>>12630126I didn't say it doesn't have utility. I didn't say it won't make you money in this cycle.
What I am saying is that it isn't the fix that you want it to be.
Ledgers that don't have integrity and where you can't add up the numbers on both sides are fraudulent, that's something the FED taught us. Going right back to it would be pretty silly.
>you haven't done anything to disprove our arguments except call them stupid.I won't either.
I won't help you figure out how to do naughty things. That's all on you. There's plenty of ways, actually... you just have to be smarter, I take it.
I own ZERO Bitcoin.
>I just want my privacy.I understand that, but chains like BTC and ETH can already offer you that if you aren't lazy and you don't just hop off of the first train you see on the highway, promising you riches and other bullshit.
tptb will take their money laundering operations and they'll just start using something you depend on, think is safe and won't question again.
I'm not saying BTC (in its current form, at least) or another chain is the perfect fix so long as its ledger is decentralized and public, but I am saying XMR sure isn't.
Again, you'll make money off of it during this cycle. I'm sure it's helpful for you and other retards stupid enough to talk here about how you use it or plan to use it for illegal things, but it doesn't fix the privacy problem. Instead, it just makes it worse.
If and random schmuck with a little determination can't (feasibly) determine that the price of a given asset is accounted for in its ledger, tptb will just use that to continue to siphon your tax dollars away while they claim to you "it was just an accident, anon. don't worry about it. no, you're not allowed to see it. quit asking questions or we'll ruin your life by blacking your daughter, getting your wife to divorce you, boot you off paypal, get banks to deny you any service and gangstalk you until you relent."
Again, you're an idiot.