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 If you’re right and systemic collapse is inevitable, then we are headed into a dark age of humanity or extinction. The modern Leviathan of the current global order is not something you just let spiral, and hope that bitcoin acts as a safety net which arrests the fall. Money just isn’t going to matter that much, when the power competition starts on a global scale, and the Long Peace comes to its end.

The idea that the “bad money” being used to fuel the armies and weapons will blunt the ability of states to prosecute World War III is pretty much, to me, one of the most naive hopes that I see in these conversations. It requires a real failure of imagination and ignores the real ways in which our tribal instincts cause us to close ranks around external threats. 

In World War II, the American public and most of its allies, were able to sustain extreme economic hardship, while maintaining support for war, for instance. Rationing. Soup lines. High inflation. Germany’s currency had literally completely collapsed nearly 10 years earlier, and Hitler still managed to nearly take over the world within a decade of that event.

If people really think we need to write-off the current “system” and prepare for “what’s next”, and abandon the principle of stability and trying to hold the center, then I actually think humanity is likely careening towards extinction. I don’t say that lightly.  
 Yes.  Extinction is certainly on the table. Under a fiat standard we are always one nuke from a desperate world power away from that reality. 
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 That threat is nothing to do with fiat. Nothing. 
 Disagree. War will always be around, But money printing has scaled world killing weapons beyond our wildest dreams. 
 Ooo just wait till poppa Biden turns them printers on again to help out the Israel homies. 
 I’m not a doomsdayer by the way.  I just simply don’t believe govts and fiat money is the biggest lie of all. I don’t know how you believe anything they say, do, or show you. It’s all nonsense to keep the charade going.  And war is a HUGE part of keeping it going. 
 Thank you for providing a counterweight. In a world of polarized opinions, holding the middle becomes the hardest position to take and the most trying story to “sell”. 
 But this could be 100s of years from now. Not in our lifetimes.  
 Oh, I think we could be in WWIII before the end of the decade at this point. My prediction is up to about 50% likely now. 
 I really hope you are wrong.  
 Well first I would point out that I didn't use the word "collapse" in my post. I said crisis and trend change.

Sometimes those are collapses, and sometimes they are not. The 1930s/1940s in the US was a crisis and trend change but not a collapse, for example. Whereas Europe did have collapses. I would also consider the late 1970s in the US and parts of Europe to be a smaller crisis and trend change.

I also didn't say much along these lines: "The idea that the “bad money” being used to fuel the armies and weapons will blunt the ability of states to prosecute World War III is pretty much, to me, one of the most naive hopes that I see in these conversations."

So, I'm not really sure if your line there was directed at my post or not.

Now, I do think that central banking fuels war, with UK's involvement in WWI being a prime example, and US's involvement in the Iraq war being a smaller one. With currency dilution comes less transparency and accountability, since things can be funded without 1) taxation or 2) issuing bonds that people voluntarily buy. Currency dilution and debasement is a big factor in fueling war, but by no means the only one. Wars have been fought for millennia, and indeed tribalism is a big part of that. And in this particular case, the biggest weapons of war, the nukes, are already there. It doesn't cost much money to use what is already there.

What I'm saying is that, both based on my reading of economic history and current events, incrementalism causing a monetary/fiscal/economic trend change tends to be uncommon, and rather the trend is usually on a pretty firm path until a crisis occurs. That doesn't mean that nobody should engage in politics, but rather, that this is the realistic cycle that things go through, especially around signs of sovereign debt problems.

For example, I view the current global monetary system to be unsustainable and unsalvageable. It was based on a certain technological and geopolitical era. As the US has to keep exporting dollars to maintain the system, it hollows itself out with an ever-deeper negative net international investment position, and that has a certain limit to it. But I see very low probability that it will be changed prematurely- I think they will push the existing system and its network effects until the breaking point.

Similarly, I don't think many developing countries will develop under the current system either. In the past 50 years, only a handful of countries (mostly in Asia) have gone from developing to developed country status. It's like threading a needle. As long as countries issue their own ever-diluting currencies that their people use, and get funded externally in dollar-denominated debt that can be aggressively hardened or softened without any regard to the conditions in those countries (only the US), I think the rate of development will continue to be low. Ever-more energy usage per capita and the proliferation of semiconductors have been responsible for a lot of development, which offset some of these negative monetary effects, but for energy in particular I think that's going to be harder going forward.
 
 A big Western default is inevitable.  When and how it will be delivered is not yet known.  But if you know that the event is inevitable, you can plan for it. 
 I agree with you in the sense that all macro patterns in complex systems are meta stable. And no system will survive forever. My disagreement comes from that abandoning incrementalism and suing for compete revolution is profoundly dangerous given the complexity of modern states, modern economies and the modern world. 

We agree that these breakdowns are often associated with war. But I disagree that money can be a limiting factor -- especially for say a great power conflict. Governments can just nationalize supply chains and defense production directly. They don't HAVE to go into debt to sustain a war. And if the war is considered to be existential, it's likely this is what they'll do. In fact, the US already had laws on the books that give the president expansive authority to seize control of production in the presence of a real or apprehended war -- the Defense Production Act, for example. 

So I get my back up against the wall when people suggest something like Bitcoin can bend us away from these kinds of risks because of any discipline they think it can impose on governments, in this sense. 

I'm willing to concede that wars like Iraq in 2003, conducted at the height of America's unipolar moment, within a largely peacetime framework of government debt and spending, could potentially have been attenuated if the public had felt the effects of that more directly, as you pointed out on WBD. 

But I think existential wars are different. The rules change. The government can just force industry into a wartime economy and use production nationalization as a tool, if necessary. Which happened under FDR in WWII. 
 Straw men argument, the easy way out from the work necessary to form a sound idea. How about you summarize Lyn position in the strongest possible way before attacking it? 
 I'm not *quite* directly disagreeing with Lyn per se. I'm emphasizing an orthogonal point about the importance of stability, and suggesting that if the dollar collapses in a catastrophic way in the near future, then I'm not confident we survive the chaos at all. I don't think we get a chance to reset with Bitcoin. I think it's just potentially game over for our civilization. If people are still living, they'll be living in a dark age. 
 transition time seems smart for human coping abilities 
 You're both right.

Hard money only would impose a structural obstacle that can still be overcome to achieve nefarious goals like war. But it's not a silver bullet for solving problems caused by our innate tendencies:

Humanities biggest strengths (tribalism, empathy, cooperation) are also its biggest weaknesses (groupthink, weaponization of emotions, systemic overshoot). Technology *could* change that because it codes behavior. But that would require software (culture) to override hardware (above mentioned tendencies hardcoded into our genes). 

The only way you could achieve this is by literal brainwashing of civilizations with new objectives overriding our evolutionary ones. The Culture by Bainks is a good fictional example of this. North Korea comes closest to a real-world example, albeit a distorted one.

Hard money alone is just a one tool in a hypothetical set of tools that would be needed to fix this. 
 Zapping Lyn for this 
 The fiat will kill itself off. Since gold, silver and oil are now fiat, through futures suppression and supply manipulation, only bitcoin survives.

Bitcoiners will be the last alive, in bitcoin friendly countries, with bitcoin payed infrastructure and commodities. 

Bitcoin did not exist in the previous global conflicts. To ignore its affect as a third option is as naive as the claim it will stop the collapse. 

It won't stop the collapse, the way a life boat does not stop a sinking ship. 
 I think if we didn't have bitcoin, then the end of the Fiat experiment, as obviously flawed as it was, would take us all the way down to apocolyptic near-extinction. Maybe full extinction if combined with nuclear war.

With bitcoin we have a real chance of a "soft landing." Family by family, or even individual by individual, we will all have a point where we feel the money we're told to use fails us and bitcoin is a _useful_ alternative. 

Multiply that by 8 Billion people and you've completely ended state's control over the money supply and no major event happens like an economic collapse... There would be an equal and opposite Economy growing at the same time and eventually everyone will be in it. (Yes, even Krugman & Schiff)