I'm wondering if the USA will take Silver or Gold at the upcoming games. Russia took Silver and Gold a few times, and China also has taken Silver and Gold. But maybe in the next few years, the USA will again take Silver or maybe Gold. From a business standpoint, is Silver or Gold the smarter bet?
>>62199541I'd prefer a Bitcoin medal. American always wins by medal count
>>62199541But how can you be sure you don't fish a troll after they've read your OP image?
>>62199541Cope. Gold and silver are for poorfags too stupid to learn how to invest in stocks or crypto.
>>62199567Um, I don't know, sir.
>>62199600Yeah we still have the "is it a robot or is it a troll dilemma".A shiny silver robot with gold circuits and lots of fancy gold trim? Or a troll with a precious silver and gold crown and flowing gold cape? And which would be more likely to get metal for USA in 2028?
>>62199611And should we bet it all on getting the Silver metal or the Gold metal, or both? Which is more valuable, long term? Which is more scarce? If we were to stack them, or store them in bags, which is worth more to us as an investment?
>>62199755For the USA, I'm always betting on Gold. It's the patriotic option.>>62199549That should be in the cyberlympics. Bitcoin for first, but what for second and third place?
>>62199541You are thinking too short term. Say the olympics are won and the big bang is over. You have your medal but the judges are now short of medal. Do you think it will be easy street with your winnings when the judges are pretty desperate? That’s what you should plan for
>>62199823I'm more concerned about getting my stacks of silver and gold medals and then they become priceless, and as happened earlier this year, i couldn't unload them before a rug was artificially pulled. I'm proud of the medals, they're a win, just having them, but if it is precluded from leading to a better life it means that just having the medals cannot be the totality of one's plans.