Bitcoin is down. Now what?

The hardest money always wins

Bitcoin has gotten pummeled the last week or so. It’s down around 11% year to date.

The critics are celebrating, calling it dead for the 478th time.

But let’s step back. Let’s zoom out. Because these minor dips in a long-term, world-changing revolution is about as relevant as a single raindrop in a hurricane.

Bitcoin remains the hardest, most superior form of money ever created. That is not hyperbole. That is a statement of verifiable fact that's backed by undeniable economic principles, historical evidence, and unbreakable cryptographic security.

Every form of money before Bitcoin has been subject to manipulation, devaluation, or outright collapse.

Governments have debased currencies for centuries. Whether it was the Roman Empire clipping its gold coins, the Weimar Republic drowning in hyperinflation, or Argentina’s peso losing 99% of its value in just the last 20 years.

The pattern is always the same: those in power print, dilute, or seize wealth to prop up their failing systems, and everyday people like you and me pay the price.

Savings are wiped out. Retirements are ruined. Entire generations lose everything; not because they made bad choices, but because they trusted money controlled by those who can’t resist the temptation to destroy it.

But Bitcoin? It stands alone. Immutable, incorruptible, and immune to the reckless monetary policies that have destroyed civilizations. It is the first and only form of money that no central bank, no government, and no dictator can corrupt. And that changes everything.

And by the time you finish reading this, you’ll understand why and the implications that should keep every fiat-currency believer awake at night, wondering if their savings will still hold value tomorrow.

A History of Failed Money

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