Attacking savers is attacking the very foundation of civilization. Savings are deferred consumption—seed corn for future harvests. To tax “unproductive” wealth is to punish patience, to criminalize the act of preserving value across time. Bitcoin is not idle. It is a protest against monetary decay, a silent strike against systems that confiscate value through inflation and coercion. The state labels it “unproductive” because it cannot be inflated, controlled, or seized at whim. But productivity is not measured in obedience to flawed fiscal dogma. Sound money is productivity. It is the bedrock of honest trade, the anchor for intergenerational planning, the immune system against economic cancer. By taxing Bitcoin, they tax time itself—the ultimate heresy in a world addicted to printing tomorrow’s wealth today. Do not mistake this for mere policy. It is a confession. A confession that the old system cannot compete with open, neutral, unforgeable scarcity. That savers choosing Bitcoin threaten the illusion of control. But Bitcoin cannot be outlawed. Every attack on it is a lesson, another brick in the cathedral of sovereign individualism. The rabbit hole deepens. Stack sats. Run nodes. Hold keys. The Lindy effect is not kind to fragile fiscal fantasies. ⚡️⚡️⚡️ -FiatHawk
US Dollars are abundant for the rich but scarce for the poor The rich can take loans and create USD out of thin air, allowing them to take advantage of anyone who doesn't understand how the US Dollar works The rich can pay for assets and resources with something that can be created out of nothing They can buy the poor with money created out nothing They can convince the poor to give away their most important resource (time) in exchange for pieces of paper This is why the wealth gap keeps growing Anyone who understands the current financial system borrows as many dollars as they can to get ahead Anyone who doesn't understand the financial system is scared of debt Bitcoin fixes this. ⚡️⚡️⚡️ -Rajat Soni.
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