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Elon Musk called Dogecoin a hustle on Saturday Night Live and Tesla said bitcoin’s bad for the environment.
graced the front page of the Sunday Business section of a leading US newspaper, the New York Times. CNBC runs crypto segments all the time. Bankers rip the industry to shreds at seemingly every turn.
My old boss—a former lobbyist—sends me cautionary crypto articles on the regular because he thinks I’m a “speculator.”(Ok, boomer.)Then there’s this one from .It reminds me of something Dale Carnegie wrote:“Nobody kicks a dead dog.”
Does that mean they’re going to open a Coinbase account today?
No. Some of them will still not care enough to make the effort. Many will shrug and ignore it. “Oh, there’s that bit-money thing again.”But a few will look into it further. Perhaps just a Google search or a question to one of their crypto friends at a cocktail party. That’s ok. It’s enough to stoke their curiosity.“Sure, I’ll throw a few shekels in. You never know, right? Sarah made some money on it, maybe I can, too.”
Does that sound familiar?It’s the way bitcoin had grown since its inception, with each parabolic boom bringing in a wider and more diverse group of curious shruggers.Each boom also brings a wider and more diverse group of media outlets posting bad news and negative coverage.Welcome it. Celebrate it. Without that attention, you probably would never have heard about bitcoin, either.Neither would anybody else.Mark Helfman publishes the newsletter. He is also the author of three books and a top bitcoin writer on and Hacker Noon. Learn more about him in his .
Originally published in .