What is Cryptocurrency? In our mission to answer your question, we bring you a popular topic of debate.

The value of Bitcoin versus the U.S. Dollar!

Because the dollar is the system of trade we are so used to and cling to daily, we tend to look at the value of other things of value in ‘dollars.’ The exciting thing about Bitcoin and cryptocurrency is that the value of Bitcoin versus the dollar in the long term will not matter as it has a value that is derived much differently than that of our limited fiat currencies.

I will provide several reasons why that the Bitcoin value versus the “Almighty Dollar” is actually of little significance beyond the day to day trading or liquidation of the currency by holders. I will explain to you why that this value connection is otherwise somewhat irrelevant now and will be utterly irrelevant in the future to come.

What Is Cryptocurrency? | Reason #1: The History Of The Internet Points To The Future Of Money

This first reason is one that can be learned from the lessons taught in history about decentralized networks versus centralized networks. One of the former (centralized) in the form of the system we use today, while the other gives you a glimpse into the future of money!

Just twenty years ago, the internet was just picking up momentum, with the first people accessing it through phone lines and the classically slow AOL service. The internet was in a similar stage of development as cryptocurrency is in today.

The internet replaced older communication methods, such as typewriters and traditional snail mail. At first, this transition was slow, but before long, it picked up speed, and now virtually everyone uses the internet and email.

These older means of communication weren’t wholly instantly replaced by any means, but over time they were made obsolete. If you look a few years further into the growth of the internet, you can also see how the news organizations (paper-based communication) adopted the online sphere for the delivery of their news product. The internet revolution caused the size of newspapers to shrink, and the demand for the physical paper also to decrease as more people started accessing the news online.

In the same way that people are wondering, “What is cryptocurrency?” and “What is bitcoin?” people at the beginning of the internet era were wondering “what is email” and “what is the internet.” So you have some serious parallels between these two technological megatrends in our society. If you look at it this way, you can see that Bitcoin is following the internet’s lead.

Bitcoin has built its blockchain technology on top of the existing network technology we have come to know and depend on for communications: “the internet.” Bitcoin has a growing influence on the monetary systems around the globe and is revolutionizing global commerce as we speak. The level of influence that Bitcoin and cryptocurrency will have on global financial systems and trade is similar in depth to the power of the internet and how it revolutionized the way we communicate instantly / globally.

The potential of cryptocurrency and Bitcoin is only just beginning. And what an incredible beginning it has been!

The power and value of Bitcoin/cryptocurrency has scared some sovereign governments (i.e., Russia, Ecuador, Bolivia) to ban it outright, in practice or through de facto capital controls. While at the same time, other countries like the United States, Australia, United Kingdom, and many more have embraced a higher understanding and favorable position regarding cryptocurrency.

Recently the Australian Senate deemed that cryptocurrency is to be treated legally as all other world currency. And then just several days later, the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced the classification of cryptocurrency as a commodity.

These fascinating developments in the world of Bitcoin & cryptocurrency have caused many people from around the world to start asking the question: What is a cryptocurrency?

What Is Cryptocurrency? | Reason #2: Bitcoin vs. The Dollar? It’s Like Comparing Physical Mail To Email

Both the dollar and Bitcoin have a value that can be transferred from one party to another. But the similarities end there.

Just because our mindset is so ingrained to value everything around us in ‘dollars,’ the value of Bitcoin is most often compared to the world’s reserve currency. The U.S. Dollar also happens to be the most liquid, distributed, and highly established currency in all of history.

We also tend to look at both the dollar and bitcoin as ‘currencies.’ While with the dollar that is correct, bitcoin is actually much more than that. Functionality as a currency is simply one of the useful applications of Bitcoin.

Bitcoin has another killer advantage. It appreciates in the range of 2-400% per annum, even during an off-year for the economy. Technical geek fact: you can send 1000 bits of information with a Bitcoin. You can send as little as a millionth of a bitcoin as a payment to a fellow Bitcoin wallet holder for a minimal fee. (and bitcoin wallets are free to set up and use!)

A significant difference between Bitcoin and the U.S. Dollar is the fact that the amount of Bitcoins that will ever be produced is capped at 20 million. With the dollar, the federal reserve can continuously print more money and debase the value of the currency. The effect of this is that over time, you earn the same amount of money, but your buying power goes down as the price index of everyday items increases. Bitcoin and cryptocurrency are not affected by any such ‘central banking’ monetary policies, and that is a HUGE advantage that makes it a powerful safe-haven for our hard-earned value.

Bitcoin is fully decentralized and is not bound or controlled by any regional territories or powers. If your countries economy is faltering and goes through a currency devaluation similar to what happened in Greece, whatever value you have stored in cryptocurrency will be safe. If anything, the value will increase in proportion to the value of the fiat currency issued by your government banking system.

On the other side of the coin, we have the “The Almighty U.S. Dollar.” Dollars are like the celebrities of past generations, that had their time in the limelight but are continually fading into history. The same is the case for the dollar, as its power and influence weakens around the world. The most significant advantage of the dollar in our current market environment is that it can quickly provide liquidity. It sadly has also been historically used to force political will on smaller countries by gunpoint. Take Muammar Gaddafi, for example.

What Is Cryptocurrency? | Reason #3: The Dollar Is Phasing Out Globally

The U.S. Dollar is teetering towards a collapse of epic scale, and many of the financial experts out there have been warning about this for some time now. Of course, many people will be asleep at the wheel up until it’s too late to take action to protect themselves from the shakeup and ensuing devaluation. The ‘Great Recession’ of 2008-2009 was just a warm-up for what is to come.

Historically any currency that has held a ‘World Reserve Currency’ status has done so on average for 65-70 years. The U.S. Dollar has held the reigns of ‘world reserve currency’ for over 70 years now, and the main thing keeping it in business is the sphere of U.S. military influence globally with over 100 countries occupied by military bases. But signs are pointing to change.

A critical nail in the coffin to the dollar’s world reserve currency status was this year’s formation of the BRICS Development Bank. It was a significant regulatory step in the advancement of the demise of the dollar as an internationally relevant currency. This bank is formed by the BRICS nations, which include; Brazil, Russia, India, China & South Africa. The BRICS nations control 40% of the world’s currency reserves and human population.

Back in July of this year, the BRICS nations drew the line when they announced that they would trade directly with each other without using the U.S. dollar. The United States was silent in response to this announcement. There was not much they could do to stop this. Even previous to this new and official banking arrangement, for many years, these countries have been conducting ‘bilateral trade agreements,’ which are international trade deals that are settled without exchanging the sovereign currency for U.S. Dollars. To release this new world bank to facilitate and make their trading more efficient, was just the next reasonable evolution of their system.

This came to be as the dollar has little to no intrinsic value, and the Federal Reserve keeps implementing ‘Quantitative Easing’ with the money supply (that means the Fed keeps printing more money and debasing the value of the dollar.) And the Federal Reserve also has failed to raise interest rates out of fear of economic collapse. The Federal Reserve bank is on monetary life support.

Even though the official U.S. reports continue to paint a pretty picture by inflating or deflating specific numbers, the rest of the world is abandoning the dollar. The government does not want you or the masses to know this until it’s too late. That is why you will always see the mainstream media & news report on the drop in the value of Bitcoin rather than focus on its rise in value.

It’s interesting how things can so often just be a matter of perception. And now more than ever, it’s really important where you are getting your information about things!

Financial experts like Robert Kiyosaki, Peter Schiff, Jeff Berwick, and Mike Maloney (just to name a few) have been predicting an economic collapse for years now (click the links for more info on their views and logic). Personally knowing people from Wall Street who work as investment bankers, I can say with confidence that they all sing the same tune and have also been warning me of what is to come.

We are pretty far advanced into the terminal stage as we speak, even George Soros proclaimed the dollar as dead as early as 2008: “Americans, in particular, are truly ignorant about economic collapses because they have never experienced one first hand. What happened in 2008 as a little heart attack, that is the precursor to your coming demise, if you don’t amend your economic policies.”

Do you think that the U.S..S. government has got its house in order since 2008? We all know the answer to that one. National Debt over Gross Domestic Product has only continued to rise to record heights, and we are truly currently at a tipping point in history.

Robert Kiyosaki, the author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, said, “Eventually, this [dollar] will go to its true worth. Zero. So all of you savers [of dollars] out there, you’re going to lose big time!”

So does this mean we will just stop using the dollar in the U.S..S. all of a sudden? Well, no, not instantly. Some people still use typewriters, and all of us still use regular mail. There are still people out there who read the actual physical newspaper. People will continue using the dollar until it completely collapses into zero value.

And it’s to be looked at as ‘not if’ but ‘when’ the dollar collapses and reduces to its true value. The value of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency will have an inverse market value relationship. This means that as the purchasing power of the dollar goes down, the value of the Bitcoin versus the dollar will go up proportionally. As the dollar continues to struggle moving forward, Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies will march forward into the future of money as we know it.

So this is why the value of Bitcoin against the dollar is virtually irrelevant and soon to be fundamentally irrelevant globally. One thing to understand is that Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies were not designed to replace the world reserve currency. Bitcoin industry leaders are of the stance that the value of Bitcoin versus the dollar does not matter since that it is not designed to be a ‘world reserve currency.’

This may be hard to wrap your mind around, but Bitcoin industry leader Andreas Antonopoulos once stated: “the internet’s value is not measured in its ability to replace a number of fax machines. So why measure Bitcoin in dollars? They are totally different ecosystems. Like comparing apples to oranges, literally.”

In the first six years of its life as a currency, Bitcoin has paved the way for the acceptance of cryptocurrency in everyday commerce and as a revolutionary way to transfer money from peer to peer globally for free.

Now over the next five years, which currency do you see not only lasting but growing in popularity and value? Bitcoin or the U.S..S. Dollar? With a growing international community shunning its use by practicing bilateral trade and implementing its own world bank (the BRICS bank), the overprinting of the money supply by the Federal Reserve, and with cryptocurrency beating it out through attrition (smart people are diversifying out of the dollar).

I know where I’m placing my bets. And as things continue to develop on the global stage, you will likely be thinking the same if you haven’t already figured it out at this point.

Until Next Time,



P.S. Want to learn how you can profit from the cryptocurrency revolution? Check out our FREE Cryptocurrency Mini-Course by clicking the following link:

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What Is Cryptocurrency?