You dedicate 50 hours weekly to your career.
Paycheck arrives: credit cards, rent, bills - most vanishes.
A modest surplus remains, prompting a critical choice; a choice revealing whether you’re someone who knows how to preserve your time and energy… or someone who wastes it.
In fiat monetary systems (the US dollar is one), savings lose purchasing power every day due to monetary expansion.
The Federal Reserve, the Treasury, and Banks collectively create new money out of thin air (their words, not mine) via government spending and bank loans, and this increases the supply of literal US dollars in global circulation.
Basic economics tells us that rapidly increasing the supply of something makes it less scarce and more readily available for consumption, which means it takes a loss in its value.
This is what happens to the dollar: the supply of dollars in circulation is increased every year, and the value of each dollar decreases as a result. It’s rapid dilution.
You can’t add more water to your half empty cup of sweet tea and expect to have an equally strong full cup of sweet tea. You’ll have a full cup of barely flavored tea water. Yuck.
That’s why homes cost $50,000 in 1980 but they cost $500,000 today. The house isn’t worth more, but the dollars are just worthless - er… uh… I mean, “worth less.”
Dollars are not true wealth preservation - they’re rapid dissipation and wasted energy.
Bitcoin, however, acts as a perfect digital battery.
Its supply is fixed at 21 million, which resists inflation, maintaining value over time.
Yes, there’s volatility.
But zoom out and look at the purchasing power of one dollar over 100 years (Google this).
Then zoom out and look at the purchasing power of one bitcoin over its lifetime (Google that, too).
I could do it for you here, but DYOR (do your own research) will build the best, longest-lasting conviction in ourselves. Plus, you seem like an intelligent person.
You’re smart enough to decipher the meaning of this data you will look up, and you’re smart enough to come to your own conclusion. I trust you.
Likely you’ve heard that lately Wall Street bankers, corporations, organizations, states, and even entire nations have been allocating their wealth into bitcoin held in strategic reserves.
Have you considered that they are run by people who are usually rather smart when it comes to understanding money and following strategic trends in the world?
What are they seeing in Bitcoin that perhaps you might have missed?
This is the question I hope piques your interest and curiosity. I don’t want you to look back in 2 years, 4 years, or 10 years and smack your palm into your forehead in frustration for naysaying something that you misunderstood or had a bias against.
Take a fresh look.
Control your bias.
Do your own research.
Ask for help.
Trust the math.
Secure your future.
Allocate to Bitcoin.
– parachutesBTC
(Here to help, always)
If you made it to the end, do me a favor and like 👍 or repost 🔁. It would be greatly appreciated. Spread the message and spread the kindness.
Paycheck arrives: credit cards, rent, bills - most vanishes.
A modest surplus remains, prompting a critical choice; a choice revealing whether you’re someone who knows how to preserve your time and energy… or someone who wastes it.
In fiat monetary systems (the US dollar is one), savings lose purchasing power every day due to monetary expansion.
The Federal Reserve, the Treasury, and Banks collectively create new money out of thin air (their words, not mine) via government spending and bank loans, and this increases the supply of literal US dollars in global circulation.
Basic economics tells us that rapidly increasing the supply of something makes it less scarce and more readily available for consumption, which means it takes a loss in its value.
This is what happens to the dollar: the supply of dollars in circulation is increased every year, and the value of each dollar decreases as a result. It’s rapid dilution.
You can’t add more water to your half empty cup of sweet tea and expect to have an equally strong full cup of sweet tea. You’ll have a full cup of barely flavored tea water. Yuck.
That’s why homes cost $50,000 in 1980 but they cost $500,000 today. The house isn’t worth more, but the dollars are just worthless - er… uh… I mean, “worth less.”
Dollars are not true wealth preservation - they’re rapid dissipation and wasted energy.
Bitcoin, however, acts as a perfect digital battery.
Its supply is fixed at 21 million, which resists inflation, maintaining value over time.
Yes, there’s volatility.
But zoom out and look at the purchasing power of one dollar over 100 years (Google this).
Then zoom out and look at the purchasing power of one bitcoin over its lifetime (Google that, too).
I could do it for you here, but DYOR (do your own research) will build the best, longest-lasting conviction in ourselves. Plus, you seem like an intelligent person.
You’re smart enough to decipher the meaning of this data you will look up, and you’re smart enough to come to your own conclusion. I trust you.
Likely you’ve heard that lately Wall Street bankers, corporations, organizations, states, and even entire nations have been allocating their wealth into bitcoin held in strategic reserves.
Have you considered that they are run by people who are usually rather smart when it comes to understanding money and following strategic trends in the world?
What are they seeing in Bitcoin that perhaps you might have missed?
This is the question I hope piques your interest and curiosity. I don’t want you to look back in 2 years, 4 years, or 10 years and smack your palm into your forehead in frustration for naysaying something that you misunderstood or had a bias against.
Take a fresh look.
Control your bias.
Do your own research.
Ask for help.
Trust the math.
Secure your future.
Allocate to Bitcoin.
– parachutesBTC
(Here to help, always)
If you made it to the end, do me a favor and like 👍 or repost 🔁. It would be greatly appreciated. Spread the message and spread the kindness.
❤️1