Re: Is Bitcoin legally a Currency?
What has historically made a currency
legitimate defacto is the ability to pay perceived tax obligations, so no, Bitcoin is not a currency, because currently no taxing authority will accept it..
In the USA the US Dollar must be accepted for existing debt, under law and criminal penalties if not, so it appears the modern definition, at least in the USA, is to pay existing debt byway of coercive threat of force/death.
Some might confuse "currency" with "legal tender". The meaning is as distinct as the spelling.
The first has a practical definition, the second a legal one.
There are private currencies.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_currency(Hey look, Liberty Dollar made the list and not yet Bitcoin? Someone should update it.)
Then I guess the hinge-pin is my use of the word 'legitimate'. Allow me to replace that with 'defacto'.
Bottom line at the end of the day is mean men with guns will kill me if I dont pay them with it and resist their attempts to imprison me for my inaction, which realistically requires me to earn it and use it, or I could go to prison or die, because they never deescalate or back off until equal-to-greater force is applied. They will keep sending more and more men until I pay, am in prison or dead. Then they take my property away from my heirs, sell it and recoup my refusal to obey.
So, for my purposes, I meant a currency you can pay Caesar what is Caesar's with.
You maintain the confusion between terms. Your description is of legal tender, and nothing really to do with currencies, legitimate, defacto or otherwise.
That a particular currency is
legal tender within a geographic region does nothing to invalidate all other
currencies that may be bartered about. Legal tender just means that it can settle a debt under the law, such as a tax debt, which you can get by hanging out in an area with a government that taxes people. Legal tender also means that you are obliged to accept it to settle any other debt. It does not require you to transact using it, only to not refuse it if used to pay a debt (you can't require
BTCBTC instead if $$ are offered) unless these are specific terms in a contract, and if that contract gets litigated, it will likely end up being $$ anyway as "specific performance" (another legal term that can require a different payment) is much more difficult to get from a judge.
Look at other debts such as a restaurant bill. The restaurant is required to accept legal tender if paid, but is free to accept dishwashing, a good review in a magazine, hugs or anything else they might choose. So dishwashing can be a currency. What makes a currency is the fluidity by which transactions can occur with it. Like the current in a river, the more money flow, the more defacto it is a currency.
So bitcoin is a "currency" but there is nothing either illegitimate or legitimate about that term. 50K transactions a day make it a pretty good one (though maybe not as good as hugs). Currency is not a legal term of art in the way that "legal tender" or "current money" are.