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May 1st, 2018
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  1. Most of the people one the small block side don't strike me as libertarians. Most are people who just got attracted to the large gains and bought into the promise that if they support the Core devs the gains will continue. These people come from many different political ideologies, but I see a good deal of left wing ideology in some of them.
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  3. Of the few genuine libertarians/anarchists that remain committed to Bitcoin (many, MANY have left), I see a few that looks something like this: Bitcoin makes a great "base money". Similar but better than gold. As long as you have sound base money then you can always build financial systems on top of it that can facilitate things like transfers. Thus it doesn't matter if transactions fees blow out to $100 or $1,000 because most people never interact with the base layer, but rather the upper layers. In this view the main innovation of Bitcoin is "sound base money".
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  5. My view is the world was not in need of another sound base money when Bitcoin came along. Nor is that the main innovation Bitcoin brings to the table. The world has had sound base money for thousands of years... gold coins, silver bars, etc. They are as decentralized as you can get, scarce, and difficult to counterfeit. And one could make a strong argument that they even make better base money than Bitcoin due to the absence of technological risks that Bitcoin posses. But regardless, the world wasn't in need of "sound base money" when Bitcoin came along in 2009.
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  7. In fact the main problem with Gold was precisely that it require a "layer 2" system transact with (since transacting directly with gold coins is cumbersome and unwieldy). If you know the history of the gold standard, particularly in the US but also elsewhere, the "layer 2" (the banks and financial institutions) fell victim to cronyism. The banks themselves engaged in regulatory capture to pervert the system in their favor to increase profits while undermining the soundness of the base money. And governments were all to eager to oblige as long as they got their cut.
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  9. So the layer 2 system ended up being to easy to control and manipulate and ended up being the cause of the downfall of gold standard. What libertarian Bitcoiners who hold the views above are fundamentally advocating is to build the exact same type of gold-standard-like two layer system failed so hard in the 19th and 20th centuries. Only this time with a digital asset instead of a physical asset as the base money.
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  11. My view is that the primary innovation of Bitcoin is not sound base money (it has that property but again, given the presence of gold, it's not really an innovation), but rather censorship resistant value transfer. The ability to transfer value WITHOUT going through the same corruptible middle men that brought down the gold standard system. Bitcoin is a money that was designed to be unregulatable and that property is fundamentally threatened by a system that says "you can only make an unregulated censorship-resistant payment if your payment is large enough and you can afford the $100 transaction fee".
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  13. Now you can say, "well that would be great if every payment could be censorship-resistant but the tech can't handle it". But I fundamentally disagree. Or at least I disagree at the scales we're talking about and are likely to see any time in the next 10 years. Again, the laptop I'm typing this on can fairly easily process 100mb blocks and possibly up to as much as 1GB blocks with some optimizations. Let's not pretend that every technical person believes Bitcoin cannot handle more than 1mb blocks. That is simply not true. I'm only one example of many, both inside and outside of academia.
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  15. My goal is censorship-resistant unrelatable money. If we're not going make the optimizations needed to make that happen for everyone (not just those who pay the $100 fee), if we're just going to push payments off playforms that require middlemen, then I don't see a point. Reashing the failed gold standard experiment, this time in digital form, isn't going to produce a different outcome.
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