> The clincher is that regulations, taxes or outright prohibitions of cryptocurrencies will be enforced with violence.
Hence my references to anarchy. All governments are the definers of legitimate force and to whom their local monopoly of it can be deputised.
> Are freedoms granted by government?
Yes.
> Where does it stem from?
Game theory, economics, and the occasional threat of other people doing violence against the stuff they (the powerful) like.
> Who is entitled to the value you add to a marketplace?
Nobody, including the creator of that value. The creators of value are only rewarded with it because a system vastly bigger than any single human has temporarily settled on a local equilibrium where that is the motivation.
Entitlements only exists with respect to legal frameworks and with enforcement mechanisms, not by themselves.
> Is a market a zero sum game?
They can be, they can also be negative or positive sum games. Messing with currencies is often a negative, because it creates opportunities to defect that otherwise don’t exist.
I own a flat. It’s collecting rent. If the economy goes up and all else is equal, I collect more rent (more money in the system for fixed supply); if home construction increases, I collect less (more supply for fixed money in the system). This income is entirely due to what the government in charge of the area decides to motivate, not how much I put into maintaining the place. Similarly: the profitability of Nissan in the UK is determined by what sort of trade deal the UK and the EU have; Facebook, GDPR-style and safe harbour laws; SpaceX, national security laws; Saudi Aramco, global oil policy; and so on.
None of us stands alone (assuming nobody here has a von Neumann probe), and tax evasion is Nash-defection.
Hence my references to anarchy. All governments are the definers of legitimate force and to whom their local monopoly of it can be deputised.
> Are freedoms granted by government?
Yes.
> Where does it stem from?
Game theory, economics, and the occasional threat of other people doing violence against the stuff they (the powerful) like.
> Who is entitled to the value you add to a marketplace?
Nobody, including the creator of that value. The creators of value are only rewarded with it because a system vastly bigger than any single human has temporarily settled on a local equilibrium where that is the motivation.
Entitlements only exists with respect to legal frameworks and with enforcement mechanisms, not by themselves.
> Is a market a zero sum game?
They can be, they can also be negative or positive sum games. Messing with currencies is often a negative, because it creates opportunities to defect that otherwise don’t exist.
I own a flat. It’s collecting rent. If the economy goes up and all else is equal, I collect more rent (more money in the system for fixed supply); if home construction increases, I collect less (more supply for fixed money in the system). This income is entirely due to what the government in charge of the area decides to motivate, not how much I put into maintaining the place. Similarly: the profitability of Nissan in the UK is determined by what sort of trade deal the UK and the EU have; Facebook, GDPR-style and safe harbour laws; SpaceX, national security laws; Saudi Aramco, global oil policy; and so on.
None of us stands alone (assuming nobody here has a von Neumann probe), and tax evasion is Nash-defection.