Still believe that memes are one of the most cost effective ways to get a message across.
It might be studied by future historians similar to how current historians studied hieroglyphs and stuff.
Good times
I often see people who understand bitcoin bashing those who don’t for being “dumb” or saying things like “good luck staying poor”.
But I think people forget that money is deeply emotional and personal. So it will take time for people to come to terms with it.
That’s one of the reasons I don’t see being highlighted enough in most of the educational content out there.
That inspired me to write my next article on “Why Bitcoin Is hard to understand”
TLDR:
1) mental energy needed to study bitcoin
2) accepting that money can function perfectly well without centralization (i.e. fed and government)
3) emotional aspect of money (leading to ego, fear, etc.)
4) all the other “crypto” distraction stuff
Again, no harm being nice here.
Am writing my next newsletter and touching on the covid money printing by the US.
We know that the money printer went crazy ($3.3 trillion) in 2020 alone
My question is: does the US not have any strategic reserves that it could have deployed?
Singapore for example, deployed its reserves 3 times for covid according to wikipedia. The last time it deployed its reserves was the 08 crisis, and back then it was only 1 time. The country seems to not have deployed its reserves any other times.
What makes up the US strategic reserves as of the covid era? Is the composition and value disclosed publicly?
Lets see it Nostr.
#AskNostr #US #MoneyPrinting #COVID #Singapore