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I don’t think so. I already wrote about it. So, we have the best “old school” representative, Warren Buffett, who said that “if you ... owned all of the bitcoin in the world and you offered it to me for $25, I wouldn’t take it.” Nuff said. Then, we have the “icon” of the “younger generation” of entrepreneurs who has his fun with Dogecoin. Nuff done. Elon Musk warned us all: “don’t bet the farm on crypto!”
In finance, suggests that one can sometimes make money through the purchase of overvalued assets — items with a purchase price drastically exceeding the intrinsic value — if those assets can later be resold at an even higher price.
Bill doubled down by making a “joke” about NFTs.
Was that “cult quote” pulled out from THE “Financial Times,” for real? I had to check. And, that speaks volumes, doesn’t it?
Most groups identified as cults feature a single charismatic leader, something that the crypto world lacks. But many other classic hallmarks of culthood — apocalypticism, the promise of utopia for worthy believers, shunning of external critics and vitriolic denouncement of heretical insiders — are increasingly dominant.
So, crypto is an “atypical cult,” but still a cult because “another major way in which crypto-cultism differs from traditional cults is the lack of physical gatherings. Beyond events such as Bitcoin Miami and “crypto cruises”, or scattered communities like El Salvador’s bitcoin beach, cryptocurrency advocates communicate online.”
So, it’s not all that bad. My crypto buddies and the crypto community still have a choice. They can either be “crypto fools” or “crypto cult members.”
In total, with assets totaling more than $690m.
The old and wise have spoken, crypto as the future of finance is broken!
“And isn't it ironic... don't you think?” Yes, it is, my dear Alanis Morissette. We still haven’t figured out how to decentralize the Internet, not to mention the finances, decentralization of the farmland has already become the (next) problem.