El Salvador and Bitcoin City
El Salvador and Bitcoin City
Let's talk about El Salvador. There's been a lot of talk and a lot of hype for a while now, but still no real news on what's going to come of it. Personallif I were Bukele right now, I'd be shaking in my boots watching the price of bitcoin tank and my economically distressed nation about to sink with it into the pacific ocean bringing the poor of the poor to even deeper depths of poverty. How about some diversification? There are lots of other cryptos that are more secure and have better tech.
Max Keiser and his wife have been going down there and meeting, but I can't find much news about it other than a couple articles in Spanish. Looks like they're expecting to get some sort of fast-track citizenship just by advising the government about the bitcoin bond idea.
https://www.criptonoticias.com/comunida ... -consigue/
Max Keiser and his wife have been going down there and meeting, but I can't find much news about it other than a couple articles in Spanish. Looks like they're expecting to get some sort of fast-track citizenship just by advising the government about the bitcoin bond idea.
https://www.criptonoticias.com/comunida ... -consigue/
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Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
Is this what happens when you dump the IMF?
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- WilliamSmith
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Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
I'm curious about this as well. Has anyone ever seen him give a detailed explanation of how it will impact them when Bitcoin's crashing and theoretically enters another multi-year bear market after a huge sell-off?rudder wrote: ↑January 27th, 2022, 5:51 pmLet's talk about El Salvador. There's been a lot of talk and a lot of hype for a while now, but still no real news on what's going to come of it. Personallif I were Bukele right now, I'd be shaking in my boots watching the price of bitcoin tank and my economically distressed nation about to sink with it into the pacific ocean bringing the poor of the poor to even deeper depths of poverty. How about some diversification? There are lots of other cryptos that are more secure and have better tech.
I certainly wish them luck getting the tentacles of the NWO off of their nation.
https://abcnews.go.com/International/wi ... -82588223
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -- The government of El Salvador on Monday rejected a recommendation by the International Monetary Fund to drop Bitcoin as legal tender in the Central American country.
Treasury Minister Alejandro Zelaya angrily said that “no international organization is going to make us do anything, anything at all.”
Zelaya told a local television station that Bitcoin is an issue of "sovereignty.”
“Countries are sovereign nations and they take sovereign decisions about public policy,” he said.
The IMF recommended last week that El Salvador dissolve the $150 million trust fund it created when it made the cryptocurrency legal tender and return any of those unused funds to its treasury.
The agency cited concerns about the volatility of Bitcoin prices, and the possibility of criminals using the cryptocurrency. After nearly doubling in value late last year, Bitcoin has plunged in value.
Zelaya said El Salvador has complied with all financial transaction and money laundering rules.
The trust fund was intended to allow the automatic conversion of Bitcoin to U.S. dollars — El Salvador’s other currency — to encourage people wary of adopting the highly volatile digital currency.
The IMF also recommended eliminating the offer of $30 as an incentive for people to start using the digital wallet “Chivo” and increasing regulation of the digital wallet to protect consumers. It suggested there could be benefits to the use of Chivo, but only using dollars, not Bitcoin.
“In the near-term the actual costs of implementing Chivo and operationalizing the Bitcoin law exceed potential benefits,” the report said.
Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele had been dismissive of the IMF’s recommendation’s concerning Bitcoin.
Government officials told the IMF that the launch of “Chivo” had significantly increased financial inclusion, drawing millions of people who previously lacked bank accounts into the financial system. They also spoke of the parallel tourism promotion targeting Bitcoin enthusiasts.
The government did not see a need to scale back the scope of its Bitcoin law, but agreed regulation could be strengthened, according to a report.
Bukele led the push to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender alongside the U.S. dollar. El Salvador’s Legislative Assembly made the country the first to do so in June and the Bitcoin law went into effect in September.
El Salvador and the IMF have been negotiating $1.3 billion in lending for months.
If you're serious about "taking the red pill," read thoroughly researched work by an unbiased "American intellectual soldier of our age" to learn what controlled media doesn't want you to see
: https://www.unz.com/page/american-pravda-series/

- WilliamSmith
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Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
I was curious what the veteran speculator and "International Man" founder Doug Casey thought of El Salvador as an expat location for people with (more or less) libertarian sentiments, and guess he doesn't think much of it, LOL:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixC1o8vXzZo&t=3332s
[/youtube]
He said he'd have chosen El Salvador last as a promising libertarian country (he's said such things before in print interviews, but this is recent, and since they started up the policy of formally making Bitcoin legal tender).
Rough transcription here from a robo subtitle-grabber:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixC1o8vXzZo&t=3332s
[/youtube]
He said he'd have chosen El Salvador last as a promising libertarian country (he's said such things before in print interviews, but this is recent, and since they started up the policy of formally making Bitcoin legal tender).
Rough transcription here from a robo subtitle-grabber:
okay um what's doug's take on salvador
uh becoming a libertarian paradise now
that they've made bitcoin legal tender
Doug Casey:
i would have picked salvador
would have been my last choice for a
place to become a
beacon of freedom in
in the world
yeah
i mean it's a horrible little country
i mean
overpopulated and dangerous and their
main export is
you know
gangs
you know
so off listen anything can happen
yeah i mean maybe a place that's that
desperate you know maybe
you know maybe there's maybe that's when
opportunity is created it certainly is
certainly did
they had to have pissed off a lot of
people at like the
bank of international settlements and
the imf for uh you know for basically
for for for making bitcoin a legal
tender there i mean it had to upset
people which is i mean i'm impressed
that they were willing to do that
but yes it'll be interesting to see what
comes next
well look
you got to remember
hong kong and for that matter singapore
and for that matter dubai
i mean all
hong kong and singapore
you know had great ports okay but they
had no money
just full of ignorant almost illiterate
chinese
and they transformed those two cities
and into the
you know two of the most successful and
dynamic places in the world in a couple
of generations
and what happened in dubai was even more
spectacular quite frankly
i mean when i first went to dubai it was
just to go through the airport back in
1980
and the airport was kind of a dump and
the airport was no bigger it was a
little airport about the size of aspen's
airport it was nothing
and now i think dubai probably has the
largest airport in the world and the
place is unbelievable what they've done
with that
so
can could the same thing happen to sing
to el salvador yes it could
because it's happened
you know
what dynamics would be required though
if you take those three examples it's
like hong kong
singapore and dubai and what are the
what are the commonalities between what
they did that then that could be applied
to make el salvador
you know the next dubai
well i'm not going to say
you know i i would add all kinds of
things about personal freedom in there
something which
you know singapore is not famous for and
neither is dubai quite frankly
but um
it's i think it's basically stability
and the rule of law
i think in a stable environment
you know most people are not interested
frankly
except you know
little personal things most people
aren't interested in philosophical
issues and that includes personal
freedom and
they really don't care all most people
want to do and it's quite understandable
is just
you know
plant their own garden and watch it grow
and not be stolen from and
you know right
be reasonably safe from the attack of
bandits and things like that so if you
create an environment like that
where the taxes are not onerous
which is also a very important thing the
regulations are not onerous
yeah it'll grow
organically
so well especially
the thing about hong kong and uh and
singapore though is that they had this
huge national or natural resource there
with their ports
that were just you know
and i don't know if uh el salvador has
anything like that you know what i mean
as like as an anchor that can
because if you have that great
natural resource essentially it gives
you and you have a good stability and a
good legal framework good tax structure
low regulations all that you know
something interesting has certainly
occurred but without that i wonder you
know i mean without having some
natural resource
i mean dubai had they they had oil
wealth that they were willing to dump
into it you know what i mean to like
make it something so huge they they one
guy could make a decision the crown
prince to dump huge amounts of personal
capital really uh the country's capital
into making that some uh a place that
would cater to all kinds of interests
and he could demand the certain legal
structure and all that
but
the other places had a natural resource
and i just don't know i don't wonder if
it could be done with just good
stable
stability and good regula a good
regulatory framework
well i think it could
actually because in hong kong
they didn't have a ruler like likai
shingen in singapore who
transformed things or the sheik in dubai
so it was really just the free market
that made uh
under under the british aegis
you know uh that
made hong kong what it was
yeah i think it could happen in salvador
what do they have
we've got some sea coasts they've got
some beaches
but uh
other than that what do they produce
there coffee
and bananas i don't think anything else
that i can think of frankly
yeah i'm not sure i i should look into
it more but
it is interesting and i certainly like i
it's it's hard to be
to be a nation-state and be an innovator
today i think because of all the
pressures that are on you for trade and
for you know
the with the imf stuff and all this so
it's it's cool to see they're doing it
and i hope i hope it's really successful
i really do
i'm sure the u.s i'm sure the u.s
government is very unhappy
about what they're doing
If you're serious about "taking the red pill," read thoroughly researched work by an unbiased "American intellectual soldier of our age" to learn what controlled media doesn't want you to see
: https://www.unz.com/page/american-pravda-series/

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Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
How's Doug's libertarian sanctuary in Argentina doing these days? Last I heard it was pretty much in full police state mode.
- WilliamSmith
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Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
Argentina's not on my personal list, but here's what Casey and his host had to say re: Salta, Argentina as a bolthole, about 25 minutes into this.
At 1:07:12 they also ask about "Doug the next President of Argentina?," but he says the deep state there is too entrenched.

At 1:07:12 they also ask about "Doug the next President of Argentina?," but he says the deep state there is too entrenched.

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=unoakqX_Y-A&t=1499s[/youtube]
If you're serious about "taking the red pill," read thoroughly researched work by an unbiased "American intellectual soldier of our age" to learn what controlled media doesn't want you to see
: https://www.unz.com/page/american-pravda-series/

Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
Is there a podcast version of this?
WilliamSmith wrote: ↑February 6th, 2022, 5:56 pmI was curious what the veteran speculator and "International Man" founder Doug Casey thought of El Salvador as an expat location for people with (more or less) libertarian sentiments, and guess he doesn't think much of it, LOL:
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixC1o8vXzZo&t=3332s
[/youtube]
He said he'd have chosen El Salvador last as a promising libertarian country (he's said such things before in print interviews, but this is recent, and since they started up the policy of formally making Bitcoin legal tender).
Rough transcription here from a robo subtitle-grabber:okay um what's doug's take on salvador
uh becoming a libertarian paradise now
that they've made bitcoin legal tender
Doug Casey:
i would have picked salvador
i'm sure the u.s i'm sure the u.s
government is very unhappy
about what they're doing
- shawnberwick
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Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
The El Salvadorian flag has a blatant Masonic symbol on it. I think it's a strange coincidence that the first country adopting Bitcoin has a Masonic flag.WilliamSmith wrote: ↑February 6th, 2022, 5:47 pmI certainly wish them luck getting the tentacles of the NWO off of their nation.

I believe Bitcoin has been infiltrated. It's now an institution coin. Video explaining...
Monero is genuinely hated by the establishment.
- WilliamSmith
- Veteran Poster
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- Joined: November 10th, 2021, 5:52 pm
Re: El Salvador and Bitcoin City
Heheh, well not sure what's going on with El Salvador and BTC, but a few Fintwit tweets caught my eye today so thought I'd share:
If BTC and/or any altcoins or others help win the battle against a globalist evil empire I'm all for it, but must say I'm glad I'm a trader and not a hodler who listened to the know-it-alls talking about how BTC was supposedly going to be a contrasset or safe haven when stocks crashed, and/or whatever it was about how "the mathematics" made it a sure thing to be over $300k by Q1 2022
:
Apparently President Bukele thinks its OK:
If BTC and/or any altcoins or others help win the battle against a globalist evil empire I'm all for it, but must say I'm glad I'm a trader and not a hodler who listened to the know-it-alls talking about how BTC was supposedly going to be a contrasset or safe haven when stocks crashed, and/or whatever it was about how "the mathematics" made it a sure thing to be over $300k by Q1 2022

Apparently President Bukele thinks its OK:
If you're serious about "taking the red pill," read thoroughly researched work by an unbiased "American intellectual soldier of our age" to learn what controlled media doesn't want you to see
: https://www.unz.com/page/american-pravda-series/

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