The post The Snobs’ Attack On Gold Is Failing, Thanks To Bitcoin appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The classical challenge to fiat money is gold. Populations wary of sovereign or bank money-printing—or taxes and regulations—pile into precious metal, leaving the fiat without volunteer users and high and dry. This was the way of the world for centuries, millennia. In the United States in the early 1930s, the American people, tiring of income tax increases taking rates absurdly higher than they had ever been in peacetime, property tax increases far and away the highest in the nation’s history, and exceptional tariffs that made everything more expensive, said forget it and pushed into gold, selling their United States banknotes for it, at $20 per ounce (the official price). The president, FDR, found this so very objectionable and outlawed the private ownership of gold. A better solution would have been to go easy on the tax-rate levels. It would have been enough to dispatch the Great Depression while retaining classical money. Today people still do this. Hence gold zooming up past $4,250. It was at $275 in 2000. Microsoft stock sure has done well in the 21st century. Not as well as gold, though. But today people do something else too. They go into a new gold alternative, which is therefore a new fiat alternative, Bitcoin in a word although encompassing the cryptocurrency universe as well. By the 2000s, the fiat-gold contest had become long in the tooth. After 1971, gold had no official monetary role for the first time basically ever in the world. For forty years we got lectures on how crank-like gold is—its advocates are “goldbugs”—and how professional fiat money is, via the ministrations of credible, credentialed staff at the Federal Reserve and in the economics establishment broadly. The nature of this emasculation of gold was social. The demonetization of gold that held from 1971 to roughly… The post The Snobs’ Attack On Gold Is Failing, Thanks To Bitcoin appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The classical challenge to fiat money is gold. Populations wary of sovereign or bank money-printing—or taxes and regulations—pile into precious metal, leaving the fiat without volunteer users and high and dry. This was the way of the world for centuries, millennia. In the United States in the early 1930s, the American people, tiring of income tax increases taking rates absurdly higher than they had ever been in peacetime, property tax increases far and away the highest in the nation’s history, and exceptional tariffs that made everything more expensive, said forget it and pushed into gold, selling their United States banknotes for it, at $20 per ounce (the official price). The president, FDR, found this so very objectionable and outlawed the private ownership of gold. A better solution would have been to go easy on the tax-rate levels. It would have been enough to dispatch the Great Depression while retaining classical money. Today people still do this. Hence gold zooming up past $4,250. It was at $275 in 2000. Microsoft stock sure has done well in the 21st century. Not as well as gold, though. But today people do something else too. They go into a new gold alternative, which is therefore a new fiat alternative, Bitcoin in a word although encompassing the cryptocurrency universe as well. By the 2000s, the fiat-gold contest had become long in the tooth. After 1971, gold had no official monetary role for the first time basically ever in the world. For forty years we got lectures on how crank-like gold is—its advocates are “goldbugs”—and how professional fiat money is, via the ministrations of credible, credentialed staff at the Federal Reserve and in the economics establishment broadly. The nature of this emasculation of gold was social. The demonetization of gold that held from 1971 to roughly…

The Snobs’ Attack On Gold Is Failing, Thanks To Bitcoin

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

The classical challenge to fiat money is gold. Populations wary of sovereign or bank money-printing—or taxes and regulations—pile into precious metal, leaving the fiat without volunteer users and high and dry. This was the way of the world for centuries, millennia. In the United States in the early 1930s, the American people, tiring of income tax increases taking rates absurdly higher than they had ever been in peacetime, property tax increases far and away the highest in the nation’s history, and exceptional tariffs that made everything more expensive, said forget it and pushed into gold, selling their United States banknotes for it, at $20 per ounce (the official price). The president, FDR, found this so very objectionable and outlawed the private ownership of gold. A better solution would have been to go easy on the tax-rate levels. It would have been enough to dispatch the Great Depression while retaining classical money.

Today people still do this. Hence gold zooming up past $4,250. It was at $275 in 2000. Microsoft stock sure has done well in the 21st century. Not as well as gold, though.

But today people do something else too. They go into a new gold alternative, which is therefore a new fiat alternative, Bitcoin in a word although encompassing the cryptocurrency universe as well. By the 2000s, the fiat-gold contest had become long in the tooth. After 1971, gold had no official monetary role for the first time basically ever in the world. For forty years we got lectures on how crank-like gold is—its advocates are “goldbugs”—and how professional fiat money is, via the ministrations of credible, credentialed staff at the Federal Reserve and in the economics establishment broadly.

The nature of this emasculation of gold was social. The demonetization of gold that held from 1971 to roughly 2011 used attitudes of social superiority to enforce the new regime. Mention gold, and you are out of polite conversation. Say go back to a gold standard, get labeled a crank. Not an economist in the top thirty departments say a gold standard can work. It is nowhere in the peer-reviewed literature, etc.

What was rising in 2011 was, of course, a remarkable attempt at emulation of gold that would cut off the snobbery at the pass. Bitcoin, which began trading in fractions of a cent in 2009, was cutting-edge computer science. Economists and officials at the Federal Reserve could snob that? What, it is not intellectually sophisticated enough? Not only was it intellectually sophisticated, it was a crowning achievement—if only still in germ, making it all the more fearsome and impressive—of the most remarkable intellectual and technical development of modern times, the IT revolution.

Bitcoin is for fools? It came from obviously exceptional intelligence. Economics departments and central banks are more intellectually sophisticated that Bitcoin, the old parlay against gold? Cut off at the pass, the money establishment was, in Bitcoin’s inherent sophistication.

To begin our book Free Money, on Bitcoin and its consonance with the long American monetary tradition over the centuries, we report how in Bitcoin’s early days of public visibility, 2013 or so, the establishment did try to use its old tool, social snobbery, to pack off Bitcoin for good. Its users lived in their parents’ basement. People who played video games all day were its base. It was male. Important people like monetary officials paid no attention to it. All sorts of snobbery spaghetti, thrown at the wall. Did it stick? Did the price go up?

On or about 2020, it became impossible to continue with the snobbery. Blockchain technology and peer-to peer Internet transactions, it was becoming altogether clear, were amounting to another major entry in the relentless IT revolution. It was interesting how Bitcoin understood, at the very outset in 2009, that it had to bring a different kind of weapon in the fight against fiat money. It had to bring overwhelming intellectual superiority to the fight.

No self-respecting monetary establishmentarian can scoff at the computer science revolution. Computers—the people who do them are 100 percent dumb. To say such a thing is to get yourself escorted out of the room. Yet only yesterday (before 2009), to say gold got you escorted out of the room. How ingenious it was for Bitcoin to marshal an intellectual frontier far beyond the scope and abilities of the advocates and preservers of the fiat money regime. The fiat people had chosen social snobbery to oust gold, and thereby set themselves up, showed where their vulnerability lay. What if a gold alternative began from a premise of intellectual superiority that the monetary establishment could never touch?

Now we hear Bitcoin is too sophisticated. People don’t understand it. Buffett: I don’t understand it. Bernanke: said the same thing about gold (actually a fire-able offense for a Federal Reserve chair). This is where the beauty lies. If Bitcoin is too sophisticated, there is an alternative that is homely and comfortable and simple as an old shoe, gold.

What a lovely pair of scissors in which fiat money has found itself. Trash gold because it’s old-fashioned? Here’s Bitcoin, so new-fangled it will blow your mind. Trash it for being far out? Oops, we are back to having to deal with gold. It is perfectly understandable that gold and Bitcoin recently have been traveling up to heights largely together. Each alternative batters the aging fiat money consensus against that consensus’ own aging prejudices. Obviously we are going to have monetary reform, probably of the organic variety, globally in the perhaps near term. An outstanding possibility is a grand alliance between Bitcoin and gold.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/briandomitrovic/2025/10/18/the-snobs-attack-on-gold-is-failing-thanks-to-bitcoin/

Market Opportunity
Lorenzo Protocol Logo
Lorenzo Protocol Price(BANK)
$0.03992
$0.03992$0.03992
+0.98%
USD
Lorenzo Protocol (BANK) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC

Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC

The post Franklin Templeton CEO Dismisses 50bps Rate Cut Ahead FOMC appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson has weighed in on whether the Federal Reserve should make a 25 basis points (bps) Fed rate cut or 50 bps cut. This comes ahead of the Fed decision today at today’s FOMC meeting, with the market pricing in a 25 bps cut. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market are currently trading flat ahead of the rate cut decision. Franklin Templeton CEO Weighs In On Potential FOMC Decision In a CNBC interview, Jenny Johnson said that she expects the Fed to make a 25 bps cut today instead of a 50 bps cut. She acknowledged the jobs data, which suggested that the labor market is weakening. However, she noted that this data is backward-looking, indicating that it doesn’t show the current state of the economy. She alluded to the wage growth, which she remarked is an indication of a robust labor market. She added that retail sales are up and that consumers are still spending, despite inflation being sticky at 3%, which makes a case for why the FOMC should opt against a 50-basis-point Fed rate cut. In line with this, the Franklin Templeton CEO said that she would go with a 25 bps rate cut if she were Jerome Powell. She remarked that the Fed still has the October and December FOMC meetings to make further cuts if the incoming data warrants it. Johnson also asserted that the data show a robust economy. However, she noted that there can’t be an argument for no Fed rate cut since Powell already signaled at Jackson Hole that they were likely to lower interest rates at this meeting due to concerns over a weakening labor market. Notably, her comment comes as experts argue for both sides on why the Fed should make a 25 bps cut or…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:36
Strategy leans on STRC to accelerate Bitcoin buying in 2026

Strategy leans on STRC to accelerate Bitcoin buying in 2026

The post Strategy leans on STRC to accelerate Bitcoin buying in 2026 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Strategy has found a new gear in its Bitcoin accumulation
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/11 03:18
Senator Alsobrooks warns that the CLARITY Act middle ground will leave everyone "a little bit unhappy"

Senator Alsobrooks warns that the CLARITY Act middle ground will leave everyone "a little bit unhappy"

Speaking at the American Bankers Association summit in Washington, US Senator from Maryland, Angela Alsobrooks, spoke bluntly to a room full of community bankers
Share
Cryptopolitan2026/03/11 03:25