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To: TsonicTsunami08; grania; narses

Yes, "churning" is the name of the game.

Non sequitur. Dodd-Frank is an abomination, as well as Sarbanes-Oxley and number of other laws, regulations and mandates, which should be repealed, but it has nothing to do with Bitcoin. Anyway, 80% or more activity in Bitcoin has been from China and other countries with capital controls. This is just a diversionary scare tactic, which ironically, Bitcoin promoters are usually accusing critics of.

Another non sequitur. What does this have to do with Bitcoin, unless you imply that USD$ will be confiscated, but if you put all your money in Bitcoin "wallet" you'll happily avoid that "fate" or be able to hide your income because transactions in bitcoin are somehow "anonymous"? So were numbered Swiss bank accounts at one time. Anyway, there are other, far less speculative investments than Bitcoin. Sure, you can use bitcoins to transfer the money and immediately convert it into [other] "fiat currency" on the other end, but there are much cheaper ways of doing it, and it does not do much for Bitcoin economy, except get some miner(s) transaction fees. But I guess that's the BTC economy in a nutshell.

Re BoA/Merrill Lynch's currency analyst John Woo's quote - it's not an "endorsement" as the heading and the article in BI states, it's actually a warning:

Obviously, these are requirements for any B2C (Business-to-Consumer) company, none of which Bitcoin currently meets or likely to meet in the near future, with the growing competition from Amazon, Paypal (eBay), Square, JP Morgan (patent on cryptocurrency and anonymous e-payment/e-transfer) and other better known and financially stable players as well as other cryptocurrencies that dilute the marketplace. Leave it to Business Insider / ZeroHedge hacks to take a quote or a fact and turn its meaning 180 degrees, as an "endorsement". No wonder the disgraced Internut pumper Henry Blodget - who has been barred from securities business - is invested in it and runs it:
Business Insider Turned Down $100M-Plus Buyout Offer: Source - FBN, by Katie Roof, 2014 January 03

Yep, I agree, you were right about ShamWOW moment. And in all caps, too.

OT: Considering marginal profitability and that the competitor TheStreet (TST) has nearly 3 times the revenues and only valued at 1.5 times sales currently, it's unlikely that $100M offer was made, but in the Internut world anything is possible.

Of course, Western Union itself is a dinosaur, and their BidPay e-payment business failed twice (even before Bitcoin scheme was a concept) but the business model is the predecessor of and the same as other transfer payments, only now the newer e-payments are cheaper and more convenient for most people, leaving Western Union with expensive infrastructure and less than stellar name in financial services.

Visa (V), MasterCard (MA) and American Express are doing extremely well and are expected to continue to do well, as more people are using reliable payment services, and they don't have a pyramid scheme built-in by design into their business/service model.

From The Case of the Disappearing Dollar Bill - B, by Alexander Eule, 2013 December 28

Probably no tears should be shed for Visa, MasterCard and AmEx. Bitcoin is not even considered a competitor, and by its flawed "hybrid" design it should not be.

Yet another non sequitur. First, you are making wild and unsubstantiated assumptions about my use of financial services.

Second, you again change the subject by insulting and denigrating the financial options that far more people would use instead of bitcoins (as per your own example) in an airport of your choice (or anywhere else) where presumably TSA or other federal agency is likely to rob you of your gold, cash, diamonds or just about anything that is "not a bitcoin." I think most sane people would not try to transport bullions of gold and bags of cash through the airport, but they don't have to use bitcoins to have "cash" available to them.

And what does the stock market have to do with Bitcoin? Are you saying that Bitcoin is better investment than stocks , or that it's the only investment, or that it's better investment at this time, or that it's not an investment at all, just a store of value that can be transferred at any airport without fear of TSA?

It was another ShamWoW scare tactic, as I clearly demonstrated in my response.

Unfortunately, while trying to defend the obvious flaws of Bitcoin as a "currency" / "money" / e-payment / e-transfer / speculative investment of by design limited "ever-appreciating" commodity/asset etc., instead of arguing the facts most Bitcoin promoters prefer to change the subject and point fingers at something else ("fiat currency", gold, credit cards, stock market etc.) or divert attention by personalizing the non sequitur response. Actually, they like the confusion, so the different aspects of the "hybrid" may appeal to different constituents. Doesn't speak well of the product or its ecosystem.

Only 5 years since unbelievable 20+ years Madoff's scam unraveled and people are ready to jump into a massive pyramid scheme disguised as a virtue for all kinds of "clients" - from gold bugs to boiler room operators to technogeeks - "inequality be damned, now it's "for the masses".

You are welcome.

26 posted on 01/05/2014 3:19:46 PM PST by CutePuppy (If you don't ask the right questions you may not get the right answers)
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To: CutePuppy

Yep, you can’t see what you can’t see. I will take every last Satoshi I can get my hands on . Time and tides will be the final arbiter of Bitcoin so I will leave you with another non sequitur by William Shakespeare, seeing how you are so fond of quoting degenerate Hollywood.

Brutus:

There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune. Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea are we now afloat. And we must take the current when it serves, or lose our ventures.

Julius Caesar Act 4, scene 3


27 posted on 01/05/2014 3:56:52 PM PST by TsonicTsunami08
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