How the Mainstream Media Would Cover “Cash” if it Was a New Invention

Those of us involved in the Bitcoin world are no strangers to the consistent hyperbolic, fear-mongering so pervasive in the mainstream media’s coverage of Bitcoin.  None of that should be surprising since many of them simply do not understand it, and when you couple ignorance with a natural reflexive response to defend the status quo, you get some pretty terrible reporting.

The death of Bitcoin has been greatly exaggerated many times, including last fall when the Silk Road was shut down. Yet rather than being destroyed by the episode, it came out far stronger. Something I expect to be the case again after the Mt. Gox situation (read my thoughts on it) is behind us.

Meanwhile, if you are sitting on a lot of BTC and want to directly move it into other assets, such as gold and silver (which have been moving sharply higher in 2014), it is really easy to do. Amagi Metals is a Denver precious metals dealer and one of the first to accept BTC.

Now from Ledra Capital is a amusing article demonstrating how the mainstream media might portray cash if it were invented today. The piece is titled “Bizarre Shadowy Paper-Based Payment System Being Rolled Out Worldwide”, and I have provided some excerpts below:

World governments announced a plan today to allow citizens to anonymously carry parts of their wealth on their person and exchange it with others using small pieces of colorful paper printed with nationalistic and Masonic imagery along with numbers that purportedly represent the amount of wealth each piece of paper represents (if the paper is not a counterfeit). These pieces of paper are formally a “note” from each nation’s central bank, but they are also called “cash” by many – this is a technical matter that is too complex to cover in our basic primer; Suffice it to say, that it is representative of the complexity and user-unfriendliness of this new system. 

The launch of cash has provoked an immediate reaction from law-enforcement agencies worldwide that universally condemned the development.

“Cash is a 100% anonymous and untraceable payments technology.   It is like a weapon of mass destruction launched against law enforcement,” said Mike Smith, the recently confirmed FBI Director.  “It is the perfect payment mechanism for criminals, drug cartels, terrorists, prostitution rings and money launderers.   We don’t know how we will be able to combat such a technology and fully expect that a new generation of super-criminals will emerge, working in the shadows of a world where they can conduct their illicit affairs without leaving a trace.” 

Banking Superintendent of New York State, Mike Smith had the following to say: “I can’t think of any reason that a law-abiding individual would want to use cash. At a bare minimum, we believe there should be a licensing procedure for individuals or businesses that plan to use cash, a ‘Cash-License’ as it were. This license will limit ‘cash’ to trust-worthy individuals who keep detailed auditable records of all their cash transactions in order to keep New York safe from criminals.”

Though hard to imagine, cash operates with no consumer protection at all.   If your ‘bills’ are stolen or lost, they are gone forever.

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