Kshartle wrote:Ok, i can easily trasnfer a bag of poop in a jar. Does that make it valuable?

Moderator: Global Moderator
Kshartle wrote:Ok, i can easily trasnfer a bag of poop in a jar. Does that make it valuable?
Listen I fully support real money that has nothing to do with violence or governments or subject to massive counterfeiting. I just don't think that something with no intrinsic or extrinsic value can last as money. Ironically it's the ability to escape goverment observation that provided the initial lift. Imagine if bitcoin succeeding in supplanting the fiat currencies and they went away....who would want them then? What good would they be at all?l82start wrote:there may be something to the contrary view that, not being backed by government force or subject to bankster manipulation for the benefit of banksters, actually improves there "value" (what ever that may be) over government fiat.Kshartle wrote:You are required by law to accept them as payment of debts.Pointedstick wrote: And let me ask you this, Kshartle: Do you believe that the single, solitary reason why people acquire dollars is because the government would shoot them if they didn't have enough to pay their taxes?
And if the government hypothetically stopped collecting taxes but kept printing dollars, would you immediately exchange every dollar you had for gold? Would you expect everyone else to do the same thing? What would be your reaction if they didn't? Can you even conceive of a world in which they didn't?
The only support for the slips of paper is the government decree. Does anyone take slips of paper backed by nothing and no government in exchange for something of value anywhere? If so...I would like to meet them and see if I can trade slips of paper for their stuff.
This is my point about bitcoin. This is what I think is happening. People are trading things of value for electronic slips of paper that are backed by nothing of value nor a government. I think they are doing it becuase they think the price will keep going up. The only thing fueling the rise is the belief. That is fundamentally different from dollars or gold.
If I'm wrong and there's another reason I'm all ears.
i don't own any bit coins BTW.. but i have been a fan and watched their development from the beginning
I try to provide easily understood examples to avoid confusion and cut to the heart of the matter, not insult anyone's intelligence. Also I think the example is funny. Imagine trading something valuable like narcotics or guns and getting paid in poop in a jar.Gumby wrote:Kshartle wrote:Ok, i can easily trasnfer a bag of poop in a jar. Does that make it valuable?![]()
I feel like you just ignored everything I said.Kshartle wrote:Ok, i can easily trasnfer a bag of poop in a jar. Does that make it valuable? It's very easy to box it up and mail it to someone. Not as easy as bitcoin but still very very easy. How does that make the jar of poop valuable? I guess it's fertilizer!Pointedstick wrote:It does to me. And it does to other people who hold Bitcoins. Value is determined individually, by people. You may not think that easy transmissibility is valuable, but I and many others disagree. That doesn't make either of us wrong, but it does mean that we have arrived at different conclusions. And the fact that we have been able to reach different conclusions means that your blanket declarative statement that "the ability to transfer something easily doesn't make it valuable" is incorrect. That statement is your own personal opinion, not a fact, and it is an opinion that I and many others disagree with.Kshartle wrote: It's definately easier to trasnfer a ditigal....whatever than a mountain....but my point is the ability to transfer something easily doesn't make it valuable.![]()
No I definately didn't, I just disagreed. I said the ability to easily transfer ownership cannot make something valueable and you said it's your opinion that it does. Well.....I can easily transfer a jar of poop but it's still basically worthless so the ability to easily transfer ownership clearly doesn't make something valuable. I feel like your'e ignoring this point. It has nothing to do with villages and smelliness.....just the ability to transfer.Pointedstick wrote:I feel like you just ignored everything I said.Kshartle wrote:Ok, i can easily trasnfer a bag of poop in a jar. Does that make it valuable? It's very easy to box it up and mail it to someone. Not as easy as bitcoin but still very very easy. How does that make the jar of poop valuable? I guess it's fertilizer!Pointedstick wrote: It does to me. And it does to other people who hold Bitcoins. Value is determined individually, by people. You may not think that easy transmissibility is valuable, but I and many others disagree. That doesn't make either of us wrong, but it does mean that we have arrived at different conclusions. And the fact that we have been able to reach different conclusions means that your blanket declarative statement that "the ability to transfer something easily doesn't make it valuable" is incorrect. That statement is your own personal opinion, not a fact, and it is an opinion that I and many others disagree with.![]()
Well they wouldn't be fiat, I don't know why we can't slay this dragon. Bitcoins ain't fiat.Simonjester wrote:if they supplant all other fiat dollars they would be an international non government controlled means of exchange, used by everybody to buy and sell everything.. and they would still be fiat and worth a jar of poop minus the jar and the bagKshartle wrote:
Listen I fully support real money that has nothing to do with violence or governments or subject to massive counterfeiting. I just don't think that something with no intrinsic or extrinsic value can last as money. Ironically it's the ability to escape goverment observation that provided the initial lift. Imagine if bitcoin succeeding in supplanting the fiat currencies and they went away....who would want them then? What good would they be at all?just like government dollars are/would be absent fear of the gun..
i think pointedstick may have nailed it in his post on memes, it a question of resilience and potential for resilience
If the villagers believe it's valuable because for them it's a means of exchange that lets them avoid barter, are they wrong?Kshartle wrote: No I definately didn't, I just disagreed. I said the ability to easily transfer ownership cannot make something valueable and you said it's your opinion that it does. Well.....I can easily transfer a jar of poop but it's still basically worthless so the ability to easily transfer ownership clearly doesn't make something valuable. I feel like your'e ignoring this point. It has nothing to do with villages and smelliness.....just the ability to transfer.
It's a medimum of exchange because it has value....it doesn't have value because it's a medium of exchange. We can exchange anything. If something is valueless it's not going to survive as a medium of exchange....at some point it will be rejected once everyone realizes there is no value.Pointedstick wrote:If the villagers believe it's valuable because for them it's a means of exchange that lets them avoid barter, are they wrong?Kshartle wrote: No I definately didn't, I just disagreed. I said the ability to easily transfer ownership cannot make something valueable and you said it's your opinion that it does. Well.....I can easily transfer a jar of poop but it's still basically worthless so the ability to easily transfer ownership clearly doesn't make something valuable. I feel like your'e ignoring this point. It has nothing to do with villages and smelliness.....just the ability to transfer.
We've told you over and over again: we think it has value because it's a good medium of exchange. You have a lot of difficulty with this concept and keep insisting that it must have some other value that makes us want to use it as a medium of exchange. Sorry, no. It may seem bizarre and fantastical to you, but those of us who want to use Bitcoins as a currency and not just a speculative investment do so out of the belief that its inherent traits make it a good medium of exchange, that's really all there is to it.Kshartle wrote: Thanks for answering my questions PS. I think we're going in circles at this point but if you want to continue that's fine. I just wanted to hear from people who have them why they are holding them. Anyone else that wants to explain why they think BTC has value please chime in.
Traditionally, "fiat" money was state issued/mandated money(it literally means, "let it be done", "it shall be" in Latin). However, Wikipedia claims it can also apply to money without intrinsic value:Simonjester wrote:why wouldn't it be fiat? the only difference i can see is that they are private tender instead of governmentKshartle wrote:
Well they wouldn't be fiat, I don't know why we can't slay this dragon. Bitcoins ain't fiat.neither one is backed by reservesFiat Currency that a government has declared to be legal tender, despite the fact that it has no intrinsic value and is not backed by reserves.
Wikipedia.org wrote:Fiat money has been defined variously as:
* any money declared by a government to be legal tender.
* state-issued money which is neither convertible by law to any other thing, nor fixed in value in terms of any objective standard.
* money without intrinsic value
While gold- or silver-backed representative money entails the legal requirement that the bank of issue redeem it in fixed weights of gold or silver, fiat money's value is unrelated to the value of any physical quantity. Even a coin containing valuable metal may be considered fiat currency if its face value is higher than its market value as metal.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiat_money
Yes they would be wrong. I can fill a bunch of jars with poop to prove it. I will trade it for their valuable stuff. They be left with poop and I will be left with valuable stuff.Pointedstick wrote:If the villagers believe it's valuable because for them it's a means of exchange that lets them avoid barter, are they wrong?Kshartle wrote: No I definately didn't, I just disagreed. I said the ability to easily transfer ownership cannot make something valueable and you said it's your opinion that it does. Well.....I can easily transfer a jar of poop but it's still basically worthless so the ability to easily transfer ownership clearly doesn't make something valuable. I feel like your'e ignoring this point. It has nothing to do with villages and smelliness.....just the ability to transfer.
I'm sure I missed this, PS, but do you prefer to hoard your Bitcoins (since the price may be rising dramatically) or do you prefer to spend them whenever someone will accept them?Pointedstick wrote:those of us who want to use Bitcoins as a currency and not just a speculative investment
How would your act of increasing their money supply prove that they were wrong in their estimation that poop in jars has value as currency?Kshartle wrote:Yes they would be wrong. I can fill a bunch of jars with poop to prove it. I will trade it for their valuable stuff. They be left with poop and I will be left with valuable stuff.Pointedstick wrote: If the villagers believe it's valuable because for them it's a means of exchange that lets them avoid barter, are they wrong?
I will need help filling the jars.....I will pay you in bitcoins for poop that I will trade with the villagers for valuable stuff.
I keep a bunch as a speculation, but I've also spent some. On on hand, you could say, "you idiot, you should have kept them because they'd be worth so much more now!" But on the other hand, the T-shirt I bought may outlast my Bitcoins by many many years.Gumby wrote:I'm sure I missed this, PS, but do you prefer to hoard your Bitcoins (since the price may be rising dramatically) or do you prefer to spend them whenever someone will accept them?Pointedstick wrote:those of us who want to use Bitcoins as a currency and not just a speculative investment
So, if you've only bought a T-Shirt or so, and hoard the rest for speculation, then it sounds like you really don't "want to use bitcoin as a currency right now".Pointedstick wrote:I keep a bunch as a speculation, but I've also spent some. On on hand, you could say, "you idiot, you should have kept them because they'd be worth so much more now!" But on the other hand, the T-shirt I bought may outlast my Bitcoins by many many years.Gumby wrote:I'm sure I missed this, PS, but do you prefer to hoard your Bitcoins (since the price may be rising dramatically) or do you prefer to spend them whenever someone will accept them?Pointedstick wrote:those of us who want to use Bitcoins as a currency and not just a speculative investment![]()
Well then any worthless thing people exchange for something of value would now be called FIAT money. This is ridiculous. FIAT money is intrinsically valueless items or whatever that are treated as money due to government decree or fiat. This is obviously not bitcoin.Gumby wrote:Traditionally, "fiat" money was state issued/mandated money(it literally means, "let it be done", "it shall be" in Latin). However, Wikipedia claims it can also apply to money without intrinsic value:Simonjester wrote:why wouldn't it be fiat? the only difference i can see is that they are private tender instead of governmentKshartle wrote:
Well they wouldn't be fiat, I don't know why we can't slay this dragon. Bitcoins ain't fiat.neither one is backed by reservesFiat Currency that a government has declared to be legal tender, despite the fact that it has no intrinsic value and is not backed by reserves.
Wikipedia.org wrote:Fiat money has been defined variously as:
* any money declared by a government to be legal tender.
* state-issued money which is neither convertible by law to any other thing, nor fixed in value in terms of any objective standard.
* money without intrinsic value
While gold- or silver-backed representative money entails the legal requirement that the bank of issue redeem it in fixed weights of gold or silver, fiat money's value is unrelated to the value of any physical quantity. Even a coin containing valuable metal may be considered fiat currency if its face value is higher than its market value as metal.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiat_money
Simonjester wrote: sounds like the semantics haven't caught up with the reality's of private currencies, if calling it a "private non reserve currency" works better or makes more sense than the more generalized (not backed by reserves) definition of fiat, then we can use that definition..
There was more than a T-shirt. I've bought a few things. One of the problems is that most places that sell things I want to buy don't yet accept Bitcoins, although this is improving all the time.Gumby wrote:So, if you've only bought a T-Shirt or so, and hoard the rest for speculation, then it sounds like you really don't "want to use bitcoin as a currency right now".Pointedstick wrote:I keep a bunch as a speculation, but I've also spent some. On on hand, you could say, "you idiot, you should have kept them because they'd be worth so much more now!" But on the other hand, the T-shirt I bought may outlast my Bitcoins by many many years.Gumby wrote: I'm sure I missed this, PS, but do you prefer to hoard your Bitcoins (since the price may be rising dramatically) or do you prefer to spend them whenever someone will accept them?![]()
![]()
The fact is I can prove their opinoin about poop being valuable is wrong. If I poop in enough jars and get all their stuff and they're left with a bunch of poop....well what then....are they going to have poop fights? I know it's not worth anything....so now when they want to rent their huts back from me I just say you need to pay me in animal skins....gold you mine...virgins....pretty much all the good stuff....not poop. I'm sorry but you got suckered.Pointedstick wrote:How would your act of increasing their money supply prove that they were wrong in their estimation that poop in jars has value as currency?Kshartle wrote:Yes they would be wrong. I can fill a bunch of jars with poop to prove it. I will trade it for their valuable stuff. They be left with poop and I will be left with valuable stuff.Pointedstick wrote: If the villagers believe it's valuable because for them it's a means of exchange that lets them avoid barter, are they wrong?
I will need help filling the jars.....I will pay you in bitcoins for poop that I will trade with the villagers for valuable stuff.
It sounds an awful lot like you're saying that people's opinions are wrong. I don't believe it's possible for an opinion to be wrong. I think only facts can be wrong.
Just a side note: the native Americans didn't think they were selling the island. They thought they were receiving some sort of tribute in exchange for use of the island, believing that they would be allowed to continue to share it. At least, that's what I've read.Kshartle wrote: The Native Americans had the opinion that beads were worth more than long island. Was their opinion correct? (I have not studied this, but I think the point is clear).
I don't think it would actually play out the way you think it would, but for the sake of argument, if it did, I still don't see how it would make them wrong. It would certainly make you clever for manipulating their system and putting them at your mercy, but I still don't see how they would actually be wrong. Maybe the poop-in-jars currency would turn out to be a foolish idea. But that's not the same thing as them being wrong in their belief that poop in jars had value for exchange. Do you see the distinction?Kshartle wrote:The fact is I can prove their opinoin about poop being valuable is wrong. If I poop in enough jars and get all their stuff and they're left with a bunch of poop....well what then....are they going to have poop fights? I know it's not worth anything....so now when they want to rent their huts back from me I just say you need to pay me in animal skins....gold you mine...virgins....pretty much all the good stuff....not poop. I'm sorry but you got suckered.Pointedstick wrote: How would your act of increasing their money supply prove that they were wrong in their estimation that poop in jars has value as currency?
It sounds an awful lot like you're saying that people's opinions are wrong. I don't believe it's possible for an opinion to be wrong. I think only facts can be wrong.
So you believe it is possible to have incorrect opinions? My opinion is that Ford is better them GM and Mac is better than PC. Am I wrong? Prove it!Kshartle wrote: The Native Americans had the opinion that beads were worth more than long island. Was their opinion correct? (I have not studied this, but I think the point is clear).
If a belief turns out to be foolish, doesn't that mean it was wrong? It sounds like you're saying beliefs can't be wrong.Pointedstick wrote:I don't think it would actually play out the way you think it would, but for the sake of argument, if it did, I still don't see how it would make them wrong. It would certainly make you clever for manipulating their system and putting them at your mercy, but I still don't see how they would actually be wrong. Maybe the poop-in-jars currency would turn out to be a foolish idea. But that's not the same thing as them being wrong in their belief that poop in jars had value for exchange. Do you see the distinction?Kshartle wrote:The fact is I can prove their opinoin about poop being valuable is wrong. If I poop in enough jars and get all their stuff and they're left with a bunch of poop....well what then....are they going to have poop fights? I know it's not worth anything....so now when they want to rent their huts back from me I just say you need to pay me in animal skins....gold you mine...virgins....pretty much all the good stuff....not poop. I'm sorry but you got suckered.Pointedstick wrote: How would your act of increasing their money supply prove that they were wrong in their estimation that poop in jars has value as currency?
It sounds an awful lot like you're saying that people's opinions are wrong. I don't believe it's possible for an opinion to be wrong. I think only facts can be wrong.
It's my opinion that gold is going to go up in dollar price next year. Do you think my opinion can be wrong?Pointedstick wrote: So you believe it is possible to have incorrect opinions? My opinion is that Ford is better them GM and Mac is better than PC. Am I wrong? Prove it!![]()
Well let me back up a bit.Kshartle wrote: If a belief turns out to be foolish, doesn't that mean it was wrong? It sounds like you're saying beliefs can't be wrong.
If I believed that buying a condo here in Florida in 2006 was a great idea......isn't it obvious that I was wrong? How is that different from trading valuable stuff for poop that turns out to be worthless? Aren't they both wrong?