~snip~
By the time EU countries decide to start adopting bitcoin as a strategic reserve, the price they have to pay will be one million dollars per coin LMAO.
It also seems to me that you are not far from the truth - the EU is too sluggish and conservative on some issues at its highest level - although some state members try to implement their policies and do not always agree with the policies imposed by Brussels. One of the candidates for Polish president reportedly stated a few days ago that Poland should include BTC in its strategic reserves.
That was obviously just my joke - did you believe for a moment that there was any truth to that? 
:
D
Yeah, I did. But as I said in that post, I doubted it because I don't think anything like that could happen even in third-world countries. Considering that the newly elected president is a man who has (or had) as many as 37 indictments, nothing from him will surprise me in the next 4 years. As for third world countries, much worse things happen there - for example, I live in a country in the EU where, in the last 8 years, around 30 ministers from one party have been accused and dismissed for bribery and corruption, and yet the same party continues the support of the people
