Is it ethical to borrow in fiat, to buy bitcoin? Obviously it's legal, but ethically...it feels off.
I didn't think much about it, until this post came up recently: Starve the State, starve the banks, protect yourself, your privacy & liberty. v1
Here's some quotes from the comments:
0 sats \ 13 replies \ @siggy47 27 Sep I'm pro fiat debt to buy bitcoin. Let the government inflate it away. This "debt is slavery notion" is to make sure there aren't too many people joining the cantillon party. reply
43 sats \ 12 replies \ @mf 28 Sep You do you, but that only legitimizes what they do, and fucks the ones that cannot afford to do the same. Starve the enemies, not your brothers. reply
21 sats \ 2 replies \ @pillar 28 Sep Fiat will be printed. The printing will debase fiat holders. Any printed fiat can be used to buy Bitcoin, or for anything else. When it goes to buy and hold Bitcoin, it pushes the BTC/fiat price up. Thus, besides hurting fiat holders, you reward all Bitcoin holders with more purchasing power. I will never disagree with printing money being an evil thing that worsens the world. But, if it will be printed, I can't think of a better use for it than to make Bitcoin rise. I also see it as a peculiar implementation of Alinsky's fourth rule of his rules for radicals. reply
34 sats \ 1 reply \ @mf 28 Sep It seems you are making the assumption that you are simply using the existing printing, which is not true. If you keep borrowing more fiat, you are increasing the print, not using the print, as you put it. reply 23 sats \ 0 replies \ @pillar 28 Sep I believe that, for any given range of time, the printing has a top limit (on the infinite long run, there is no limit). Western banks and other seigniorage institutions will only print so much in a year. They can't print unlimited amounts in that span, because they are still not Venezuela-grade dumb and greedy. But within those limits, they will print. It's in their interest to print. Because of what you pointed out: they are looking for the interest on the principal they are creating out of nothing. So, that fiat will be printed to someone, for some reason. When it comes to retail loans, I'm pretty confident they don't give a flying fuck what its usage will be. The way I see it, if don't take the loan offered to me, they will give it to someone else. So yes, I would agree with you that I'm making the assumption that I'm just using a part of the inevitable to-be-printed pool.

I also remembered reading in the book The Hard Boiled Egg Index - Surviving Zimbabwe's Hyperinflation by Kudzai Joseph Gumunyu, his chapter on how he (as a senior bank employee) was able to buy a house with rapidly inflating currency, loaned to him at a favorable rate of interest.
When we bought this house in August 2004, the price was 72 percent of my gross annual salary, which was a bargain. By July 2007 (three years later), I could take one ZWD$500,000 debased note (by “000”), now worth US$1.67 at parallel market rates, from my pocket and repay the mortgage, which was supposed to be repaid in twenty years. Moreover, this note was only 0.49 percent of my monthly salary of the same month, and if available, I could have two hundred of these in my pocket monthly, ceteris paribus. Although the mortgage was done aboveboard, I felt I was cheating somebody somewhere. It did not sound right that such a substantial mortgage would be so easy to expunge.
What do you think? Is this true?
The way I see it, if don't take the loan offered to me, they will give it to someone else. So yes, I would agree with you that I'm making the assumption that I'm just using a part of the inevitable to-be-printed pool.
Its unethical
Using the benefits of an immoral system to enrich yourself while hiding under the guise of "I'm speeding the decline of fiat" is an easy cop out.
Ethically speaking I think the best move is to completely separate yourself from the system. In fiat you are either the abuser or the abused.
That being said, Hustle will conduct an unethical act and take out a loan to buy bitcoin, because he has access to cheap loans and he doesn't have the will to forgo the allure of grabbing easily obtained fiat and converting it into perfect perfect bitcoin. The allure is too strong for him, but he acknowledges that its a slimy game which shouldn't be considered altruistic or helpful to the cause by any stretch of the imagination.
The beast is in its death throws, accelerationism is often an excuse to sarcastically dunk on the retarded.
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I think the best move is to completely separate yourself from the system. In fiat you are either the abuser or the abused.
I agree with that, although I don't think borrowing fiat to buy more bitcoin is unethical.
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So are you saying what Saylor is doing is unethical? I think 25-50% of maxis take on debt to buy bitcoin...
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I think it’s perfectly ethical to abuse an unethical system. Have at it. Just make sure you can meet your debt obligations. Stay humble.
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I'd say it's perfectly ethical to exploit those inflicting an abusive system onto others. You want to make sure that the consequences either fall on you or on someone else who deserves it.
Borrowing fiat to buy bitcoin fits that mold. Either you're wrong and you pay or you're right and the bank pays (or it's win-win, I guess).
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Well that was a nicer way of saying what I was saying.
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But the bank never pays, because it creates money out of thin air and collects interest. If they buy bitcoin with that interest they can win too.
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The part I don't feel like I understand very well is this...are you actually abusing the unethical system, or are you contributing to the abuse of the people who are already being slaughtered by inflation?
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Abusing might not be the right word but you are taking advantage of the unethical system because you know it requires persistent devaluation of the money. But you bring up a fair point. By borrowing fiat you are contributing to the expansion of the money supply which could potentially harm others. This monetary supply expansion will happen with or without your involvement and your involvement is a mere blip but I think philosophically it is a reasonable question. I guess it comes down to if you think the positives outweigh the negatives.
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It's hard not to follow the incentives, and there are incentives to short fiat. To not follow the incentives you'd have to break your mind and become what the communists wanted people to become, an incentive non-following creature. Such a creature would end up taken advantage of, enslaved, abused and poor.
Shorting fiat also involves liquidation risk, so you're paying a price for it in the risk and the higher your leverage, the greater the risk.
Perhaps the idea that borrowing fiat to buy bitcoin is unethical is a psyop sowed by the powers that be to keep us from stacking more? Just a thought.
I tend to view it as a game. The goal is to maximize your score, which is the amount of sats stacked. If you don't play it well, others will and you'll be their victim.
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Fiat is unethical. I’m helping end it by speculatively attacking it.
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Regardless of ethics, it inevitable. It's just simple game theory.
Of course it would be better if no one did that (cooperation). That way we would smoothly transition into bitcoin system without people getting massively rekt.
But if someone defects and does that, others will get taken advantage one. So the only counter play is to defect yourself and also borrow fiat to get bitcoin.
Also this game was played for decades by rich with other hard assets already.
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Also this game was played for decades by rich with other hard assets already.
Yes, they bought real estate and stocks. But bitcoin is more accessible, divisible etc., which makes it a fairer game.
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if you have a problem with using your money to buy btc, your only other choice is to have people pay you in btc, which is fine if you can find them
i use btc as savings, i have to use my fiat money to get some as that is my savings vehicle of choice
people in poor countries also swap fiat to get bitcoin so they preserve purchasing power.
maybe on a sailor level you could argue ethics, but some guy trying to swap his pasos for bitcoin is not an enemy or abuser, he's the abused and he's swapping a weak asset for a hard asset, failure to do so would mean his own financial destruction
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when talking about taking a loan to buy btc, shorting the currency basically, i think the ethics are maybe more questionable in countries with far weaker currencies, but when doing it with gbp, dollar, euro, i don't feel it's super unethical because you're evening the financial playing field IMO and the risk is higher because the time it takes to infalte the debt away is far longer
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ooh I'm torn on this one, on one hand fiat i feel is an unethical system to begin with, so attacking it by shorting it as best you can seems ethical to me, you can short it by just buying within your means, but if someone wants to give you preferential access to capital to short it, what's the real difference if you can avoid blowing yourself up?
You're just defering your future wages to realise the gain in Bitcoin now
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Creating more work backed by Bitcoin by working to earn it seems like a better option than borrowing fiat money to make purchases.
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Hmm, I personally don't - but I don't blame those that do. I definitely would be alot richer in bitcoin terms for taking out loans. In the end, don't look at it as an ethical/unethical play - rather pencil out the numbers and make a move if the numbers make sense, and you can sleep well at night with this kind of leverage.
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Yeah, it’s just fiat that is the unethical part. Taking a loan out for any purpose should be ethically the same wether buying a house or bitcoin.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @OT 8h
I remember reading in When Money Dies some smart people were doing this. Borrow money to buy property while the currency was in hyperinflation.
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I guess as long as you can make the payments for the debt without selling your stack your winning and you maybe able to claim the interest on the debt on tax like with lending to buy shares
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Is that what saylor is doing with his company? He keeps taking on debt to buy bitcoin.
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