized funds, Ethereum still holds about 55-60% of the total onchain market. The latest data puts total tokenized RWAs around $34 billion, with Ethereum commanding roughly $19 billion of that.
Here’s the breakdown for the big players:
• BlackRock BUIDL (~$2.5B): Live on nine chains including Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, Aptos, and others. Ethereum remains the biggest single holder but has lost share to the cheaper chains.
• Franklin Templeton BENJI (total ~$2.5B across variants): Heavily on Stellar — that’s their retail-friendly home and holds the majority, around 60%+. They’ve expanded to Ethereum, Polygon, Solana, Avalanche, Base, Aptos, Arbitrum, and BNB Chain.
• Ondo USDY and OUSG (~$2.8B combined): Primarily Ethereum, but also Solana, Arbitrum, and several others for DeFi integration.
• JPMorgan’s funds (MONY, JLTXX): Launched on Ethereum, with some activity on Base.
Ethereum’s edge is security, compliance comfort, and DeFi composability for institutions. The other chains are grabbing the growth in high-velocity use cases
None of these changes alter the fundamental investment thesis. None if the other chains are anywhere near secure for high stake tokens to reside in. The other chains are being used for high frequency options.
You are a dev, do better.
I’m struggling to see his point of view when Chainlink , being so integral to the crypto ecosystem, has failed to generate any value to investors. That will change I’m sure, but how is this any different to Ethereum and the tsunami storm that is tokenization. The price appreciation from that institutional utility alone would be worth holding ETH long term.
@TFTC21 Don’t know who coffeezilla is, but I’m guessing he’s relevant considering how viral this clip has gone. Anyway, Jeff Walton gave him a spanking here, and hopefully he comes prepared the next time around.
@CrisReed We’re making a big assumption by saying 75 is the top, when market analysis points BTC towards 250+ , 75000 would be a dream when we hit those numbers. He just needs to survive till we get there which again is an assumption, but assuming we get there witchin 2-3 years .
One of the best analogies to drive home the affect of money printing and inflation.
bitcoin:native , fixed supply, directly proportional to innovations in energy production, no need for third parties.
Keep printing money, it’s a Bitcoiner’s dream. The inevitable drive towards hard money.
I think this is a really interesting take on Bitcoin and the connection it fosters with most Bitcoiners but not just them, it should be able to do this for everyone.
Bitcoin, regardless of the FUD out there. Is more ethical than fiat.
Fix the system , don’t complain about fair share when the system you helped build is responsible for them not paying federal tax. They used LEGAL tax loopholes (accelerated depreciation, R&D credits, net operating loss carryforwards from previous years etc,)
Fix it. Do your job.
He did say he’d taper off buying when he owned 5-7% of the network.
But fun stat for you: Banks control/create ~90–98% of the money supply that people and businesses actually use for transactions and saving. I don’t see anyone up in arms about that.
Your fear is irrational as it is not a concern as of now. Retail owns significantly more bitcoin as a percentage (60-67% depending on how you define “retail”).
In the next 5 years:
- The price of oil will drop
- The price of gold will drop
- The price of housing will drop
- The price of healthcare will drop
- The price of food will drop
... in Bitcoin terms.