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Yes I am aware of the propaganda article contents.

Blaming Bitcoin for enabling these fossil fuel plants to continue is a red herring that distracts from the real issues: ineffective global energy policies and the threat Bitcoin poses to centralized financial systems. It’s easier for governments and critics to scapegoat Bitcoin than to admit their failure in promoting renewable energy or to face the uncomfortable truth that Bitcoin challenges their control over monetary policies. The narrative that Bitcoin only supports dirty energy is a convenient oversimplification, ignoring the broader economic incentives at play and the potential for technological innovation to drive a shift toward renewable energy sources. Let’s not mistake symptom for cause; the focus should be on fixing flawed energy policies, not demonizing a technology pushing for decentralization and innovation.



I’m still stuck on the first bit; you seem to sincerely believe that bitcoin is good for the environment, whilst also acknowledging it’s mainly powered by coal.

One can justify all sorts or environmental destruction with this your argument. Pouring oil on the beach is pushing local regulators to act, spurring the creation of less harmful lubricants.

The numbers show bitcoin mining is doing harm.


Comparing Bitcoin mining to pouring oil on the beach is intellectually lazy. Bitcoin incentivizes the search for the cheapest energy, which increasingly means renewable. Unlike oil spills, Bitcoin’s ‘harm’ is driving a real search for energy innovation, not just cleanup. Moreover, it’s serving a crucial economic function, providing a decentralized financial system that aligns incentives with human progress. Trivializing such a groundbreaking innovation overlooks the broader benefits it offers in terms of both economic freedom and the push towards sustainable energy solutions.


The energy isn’t making anything and it’s causing harm mining due to its vast energy usage. Buzz words and greenwashing don’t change that. Scrounging for the cheapest power source doesn’t make it special, everyone wants cheap energy. We have money whether or not you mine crypto and time will tell whether or not its groundbreaking innovations free us. So far it’s been scams, hacks, failures and waste. Let’s see what happens next.


Your dismissal of Bitcoin as mere ‘buzzwords and greenwashing’ overlooks its tangible achievements and real-world impact. Bitcoin is not about ‘scrounging for cheap energy’; it’s about fostering a decentralized financial system with over 100 million users worldwide and a market cap surpassing $900 billion. Beyond finance, Bitcoin’s transparent, immutable ledger offers unparalleled resistance to fraud, censorship, and corruption. Its technological innovations, like the Lightning Network and Taproot, are pioneering advancements in cryptography, economics, and beyond. With an uptime of 99.98% and a network secured by a record-high hashrate, Bitcoin’s resilience and reliability are indisputable. Dismissing it as scams, hacks, and failures not only ignores these significant contributions but also trivializes the global movement towards financial sovereignty and innovation. The real waste is in failing to recognize Bitcoin’s value and potential in driving forward not just financial, but societal progress.




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