Re: [tor-talk] US Senators Seek to Crackdown on Bitcoin

On Thu, 16 Jun 2011 13:14 +0100, "Anon Mus" <my.green.lantern@googlemail.com> wrote:
Bitcoin fails on point 1 above as the market place and suppliers of the unit of exchange (money) can determine quantity and not some stupid computer. That's exactly what the Federal Reserve is doing now with their "quantitative easing" (inflation) methods. Bitcoin fails on point 2 above as someone will be able to figure out how to counterfeit a digital quantity. Let's see you counterfeit a 1 ounce Gold or Silver piece.
Bitcoins are worthless and have no value. Here's an article about Bitcoin from LewRockwell.com June 9, 2011 Bitcoin: Just Another Bogus Medium of Exchange Posted by David Kramer on June 9, 2011 03:00 PM I'm sure by now many of you have heard about Bitcoin. The fact that it's called "virtual currency" gives you an idea about its actual value as a real medium of exchange. While many people who are touting it on Facebook are enamored with the fact that it was voluntarily created by the marketplace (i.e., is not forced down our throats by a private central bank), I'm afraid that those people are losing sight of how a real medium of exchange arises in a free market. A medium of exchange arises from something that had a material use/value in the market prior to becoming a medium of exchange, i.e., it was also a good being bartered for other goods and services. Over the centuries, the commodities gold and silver won out as the two most preferred mediums of exchangebwith gold holding the number one position due to its being more scarce than silver. What was Bitcoin's prior material use/value? Zero. It is just bits in a computer. And what's with the "fixed" amount of Bitcoins? Who/what determined the "proper" amount of 21 million for Bitcoins to top out at? A computer program? (Next we'll find out what the proper minimum wage should be.) Only the free market can voluntarily determine how much of a real medium of exchange is needed in the marketplace over time. While the idea of attempting to get rid of the Bankster monopoly on creating money out of thin air is commendable, Bitcoin is also money created out of thin air. Bitcoin is just substituting one bogus medium of exchange for another. UPDATE: I've been getting a lot of reader response trying to "explain" to me the economic virtues of Bitcoin. Some responders have even mistakenly used Austrian economics to rationalize their views. I would suggest that before you write to me about the Austrian economics view of a medium of exchange, you should read the two books by one of the two giants of Austrian economics, Murray Rothbard, on what a medium of exchange is. Here is the pdf for Rothbard's What Has Government Done to Our Money and here is the pdf for Rothbard's The Case Against the Fed. For those of you who have not yet read any Austrian economics, please do not waste your time writing to me trying to explain the "scientific" breakthrough of the bogus Bitcoin computer program. (There already was a REAL digital currency, e-gold, that was backed by a real commodity until the Federalistas shut it down. Eventually, Bitcoin will be shut down too because of its anonymity capabilities.) Check out Mises.org of and search for more information about money and what it is.
-- http://www.fastmail.fm - Faster than the air-speed velocity of an unladen european swallow _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list tor-talk@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk ----- End forwarded message ----- -- Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org">leitl</a> http://leitl.org ______________________________________________________________ ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org 8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
participants (1)
-
andre76@fastmail.fm