Bitcoin vs. the Dollar: Why Trust Matters More Than You Think

CN
2 days ago

Alex leaned forward at the coffee shop table. “You criticize bitcoin, but do you know how the U.S. dollar works?” John hesitated. “Gold… right? Or something physical?” “That stopped in 1971,” Alex replied. “The dollar isn’t backed by anything tangible now. It’s just… paper.” John shrugged. “But it works. Everyone uses it,” he said.

“But why and how does it work?” Alex pressed. “What gives it value?” John stared into their latte and remarked:

Honestly? I have no idea.

Most people, like John, assume money has inherent worth. But since President Nixon severed the dollar’s tie to gold, its value hinges solely on trust in the U.S. government. Unlike assets such as oil or farmland, fiat currencies derive power from collective belief in a system managed by central banks and politicians. This makes fiat currency — government-issued money without physical backing — uniquely fragile.

The modern U.S. dollar operates on faith, not facts. Central banks control its supply, adjusting interest rates and printing money to steer economies. But this power isn’t neutral. When the U.S. Federal Reserve creates trillions of dollars (as it did during the 2008 crisis or Covid-19 pandemic), it dilutes the value of existing money, often fueling inflation. Decisions made behind closed doors ripple through jobs, home prices and grocery bills, yet few question the mechanics.

This opacity invites manipulation and it is rife. Governments quietly devalue savings through inflation or bail out failing banks with newly minted cash. Markets swing between booms and busts shaped by policy shifts, not organic demand. The 2008 housing collapse and subsequent stimulus packages exemplify how centralized control can both cause and attempt to ‘fix’ crises — often at the public’s expense.

Bitcoin offers a contrast. Created in 2009 as a response to centralized financial systems that were exposed in 2008, Satoshi’s Bitcoin operates on a decentralized network where rules are written in code, not politics. Its supply is capped at 21 million coins, enforced by algorithms. Every transaction is recorded on a public ledger (the blockchain), visible to anyone. Unlike U.S. dollars or any other fiat currency, Bitcoin doesn’t rely on trust with these types of traditional institutions.

Critics call bitcoin’s price volatile, but its network design is transparent. You can audit its supply, verify transactions and predict inflation rates (new coins enter circulation at a fixed, slowing pace). No surprise injections of stimulus bitcoin exist. No committee can vote to alter its rules without consensus from users worldwide. This predictability makes it a compelling alternative for those wary of opaque monetary systems.

The real issue isn’t whether BTC replaces the dollar tomorrow. It’s that most people don’t grasp how the fiat currency system functions. Fiat currencies demand blind faith in fallible institutions. While the Bitcoin network invites scrutiny through transparency. Asking “What backs my money?” isn’t radical — it’s the first step toward demanding better from the systems that shape our lives.

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