Well, cryptoniggers ?
>>61721514Just buy pm pegged crypto.
>>61721533You don't hold it, you don't own it.
>>61721533Kek. Imagine thinking that’s gonna work out in the end. The whole point isn’t the price of metals, it’s the physical attributes. Paper silver is not silver
>>61721533>pm pegged cryptoTwice the volatility, half as easy to off ramp, Ten times the riskDisastrous
>>61721551The wonderful properties of not being divisible, hard to transport and easily confiscatable? Damn im sold. Just sold all my bitcoin for boomer rocks
>>61721628Not to mention that i love having to leave my home and talk to the most slimey jew salesmen faggots to sell it and not be able to get spot value. I hate being able to just turn on my pc and instantly sell my asset at spot value on a p2p nerwork.
>>61721628>>61721649You’re retarded and you deserve to be poor for sacrificing fundamentals for convenience
>>61721514
>>61721850Well fundamentally it sounds like it sucks
>>61721628>>61721649Are people using bitcoin as intended yet or do we have to wait five more years before they understand it?
>>61721514The global silver vaults are depleting at a rapid pace as all of the credit runs to hard assets to lock in purchasing power and people are literally "opting in" to owning nothing when the entire globe will experience a run on ALL capital and ALL assets. That's literally the grift! Finding ways to get the tax-cattle to work endlessly and openly "save" in IOUs. The banks and the elite have been the ones living high onthe hog and all you retards have to show for it is a tax bill. That's what a Treasury is. It's literally a chunk of your own ass that says "I owe the US gov $200,000". You want your value? Then YOU fork over $200,000 and we'll GIVE you your ration of healthcare. You pay $200,000 and THEN we will give you a retirement stipend. If people actually saved their purchasing power in a literal surplus these problems wouldn't exist. People are far too trusting of banks and the financial elite. Short selling, money printing, loans, and debts are all tools of "wealth extraction". The money-managers end up with the real goods and you end up with the bill and the coupons and the IOUs. If you own crypto as a means of surviving the economic fallout headed out way you are a grade-A certified retard. This is a resource shortage caused by too many paper-claims against too scarce a pool of tangible goods.
>>6172151440% stock etf20% crypto20% pokemon cards20% goldnever been more comfy in my life
>>61723239High quality post. 401k is a Jewish scam.
>>61723333
>>61723239Not bad but you forgot the part where bitcoin is based
>>61723239To expand on this, the elite's main class interest is being able to earn income on their money. They don't want to actually spend their own money on things they need. They want to leverage it up so they are earning money on their money and not spending it. This is how the economy gets flooded with credit and interest. If I go and take out a $20M loan to buy up a massive apartment complex. I am not actually spending resources to buy it, I am using debt/leverage. I am unable to fulfill the demand side because I don't have $20M. So the cost of the apartments get bid up by the loans along with the fees and interest. And then what do I do? I offload that cost onto the tenants. The banks gets the fees and interest. The owner gets the rental income. The tax-cattle plebs get the bill. It is nothing short of robbery and it is all short sighted and it ALWAYS ends up terminal. This is why you stack, because the U.S. economy has literally not grown since 1983 if you remove the expansion of credit from the GDP equation. If the government tries to repay even a single dollar of its debt while removing the deficit spending, it would be 100% meaningless but it would also come with a collapse worse than the great depression. It would be an abrupt and sudden cessation of all economic activity as the payment system would not longer be able to clear some of the most basic transactions and the bankruptcies would spread like an isreali forest fire.
>>61723409It's not based though. Banks will recapitalize themselves on the back of gold, not crypto. I've always likened it to someone going cave diving to pick up sunken treasure on the cave floor. You think you have it made while you are in the cave. But crypto holders are swimming up a false chimney. They put inordinate amount of capital into the crypto but they won't be able to get it back out when they need it most. Crypto plebs will be trying to firesale their holdings for precious metals because they will find the real-world scarcity of scarce and valuable materials will be infinitely more impactful. No one will need it anymore once real-world pricing is recalibrated against metal. BTC is collapsing against silver as we speak and this was always going to happen. It was known even as BTC was at its apex. The one single trade you can't afford to miss in the metals trade. History has already proven it to us, that even gold-backed dollars can be revalued. Any sort of proxy value or coupon redeemable in the real-deal lost value. The physical ownership of the asset was the dividing line between the haves and the have-notes (kek)
>>61723380How did that work out the previous two times
>>61723462>This is why you stack, because the U.S. economy has literally not grown since 1983 if you remove the expansion of credit from the GDP equation.Actually it's never grown more than 0% in its entire existence when compared to the M2 money supply...
>>61723531>bitcoin is cryptoglow
>>61723977The $46TN bond market ensures there are fewer seats at the table than people looking to eat. The way you take a seat BEFORE the music stops is capital assets not propped up by leveraged. If you show up to the table looking for a meal with BTC in your hand you'll get nothing right along with everyone else who collectively owns the economy two times over. You will be scrambling for anyone to even sit down and LISTEN that you have some super special digital ledger asset and no one will give two shits. No one will want it. When people's supposed purchasing power goes up in smoke then few will have tolerance to owning more "digital assets". Paper millionaires will all be financially prolapsed fighting for Walmart greeter jobs. Is that the kind of economy you want to trust crypto? Because somehow 1 BTC can buy you a very nice luxury car. Yet, somehow when shit hits the fan you think you will end up with more purchasing power, not less? Somehow the economy will shit the bed and trillions of bad assets will be written off but someone is going to think your crypto has MORE value after the bond market collapses than it does when the bond market is still liquid? Get real. The collapse of BTC against metals is already well underway and it will continue to deteriorate.
>>61724058Saved
>>61724058I don't know why you would champion the dollar so hard when you know this is going to happen to it. have you even read the bitcoin whitepaper, or did you fall for some random propaganda post that lumps it in with random indian scamcoins.At the end of the day BTC dollar value is only a temporary stage until the dollar collapses. When that occurs you will begin to see bitcoins price in asset value, including metals. Asset backed BTC >>>> asset backed (((dollars)))
>>61724058>The collapse of BTC against metals is already well underway and it will continue to deteriorate.Someone is scared of USD losing it's place.Glow.
>>61724058>BBBaggieOpinion put directly into the trash
>>61721514tether is the largest private holder of precious metals in the planetcryptoniggers own you
>>61724151>where is this “largest private holder of precious metals in the planet?”
>>61724111I'm not championing the dollar. I'm saying crypto isn't a save haven to the fiat fallout. This is not a simple matter of "line go up" and "line go down" on your assets. It's that the purchasing power of credit is going to implode due to scarcity of real world tangible assets TODAY. There won't be the luxury of waiting for future value because no one is going to accept a promise to be paid tomorrow for three decades at least. The purchasing power of bank credit will implode and so will crypto. It won't collapse in nominal terms but in real terms when priced against metals. Just watch that ratio continue to decline and know that the volatility of BTC won't mean anything when the price of metals continue to make inroads against your asset. You won't have a timely exit, nor will you find the supply of metal you want at a price favorable once signs of stress show up in the bond market. >>61724125The dollar is doomed and I have no affinity for it. I have no allusions of normalcy ruling the day just because "it just can't happen here". America is not post-scarcity, and all of the factors that make us appear so wealthy us due to credit. That's a problem for people who own credit, and real estate and insurance benefits and bonds and social security. That's not my problem. As the precarious nature of debt continues to pile up exponentially it will be too late to find a safe haven. The globe can't even find an equilibrium price for silver as the vaults continue to deplete. And a paltry 850M ounces of global production is like pissing in the wind compared gto $46TN bond market and a $40TN stock market. I'd rather own a stock worth pennies on the dollar than 10 bitcoin in about 10 years. >>61724142Thanks for the high praise. No take backs ;)
>>61724283Okay we seem to be on mostly the same page other than the fact that it's not practical to carry and spend physical metals in 2026 and we need some sort of efficient system to replace the dollar.Therefore bitcoin is based.OP on the other hand is an idiot and his picture implies that USD isn't the actual digital fairy dust.
>>61721514The government will just confiscate it if it goes up too high. My XRP cant be confiscated, Ill just claw that shit right back with my big ol diamond hand (claw)
If you think about something like your wages, my first job years ago paid $5.50 per hour. It was standard pay for a 15 year old and could buy more back then at the time. But as you can see, that $5 I made if I put it under my mattress would have deteriorated to basically nothing. If you look at things like collectibles, antiques, luxury, and real estate. A lot of these things have as much value as they do simply because the entire economy is FLOODED with credit. There are people doing hard work in a factory for $10 per day here in 2026 while people somehow have magic cards worth $20,000 each. Crypto falls into this category. It is propped up on the back of rock bottom interest rates and endless levels of credit flooding into the economy. These $4000 mint condition video games and $1000+ cardboard game pieces aren't actually worth this much money when priced in metal. All of the credit-premium tucked away inside is temporary. All loans are repaid. All debts need to be repaid or written off as losses (or monetized as inflation). So any good or service which exists solely because of credit will eventually errode against real-world resources. All of this garbage is going to continue to lose ground against precious metals. Crypto, stocks, bonds, insurance payouts, retirement payouts, luxury items, leveraged purchases, wages. It all loses ground. And it's not our choice either. We can't just "decide" to move the "big line" in such a way that we are all suddenly wealthy. Real-world resource depletion is a FUNCTION of there being too many claims on goods than goods actually exist. You don't want to own crypto in that environment. The vaults are empty and everyone is scrambling to get some sort of value out of their dollars and you want to own crypto? This is a global phenomenon and not isolated to the dollar. You won't be able to craftily swap your crypto for yuan as some sort of workaround either. The scarcity will be priced in by that point as just another bogus claim
>schizo thread
>>61724835Sneed