RIPPLE why we should not buy it

in #bitcoin7 years ago

Yes its gone way up - the BANKSTERS COIN - they can pump it up by Q A 'printing' and buy their own Ripple, pushing it up to oppress us, using our blockchain methods - they are clever and devious..

DON'T DO IT, DON' BUY IT - WATCH THIS VIDEO from Mr Silvertooth:

Sort:  

Love your passion, man! Let me respond, if I may, having worked with and for some of these banksters over the years.

Banking is a corrupt system, right from the start, and people are only just waking up to it. I'll check out the Malloney videos for sure. Here's a really old site which I still love on the history of banking...
http://www.xat.org/xat/moneyhistory.html

And there are some horribly greedy and corrupt people in the higher echelons of banking. I've met some!

BUT banks are not going away anytime soon. Bear in mind that banks are primarily there to be the front-end of government monetary policy. They're not really there to serve the likes of you and I (though they do make plenty of money from us!) They are, however, being forced into rethinking their business models. They're less likely to be storage and lending facilities down the line, and more like commoditised pipes to move wealth around. That's a good thing for us, though they'll likely fight it tooth and nail.

And there is no doubt the banks are investigating ways of using the blockchain within their own operations. Again, I've met people who are leading those efforts at the likes of HSBC. That's going to happen, is already happening, and not buying Ripple is not going to stop that. That said, I respect your integrity in this matter.

Can I offer a couple of corrections?

First off, no company IPOs at $100,000. That's way too small. And banks don't take 60% in fees!

Second, where do you get the 'print $1, owe $1.50' from? You're right that 98% of money is created as debt, but not at a 50% interest rate! And of course, virtually no money is literally printed these days. Again, around 98% of it exists only digitally, on banks computer ledgers.

Third, you kinda have the right idea about fractional reserve banking, but your figures are out. If I bank $10, yes, they can lend out multiples of that, but it's way over the 10:1 ratio that you mention. Here in the UK, the maximum is 35:1 (though few banks actually go that high).

I'm on the fence about Ripple right now, and I do need to do more research. I bought some recently, just so you know... :-0 Here's a possibly rather naive postulation, though:

Ripple is primarily designed (I think) to facilitate cheaper, faster cross-border inter-bank transactions, which will reduce banks costs. Now, leaving aside the idea of banking cartels (which undoubtedly exist) there is a level of high competition amongst banks. So could it be that Ripple = lower costs to banks = lower fees to customers? May be naive, as I said, but they've been forced to cut credit card fees massively in recent years, as the regulators saw that the relationship between costs to the bank, and fees charged, had gone all out of whack. Their costs had dropped hard but the drops were not being passed on to customers. Now they are, when the regulators forced them to. The same is likely to happen here, as a result of Ripple's work.

As I said I'm on the fence on this one (with a toe into a small Ripple stake!). I'm not defending Ripple, and certainly not defending the banks - I can tell you it's they can look even worse from the inside! - and I completely respect your well-expressed opinion.

I shall follow now, regardless of where this discussion goes.

My thoughts exactly.

After hitting levels above $20,000 per coin just last week, Bitcoin saw a massive sell-off as fears of a bubble began to loom large.

The price reached an all time high of $20,078 on December 17, but saw an approximate 40% drop in just three days, once dipping to as low as $11,833 on December 22.

However, in spite of fears, the market has rebounded again, and is now stabilizing above $14,000. At press time, Bitcoin was trading at an average of $15,147, according to Coinmarketcap.

Bitcoin Charts

The recovery so far seems to have justified the approach of HODLers (‘Hold On for Dear Life’) who refuse to sell in times of market fear.

Varying responses
Nevertheless, the drop-off saw hedge-fund manager Mike Novogratz delay the issuing of his hedge-fund, citing the substantial swings in the market as well as potential conflicts of interest as the cause.

On the contrary, however, Kain Warwick, Founder and CEO of Havven, an asset-backed cryptocurrency, made it clear that the rebound should have been expected, telling Cointelegraph:

“Bitcoin rebounded because there is significant support at psychological levels like 10k, so once the price stopped falling people came in to buy the dip.”

THIS COMMENT HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH MY POST!

To think I was beating myself for not buying the Ripple when it was low the way the price appreciated. I'm still trying to understand the workings of the crypto world.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.20
TRX 0.14
JST 0.030
BTC 67698.91
ETH 3266.83
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.64