Post
Topic
Board Gambling discussion
Re: Why don't the rich people get addicted easily?
by
Mastercon
on 06/06/2025, 10:42:51 UTC
When you get to talk about it, then you're rich.

If you don't then you are wealthy.

Man yet another friend of mine loses their bitcoin. It’s difficult not to take these as personal failures but man how hard is it to just store your private key!!
Addiction can be of any kind. Gambling addiction is one. When someone is addicted to gambling then its the end of their financial stardom. Sincerity I mean actually wanting to implement a bitcoin policy that makes sense and is handled properly, for the good of the citizens. Good to believe in bitcoin's value proposition but to want to seize it all and use it only for international trade and keep your nation on fiat internally. You arbitrarily define Bitcoin. You can make it whatever you want. But a network of 1 is useless. You need to convince everyone else your code is the best code. A node enforces their definitions of what Bitcoin is by verifying and validating each transaction and block.

Keep your own wallet. Don't allow any exchange to hold your bitcoin. Exchanges have been known to be "hacked" and "lose" everyone's bitcoins. I also disagree u can’t be early when bitcoin is the top6 biggest market cap asset in the entire planet and large corps and governments are buying it. My approach would be backing up at the Bitcoin protocol level, not the file system level. Sounds like a security exposure to me. Bitcoin. Right now, if you were to create such a thesis say, it would do nothing but contribute to the pile of junk science in this topic. Stay here with us for a few months.

If they don't believe stableshitcoins are fractionally reserved, remind them that stableshitcoin #1 was found to be backed by shitcoin gambling to the tune of 74% of its value the last time it was audited. I'm honestly very hopeful some of these etf's crash and burn and dampen this gambling strategy where they don't hold any of their own coins. where they get on stages at conferences and call people advocating for holding their own coins "naive maxis"