I propose we take the high road as we move forward with bitcoin. Here's what I mean: If you say bitcoin is a weapon designed to damage central banking, you sound angry and hostile. If you say that bitcoin is a ground-breaking peer-to-peer electronic cash system, and politely discuss that its widespread adoption may make existing financial systems less relevant and motivate governments to re-think antiquated tax laws, you sound intelligent and open-minded.
That's incredibly naive.
Central banking and the people who control it are at war with the rest of humanity, or at best see everybody else as subjects to be ruled over or livestock to be harvested.
The clash between Bitcoin and central banking will be violent,
not because Bitcoin is violent, but because they are ready, willing, and able to bring violence against anything that threatens their monopoly.
Why do you think Krugman said "The US Dollar is backed by men with guns"? That wasn't simply a quip - it's as clear and honest a warning as you're going to get from them.
You're not talking about fundamentally honest people who will gracefully step aside when something better comes along - these are ruthless mafiasos who don't care who they have to crush to maintain their position.
The only problem is they don't have the skills to combat a technological phenomena like Bitcoin themselves, so the determining factor will be how many programmers defect and sell out compared to the number that won't. It's a human resources game now.
I think you may be mis-interpretting my post if you call it naïve. I agree with most of what you just wrote. But you proved my point when you said "not because Bitcoin is violent."
Bitcoin isn't
intended as a weapon to attack/fight anything. Bitcoin is a way to opt-out of the current monetary system and support something that (at least I feel) is superior. Sure, maybe vested interests within the current monetary system will fight bitcoin, but that doesn't mean that "bitcoin is intended as a weapon to damage central banks." If central banks chose to fight bitcoin, it would just reveal
their insecurity.
What I'm saying is that if Paul Krugman says that bitcoin is intended as a weapon to damage central banks, then
he looks angry and afraid (and a bit tinfoil hattish too). If Paul Krugman says that the US Dollar is backed by men with guns (and that that's a good thing), then
he looks like he supports violent oppression.
So, again, if we say that bitcoin is a ground-breaking peer-to-peer electronic cash system, and politely discuss that its widespread
voluntary adoption may make existing financial systems less relevant and motivate governments to re-think antiquated tax laws, we sound open-minded and
non-violent.