April 25, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Re: Looks like 2000 next month

Re: Looks like 2000 next month

I currently picture myself buying lots of Bitcoins around $ 500 during the next month.

Hard fork = definitely BTC going below 500, even 500 would be a lot. Without hard fork and if people just agree that hard fork is not likely to happen then price might start rising again. I could see the price of bitcoin dropping more, but $500 seems too low. I would be very surprised to see that much of a drop unless there is a hard fork.

This HF is nothing more than just a scary dream for weak hands this is trap to get cheap coins. Nothing would be happen to the current mining system it will continue because strong exchanges and mining pools are against this. I don’t think price will drop under $900 at any moment.

(Why?)

Published at Wed, 29 Mar 2017 13:06:21 +0000

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Imf de-cashing: soft-selling financial enslavement – rory hall

IMF De-Cashing: Soft-Selling Financial Enslavement – Rory Hall

sprottmoney.com / By Rory Hall / April 7, 2017

The IMF (International Monetary Fund) or as I like to call them – International Mafia Federation – is showing its true colors and proving beyond question this organization is nothing more than street-corner-thugs in high priced suits.

With the release of this latest working paper on how to enslave nations, steal the remaining sovereignty of the people and the nations they have drawn up plans to force a cashless society upon all the people within IMF member nations.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington has published a Working Paper on “de-cashing”. It gives advice to governments who want to abolish cash against the will of their citizenry. Move slowly, start with harmless seeming measures, is part of that advice.

In “The Macroeconomics of De-Cashing”, IMF-Analyst Alexei Kireyev recommends in his conclusions:
Although some countries most likely will de-cash in a few years, going completely cashless should be phased in steps. The de-cashing process could build on the initial and largely uncontested steps, such as the phasing out of large denomination bills, the placement of ceilings on cash transactions, and the reporting of cash moves across the borders. Further steps could include creating economic incentives to reduce the use of cash in transactions, simplifying the opening and use of transferrable deposits, and further computerizing the financial system.

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