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Anthony Ostrander
158 posts

Anthony Ostrander
@anthonyost3
The corruption of money, the collapse of faith and the degradation of culture are the same story. Let's rebuild together. ✝️🇻🇦 🟠
เข้าร่วม Nisan 2022
837 กำลังติดตาม235 ผู้ติดตาม

If the money supply is growing by 6% per year, if you aren’t gaining that much that you’re getting poorer.
Your 5% raise is actually -1%.
Your 3% savings account is bleeding -3%.
Your 8% return on your stocks is 2%
Fiat disguises the truth.
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter
BREAKING: US M2 money supply jumped +4.8% YoY in February, to a record $22.6 trillion, marking the 24th consecutive monthly increase. Money supply is now ~$700 billion above the March 2022 peak. Since the 2020 pandemic, M2 has surged +$7.1 trillion, or roughly +$1.2 trillion per year. Since 2000, money in circulation has grown at an average annual rate of +6.2%. The US Dollar is losing purchasing power at a historic pace.
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The US fertility rate is at an all-time low: 1.6 births per woman. You need 2.1 to replace a population.
Since 2021: prices up 22.7%. Wages haven't kept up.
A young couple delays because the math doesn't work. It's not a fertility crisis. It's a purchasing power crisis. Fiat doesn't just steal your money. It steals your future.

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$STRC is an interesting product and the 11.5% yield makes it a very attractive place to park some cash if you need current income especially for retirees.
However, if you are young and trying to build wealth this is not the product for you.
This is a tool bringing money from fixed income investors into $BTC but if you’re young just stay focused and stack sats.
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@c64f7e94 @Gianpattention @saifedean Not only do money market funds not outpace true inflation, but you are also saying in order to keep the money you’ve earned have to then lend it back to the government.
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@anthonyost3 @Gianpattention @saifedean Putting your money in a money market fund which beats inflation is very far from speculation.
Inflation encourages you to hold less cash, which is bad, but Saifedean's theory is badly argued and mostly ridiculous.
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As @saifedean brilliantly explains in The Bitcoin Standard: when your currency loses 3-4% yearly, saving becomes mathematically irrational. Prudence (the cardinal virtue that orders all the others) requires a future worth saving for. Fiat severs that link.
The result? You get a generation that:
-Can't delay gratification (no point)
-Accumulates debt (incentives are inverted)
-Collapses into hedonism (present consumption seems like the only rational move)
-Loses the ability to build — children, communities, skill, institutions
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This would work out to over $400,000 per year if the dollar had kept pace with gold btw.
And that was MINIMUM WAGE.
Anthony Ostrander@anthonyost3
$1.60 per hour was minimum wage in 1971 That’s 1.82 ounces of gold per week That’s today’s equivalent of about $8000 a week. Let that sink in.
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I believe in one God,
the Father almighty,
maker of heaven and earth,
of all things visible and invisible.
I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the Only Begotten Son of God,
born of the Father before all ages.
God from God, Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father;
through him all things were made.
For us men and for our salvation
he came down from heaven,
and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary,
and became man.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate,
he suffered death and was buried,
and rose again on the third day
in accordance with the Scriptures.
He ascended into heaven
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory
to judge the living and the dead
and his kingdom will have no end.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life,
who proceeds from the Father and the Son,
who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified, who has spoken through the prophets.
I believe in one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.
I confess one Baptism for the forgiveness of sins
and I look forward to the resurrection of the dead
and the life of the world to come. Amen.

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Catholic priests at the University of Salamanca worked out the foundations of Austrian Economics in the 1500s.
Subjective value. Quantity theory of money. Currency debasement as theft from every citizen.
All of it grounded in Aquinas and natural law — not in "the science of economics."
When we severed economics from theology, we didn't gain objectivity. We lost the moral foundation that exposed debasement for what it is: injustice.
Bitcoin is a return to moral economics.

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If your currency is losing value at 3% a year than an investment which is losing 2% in real terms looks like it’s profitable in nominal terms. This leads to miss allocation of capital. A sound money that appreciates over time would indeed make people more prudent when it comes to what projects they invest in but that is a good thing.
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@Jackw46_ @anthonyost3 @saifedean having a "guaranteed" option to carry your money in the future at no risk with positive yield is a disaster for society. It increases the required ROI to start a real project, and so far fewer investment projects happen
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@Gianpattention @saifedean If your currency is being debased you are forced to speculate on investments in order to save. It’s become so normalized that people don’t even think about it but not only do you have to earn money from your work but you have to then speculate just to keep it.
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@anthonyost3 @saifedean this is retarded , because you save in money-like assets that generate a yield which is , in the vast majority of cases, >= inflation. Pure cash simply isn't for savings, you have it for the payment function, and a zillion options for actual savings.
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The Church's answer was always the same: money should be honest.
A fixed supply. Not subject to manipulation by kings, banks, or bureaucrats. Something that stores the fruit of your labor faithfully across time.
The School of Salamanca knew this.
Mises knew this.
Bitcoiners know this.
There's a reason the phrase "sound money" is a moral claim, not just an economic one.
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