RANCHO SANTANA, NICARAGUA ā Over the weekend, bitcoin rose to more than $7,500 ā a 200% gain from when we bought in June.
āIs that all?ā replies a colleague. āI got into a bitcoin miner at 2 cents a share. Itās now trading at $7.
āIāll do the math for you. If you had put in $1,000, youād have $350,000 today.ā
What to make of it?
Better Money?
āNothing like this has ever happened before,ā says another colleague.
Heās right.
Bitcoin offers neither products nor services. It makes neither profits nor losses. It is neither animal, vegetable, nor mineralā¦ quick nor deadā¦ ridiculous nor sublimeā¦ Laurel nor Hardy.
Is bitcoin better money? A bubble?
Perhaps it is both.
What are British investors doing with cryptocurrencies?
We repeat our caution to readers. Bitcoin is not an investment; thereās no way to analyze or estimate the likely return. Itās not a speculation or even a gamble; thereās no way to compute the odds.
But itās hard to resist an asset that doubles every 90 days.
Our advice: Treat it like entertainment. Put in a little money. If you get rich, lucky you. If you lose your money, donāt worry about it; enjoy the show.
Do not count on bitcoin for your retirement.
Flying Pigs
Bitcoin is based on new technology. And new technology is our subject recently.
Most people believe that progress and time are the same thing. If it is newer, it must be better!
Think of all the progress weāve made since we lived in caves and ate raw bats.
Itās easy to believe that time will inevitably bring more progress. Sometime in the future, we will discover cures for cancer and foot rot. Women will be treated like men. Energy will be free and clean. No one will have to work (thanks to obliging robots).
And everyone will get a check from the government.
Cars will finally fly, too. Or maybe pigs?
But new technology doesnāt always make us richer or better off. (What did the nuclear bomb do for us?)
And some new technologies seem to destroy GDP rather than add to it.
Innocent and Charming
Today, we introduce a more shocking and thoroughly disagreeable idea: Maybe the future wonāt be all itās cracked up to be. Maybe the past was actually better.
Imagine that you lived in a comfortable, nice house from the 1950sā¦ in a cute little town like Mayberry, North Carolina.
You had a small TV set in the living room, where you watchedĀ Amos ānā AndyĀ andĀ I Love Lucyā¦ a 1956 Chevy in the garageā¦ and ā instead of the iPhone X ā you had an old-fashioned telephone on a party line.
āMabelā¦ā youād say to the operatorā¦ āwould you put me through to Eleanor?ā
āOh, Iād like to, Doris. But sheās at the beauty parlor.ā
Sounds delightfully innocent and charming, doesnāt it?
Of course, you would have none of the tech breakthroughs and refinements of the last 50 years: No opioids paid for by the government. No cruise control. No GPS. No remote control. No cellphone. No laptop. No microwave oven.
Would that be so bad?
Sleep-Deprived
It is estimated, for example, that the average person now spends 8.4 hours a day on some form of electronic communications device.
Surely, that marks āprogress.ā
Or does it?
Experts warn that people now spend so much time on their iPads, iPhones, and other gadgets that they arenāt getting enough sleep.
One doctor, quoted in theĀ Daily MailĀ newspaper, guessed that two-thirds of the British population suffer from sleep deprivation.
People are spending more than half their waking hours in communion with an electronic device. What did they do with those hours in the 1950s?
Talk? Read? Think?
We know what has been gained: hours of distraction and idle amusement on Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and email.
But what has been lost?
We donāt really know.
A pleasant greeting on the streetā¦ a fresh tomato on your plateā¦ a free parking placeā¦ a wink from the bookieā¦ a cold beer with the undertakerā¦ a kind word at a funeralā¦ a good book by an open fireā¦ a pile of leaves in the front yardā¦
ā¦a moonlit nightā¦ a conversation on the front porchā¦
Isnāt it possible that by barging blindly into the future, like a toddler changing his own diaper, we make a mess of things?
More to comeā¦
Regards,
Bill
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Category: Investing in Bitcoin