Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson sparked a debate in the crypto world this week after calling Bitcoin a “giant Ponzi scheme” in a widely-read newspaper column. The response from the crypto community was fast and direct.
Johnson published his views in the Daily Mail on Friday, March 14, 2026. The piece opened with a story about a man from his village in Oxfordshire who handed £500 (~$661) to someone in a pub who promised to double it through Bitcoin.
That man spent three and a half years paying fees and trying to get his money back. He never could. He ended up losing around £20,000 (~$26,450), and Johnson said the man “was struggling to pay his bills.”
Johnson used the story to argue that Bitcoin has no real underlying value. He compared it unfavorably to gold and even Pokémon cards, saying those at least have cultural or physical appeal.
He also questioned the legitimacy of a financial system built by someone who goes by the name Satoshi Nakamoto, a pseudonymous figure whose real identity is still unknown.
“Who do we talk to if they decrypt the crypto?” Johnson asked in the column.
The reaction from the crypto industry came quickly. Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy — the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin — responded directly to Johnson’s claims.
Pierre Rochard, CEO of The Bitcoin Bond Company, also responded. He argued that the UK itself is “a giant Ponzi scheme” financed by debt.
Others pointed to Bitcoin’s fixed supply cap and its open-source, public code as key differences from a traditional Ponzi structure.
Some users responded with memes and criticized central banks for expanding the money supply during the pandemic.
The column and responses came the same week the Bitcoin network produced its 20 millionth coin, a milestone that drew attention to Bitcoin’s hard-coded supply limit of 21 million coins.
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