It's no longer a "popular vote" if the US government goes against Bitcoiners' wishes.
It's a dictatorship pretending to be something else. Don't be afraid to admit it.
Ah I see. If you win the election it's a democracy, and if you lose the election it's a "dictatorship".
Are you dumb or are you playing dumb? Not that I have high expectations from Cumala voters...
Here's the ELI5:
When a wannabe government (political party) promises to be pro-Bitcoin (before the elections), then it becomes a government (after the elections) and it shows an anti-Bitcoin stance, that's not a democracy, that's a dictatorship pretending to be something else!
I'm surprised you don't seem to understand this.
Imagine ordering a Coke and getting Pepsi instead. You would sue the shop for misleading advertising.
But accepting politicians and their lies is not misleading advertising?
Try to up your IQ a little bit.
@cryptosize: In general I agree that Bitcoin should be resilient against government attacks until a certain point. But a point, or an amount, where government intervention becomes problematic, in my opinion does exist. 30% of all Bitcoins owned by governments, or 20% by a single nation like the US, would be definitely too much. The manipulation potential is simply too high.
The "problematic amount" however has also to do with the, let's call it "ethical maturity" of the Bitcoin community. If most users would support changes to the protocol which go against privacy and censorship resistance, because they don't care about these values, then the manipulation potential is higher than if the community is aware of these issues and would fork away always if there is any manipulation attempt to the protocol.
I don't rule out Bitcoin's community can reach such a high resilience that even a threat by governments owning 30% of all BTC could be repelled in the way you described (UASF, alternative implementations etc.). But judging from the current state of Bitcoin, with many speculative investors, I remain cautious.
I honestly don't know why it worries you that much.
Bitcoin is not PoS like Ethereum, so holding 30-50% (sounds overly optimistic with a 35 trillion debt, but whatever) of the total supply is not going to give them power to change the consensus rules.
Would it give them power to tank the BTC price? Yes, but only if they're foolish enough to sell the
next global reserve currency.
Honestly, I would love it if Satoshi came out of the woodwork and sold his huge 1.1m BTC stash, even if it means that BTC would drop all the way down to $1000.
The only reason whales tend to accumulate more BTC is because the plebs (Average Joe) are not smart enough to buy the fucking dip.
Whales are smart and it's not Satoshi's fault. People are not equal (no matter what leftists say), some have higher IQ than others.
For the same reason the rest of the world follows all kinds of things the US does: our leading economy and our nuclear weapons. Take a look at what the US did to Russia for a recent example, rallying most of the world behind them to create an economic embargo.
USA is a declining empire, nothing lasts forever:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuOcnGAv4ooFor the love of God, wake up and smell the coffee!
Roman citizens back then were exactly like you. Nobody saved them, nobody showed pity for their decadent & arrogant behavior.
BRICs are going to lead the way from now on and you know why?
Because
the World Economic Forum backs them up!
They want to bring the decadent, woke US empire and the USD down to their knees. Dedollarization is part of the WEF's Great Reset agenda and they're going to use BTC as the next global reserve currency.
I wouldn't want to live in the US during 2027-2030. You've been warned.