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Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Imagine you're looking for something to eat in the ruins and all you find is money ...
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Imagine you're living among the ruins, and someone offers you gold or diamonds in return for food, clothing, or shelter.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Cash can be burned so it might come in handy.


Paper rectangles, yes, but you can't burn metal disks, and burning plastic debt rectangles is a bad idea. It produces toxic smoke.

Als Antwort auf David

@David Metal discs can be made into something too and I have quite a bit of these expired plastic rectangles which I keep and reuse.

Bitcoins and all things related like ASIC miners and hardware wallets could be kind of disappointing loot in the future...

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Burning stacks of cash is difficult. Throwing them in the fireplace will snuff out the fire.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Notes also contain plastic (or are entirely plastic!) in many countries.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Imagine you’re living among the ruins, and someone offers you gold or diamonds in return for food, clothing, or shelter.


No need to imagine, happened already, what's your point?


bitcoin .. a scarce comodity, as scarce as a healthy environment ..

btw
Is money a commodity?
It it actually scarce?

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Oh... I thought it was about this other and "deeper" irony:
unu.edu/press-release/un-study…
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

@Trocatintas
I would be more concerned about the environmental impacts in China, which are existing since capitalism decided to have a cheap workbench in a former agricultural developing country. Ironically China still insists today to keep the state "developing country" because UN allows such countries to emit more CO2 etc.
Bitcoin is our smallest problem regarding emissions. Capitalism and consumerism is our biggest.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

relevant to this discussion

The Lost Cause by Cory Doctorow. Tor. 2023. ISBN 978-1-0359-0223-1.

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Sure, let's turn this into a sinophobic argument. That will surely save us.

By the way, you'll like this bit:

China, by a large margin, has been the biggest Bitcoin mining nation. To offset the carbon emissions from China's coal-intensive Bitcoin mining operations in 2021–2022, about 2 billion trees should be planted, covering an area equivalent to the sum of Portugal and Ireland or 45,000 times the area of Central Park in New York City. Aside from China, the world’s top 10 Bitcoin mining nations in 2020–2021 included the United States, Kazakhstan, Russia, Malaysia, Canada, Germany, Iran, Ireland, and Singapore.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

@Trocatintas
What exactly is sinophobic here? And then you come up with obsolete information about China, Bitcoin mining was banned back in 2021:
cnbc.com/2021/07/03/bitcoin-mi…
Not Bitcoin builds coal power plants, it is corrupt policiticans and consumerism.

And about the "bit I'll like": Do this calculation please again for Chinas Industries. It's an eye opener.
I'll help you with that: China is building NEW coal power plants for 250 TW, those new plants alone could power Bitcoin 15(!!) times.
asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Envi…
yeah, sure, but Bitcoin is our problem... You all fall for the distraction of corporate greed.

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

You should actually read the article in my comment before questioning it.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

@Trocatintas
I do not question it. Another misconception of you. Bitcoins ecological footprint is not ideal, yet it is better than most countries or industries, especially the real big ones.
The article was written by the system (politicians) which rules you are playing after. Numbers are from 2021, so almost 3 years old, and a lot has changed since then e.g. China and Kazakhstan as main mining locations with coal have been shut down.
They want to distract you from the real problem, therefore you are talked into "Bitcoin is bad" without understanding the consequences on a broader picture.
Inflation is the motor for an ever growing economic system that results in climate change and pollution. This must end. Using deflationary assets like Bitcoin can actually help, because it removes the pressure of everlasting growth and consumerism. You would only spend it for really important and sustainable things as Bitcoin will be more worth in fiat currency later.
Some would not understand it before they actually hold a significant amount of bitcoin.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Yup, you didn't read it because some of the studies it is based of go up to 2023 although that is really besides the point, and presenting articles about how the Bitcoin mining operations moved about isn't really addressing their climate impact.

I think that if we were to have some sort of hope, we were supposed to have stopped those coal plants or any other burning of fossil fuels that sustain capitalism and it's endless hunger for unsustainable growth a decade ago.
And cryptocurrency is already showing the usual appetite for never ending growth that "naturally" came with other capitalist tools.

Just as a side note, I would more readily trust the scientists behind those studies than I would the mouthpieces for a corporation like Comcast or a neoliberal publication like Nikkei.

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

The article was written by the system (politicians)

You all fall for the distraction of corporate greed.


You "shot" the scientists, not me.

I would more readily trust the scientists behind those studies
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Now you are shooting me as the messenger.
The "science" does not reflect the actual change in mining since 2021.

Try to find relevant and actual studies. The one you showed has data from digiconomist.com inside, which is a stooge of the dutch national bank, namely Alex de Vries. And his data is taken for granted, but it is based on even older data from 2018. You can research that yourself.

And again you are still neglecting the elephant in the room, instead you keep on hitting the butterfly.

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

You keep doing that which you accuse me of doing.
That's just intelectual dishonesty.
I'm out.
Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Sure, I am the only one discussing recent facts instead of simply pointing to an outdated study.
According to a 2023 ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering paper, directing the surplus electricity from intermittent renewable energy sources such as wind and solar, to bitcoin mining could reduce electricity curtailment, balance the electrical grid, and increase the profitability of renewable energy plants—therefore accelerating the transition to sustainable energy and decreasing bitcoin's carbon footprint:
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acssu…

Now I am out, too. I will not try anymore to change your opinion which is prefabricated by central bankers. Promised.

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

Als Antwort auf anonymiss

your’s is just just right wing extremist whataboutism.


Okay, so that is your explanation? lol. You certainly want the easy and wrong ones ;)
I am since 11 years into bitcoin, and running Full Nodes and Lightning Nodes for years. I studied economics. I knew, this economically not so knowledgable forum will have a hard time to to understand the concepts and effects properly (e.g. you don't understand the benefits of ETFs for institutions from a process level), therefore you try to push me in a political corner, which seems the only thing you are able to ;)

See, you are just triggered by China, that is not the point. It is also not the point that they push solar power. They still keep building so many coal power plants, even without mining Bitcoin.
climateactiontracker.org/count…
So your argumentation is going completely the wrong route.