Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

> The real problem with Bitcoins is not really security. Instead it is that
> there is "nothing there, there" nothing but speculative fever.
>
>
>
> Anyone contemplating any renegade currency should read up on the Dutch
> Tulip bubble of 1619 and beyond. . . .
>

See the book "Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds" by
Charles Mackay, 1841. This covers tulipmania, the South Sea bubble, and in
later chapters the Crusades and witch mania, and various other incidents.

Sometimes the objects of a bubble do have value, but they are valued all
out of proportion during the bubble. There is "something there, there" with
tulips. They are still a major source of income in the Netherlands, and
still popular. But you do not find one bulb worth as much as a mansion. The
2008 crash was caused by overvalued real estate and by crazy schemes that
supposedly eliminated risk. Overvalued did not mean that real estate has no
intrinsic value at all.

Bitcoins, on the other hand, will have no value at all if people stop
believing in them.

Sometimes things have intrinsic value but technology comes along and
reduces the value. In 1917, Morton Plant traded a Fifth Avenue brownstone
mansion for a string of pearls worth $1 million. Around 1900, Mikimoto was
developing ways to culture pearls. By the 1920s this was eroding the value
of pearl necklaces. Today a pearl necklace is worth nowhere near as much as
a brownstone mansion in New York City.

- Jed

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