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So yeah, countries have been floating ideas for (building or growing) Bitcoin reserve in some sort of budget-neutral manner, but obviously most are too broke or indebted to really go out and buy it from the miners. Then, there is also the optics they have to be concerned about, as buying Bitcoin represents trusting that as money over their own papers?
Does that make companies like Strategy (US), Smart Web (UK) etc. soft acquisition targets of their respective bankrupt governments, with some pretext they come up with? It need not even be a totally forced nationalisation, but merely persuading Saylor somehow to give up the control of the keys/the company to Bo Hines (they seem good friends anyway), for a decent pay-out and some position of influence at the white house (after one has enough whatever is fuck-you money, which Saylor obviously has, they care more about influence and legacy than mere money). The stockholders can be paid with fresh greenbacks hot off the printing press too.
Something similar with Blackrock ETFs as well?
I mean, these can surely be painted as Budget Neutral enough for the sake of the narrative.
Does that make companies like Strategy (US), Smart Web (UK) etc. soft acquisition targets of their respective bankrupt governments, with some pretext they come up with?
Yes. The sly and roundabout pretext might look like a U.S. mandated hard fork, in collusion with Coinbase and Blackrock, with a "National emergency" wrapper such as, "Bitcoin is being used to fund terrorism and CSAM and blah blah blah, therefore we need to hard fork it to the U.S approved version to root out this evil". This announcement will be made on a Friday at 4:05 PM EST right after market close.
Since none of the MSTR or IBIT shareholders have keys, nor do they run nodes, they have no say whatsoever. And since the market is closed, have no chance to liquidate their holdings. It is simply mandated and enforced. Sound like a Black Mirror dystopian fantasy? This hard fork risk factor is mentioned in the ETF prospectus. MSTR and IBIT shareholders do not get to decide which fork to accept and are left with a rug-pulled shitcoin and the biggest bait and switch of the millennium is concluded.
TLDR; Run an economic node.
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127 sats \ 4 replies \ @DarthCoin 8h
ALL of them are SCAMS
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You always rain on my parade but your posts are really entertaining dude
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14 sats \ 0 replies \ @DarthCoin 5h
it takes time until you will get entirely my posts and especially my memes. My memes always have a deep message inside. Not everybody realize that. You are still a newbie.
I am "raining" on your posts because I see that you are still leaning into fiat world and your mindset is not fully prepared for Bitcoin.
And this meme by BitcoinMaxis represent it very well
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such paranoia
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Such ignorance of history.
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5 sats \ 0 replies \ @aljaz 3h
Treasury companies are just strategic reserve that hasnt been nationalized yet
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The US didn't invent Bitcoin just to 6102 it, they've already got ~20% of the supply and a golden goose in Tether et al to monetize the debt. Having that wealth here also assures a taxable base in the future. Plan distrusters rekt.
The fact we get these inane 6102 threads every few days is the best indicator it's a retarded notion.
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how the helll do you get 20%? (4 million Bitcoin)
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You're right, for some reason I misremembered how many coins Satoshi is estimated to have... its much less than that... and the clandestine mining amount is unknowable.
That said, with systems telemetry in most devices for decades and enterprise fronts as a honeypot for passwords/password managers/general storage, the NSA could easily sweep a fair percentage of coins otherwise determined to be "lost", even if they don't have a break/backdoor for the encryption with tweaked RNGs.
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The US government did not invent Bitcoin. The most basic study of the development of Bitcoin confirms this. Your rants are amusing but either delusional or deliberate misinformation. Maybe you are a fiat banker-government apologist-propagandist.
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Yes it did. We've got decades of evidence at this point.
The Satoshi fairy-tale is for adult children, a psyop, they could have told you Santa Clause created it and you'd believe it given your lack of discernment.
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If a state truly wanted Bitcoin reserves without spending too much capital directly, acquiring through indirect strategic partnerships or voluntary agreements with existing large holders is far more feasible than outright forced nationalisation. The trick would be to make it seem like a mutually beneficial alignment rather than a desperate grab. This is why the political relationships you hint at become important. Influence and legacy do weigh heavy in such decisions, but both sides would try to control the framing because reputation in these circles is as much a currency as the assets themselves.
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what's the problem, do you not love your country son?
don't worry, you will get fair value in fiat for the temporary loan.
hoarders get what they deserve.
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Yes. Order 6102 was only effective because most of peoples gold was already held in the custody of banks.
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Yeah, even in China most people keep their money in banks and have to follow whatever Beijing says.
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Not sure what your point is here unless you seek to mock my assertions that China has won the trade war and that Chinas mixed mercantile economy is outperforming the wests highly financialised crony capitalist economies?
It is true that like nearly all authoritarian governments China has outright banned MoE use of Bitcoin and still imposes strict controls on currency/capital flight.
The US appears to be leading a much more sly and sophisticated response which is to allow use of Bitcoin as a speculative commodity while obstructing use as a MoE. ETFs and Treasuries concentrating custody do enhance the potential effectiveness of any future ban on private custody and reinforce the narrative of Bitcoin being a speculative commodity as opposed to a P2P payments protocol.
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