<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>Ben Arc wrote</title><author_name>Ben Arc (npub1c8…n8avm)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1c878wu04lfqcl5avfy3p5x83ndpvedaxv0dg7pxthakq3jqdyzcs2n8avm</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>I am utterly unafraid of CBDCs. &#xA;The hysteria is mostly formed from superficial doom-circle-jerk analysis. Successful CBDCs will be a private federated ecash (or something very similar), the wisest built on the Bitcoin stack:&#xA;&#xA;* Private banks will not sacrifice their power over money production via debt (as mints&#39; status quo can continue).&#xA;* Privacy/fungibility and acquiring users overrides any Stalinist incentives.&#xA;* All we need is 1 sovereign currency producing country to use a fedi-like system built on Bitcoin, Gresham&#39;s law will do the rest.&#xA;* Building digitally native money is really fucking hard, do not underestimate the work we have done, and how governments will make use of it.&#xA;&#xA;Zoom out. Post WW2 monetary order was a design choice, the next will be for apolitical money as world reserve currency, (let&#39;s not be humble) Bitcoin really is the best candidate. &#xA;Sovereign currency-producing countries, who actually do their homework, know all this. Having a native digital currency entirely interoperable with other countries&#39; currency via its apolitical base (Bitcoin) IS the solution we are tip-toeing towards. Humanity moves toward greater liberation.&#xA;As time wears on, and liquidity pours in bitcoin, it will become stable enough to use naively. Whether people will use really depends on how poorly their CBDC treat them.&#xA;This is how hyperbitcoinisation happens. </html></oembed>