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This is a good point. I think there are plenty of people who are left leaning and already into bitcoin. However, if you pitch bitcoin to an average progressive nocoiner today, you're likely to be met with insurmountable resistance. They've told it's horrible for the environment, itself causing ransomware attacks and scamming old ladies, and beyond that they may think money the technology is evil too.
The average conservative is also going to be against it, but it's not so much of an uphill battle.
A willingness to give bitcoin a chance probably has more to do with: being intellectually curious, maintaining an open mind, and not sitting too comfortably in the economic system we already have.
The stats disagree, if conservatives were less likely to resist it then there would be a greater political bias among bitcoiners.
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Right, my point was that a 2028 survey of bitcoiners may show a different balance than the 2024 survey.
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @Aardvark 2 Feb
Sure. It could just as easily show a more liberal skew as well, but I tend to believe the biggest corelation is going to continue being knowledge of bitcoin.
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It could, and I really hope it continues to show no correlation.
From anecdotal experience, I've had success with politically moderate types who were concerned with just saving a nest egg. I've also had some success with right-wing ideologues. The most trouble I've had was with progressives who had supported the occupy Wall St movement. I was a bit flabbergasted, because I see bitcoin as trying to solve the same problems and literally the same diagnosis of the problem (Chancellor on brink of second bailout) but with an actual plan. That was frustrating.
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