Owning & Blogging About Crypto Is NOT Enough... We Beat The Central Banking System By Suffocating Their Revenue

in pitchforks •  5 years ago  (edited)


But, but, I bought a Bitcoin t-shirt...

There are a LOT of people "gone crypto" evangelizing the space and dissing financial institutions, but how many still regularly support banks?

If you're going to blog, vlog and publicly promote the cryptosphere, you should probably make sure you're not being overtly hypocritical with your financial decisions, or at least making strides to transition from dependence on these centralized institutions.

For example, if you post or Tweet about how crypto is everything now, but still charge your purchases... YOU'RE HELPING THE BANKS EVERY TIME. If you carry a balance with interest, then you're REALLY helping the banks as much as possible.

The quick solution: halt credit and loan use to remove banks' grip on our lives. Stop borrowing. Attack their revenue stream. Opt out. It's possible. Tell me if there's another way.


As a double-edged sword, credit cards hit merchants with sizable transaction fees you don't see. Credit card transactions cost merchants money which is paid to the banks. You also obviously get charged interest if you get behind on payments, and the banks get even more money (far more than the 1% unlimited cash back you think is a win). Think about it. That's bad.

Alternatively, cash can often get you a discount if you're willing to sacrifice some convenience or rewards perks designed to keep the you swiping left and right. But who wants to carry cash these days? If this entire big picture important to you, stop whining and carry cash to make a stand. Oh you shop online, pay with your checking account.

So... owning crypto as an investment isn't going to stop the central banks. Not using the banks is going to stop the banks.


Let's be real...

Crypto won't be a powerful part of our GDP if people are still buying and borrowing normally with the help of banks THAT TRACK EVERY PURCHASE, AND CHARGE INTEREST THAT CAN BURY YOU UNDER THEIR CONTROL. If you're pro-crypto, isn't that enough writing on the wall to see the mission ahead?


^--But of course everyone knows this and still consents/fuels the problem.

Ambitiously holding tokens or blogging about them doesn't make you a crypto revolutionary. You're sort of just a glorified investor, no?

On that note, I personally haven't used credit cards for anything in the last year except two small grandfathered monthly memberships (which reminds me that I need to fix), and a handful of small expenses from the card linked to my Apple ID and a car service. Everything else I've bought has been with my checking account, debit or cash. I don't need to use credit and hate the thought of using it now. The only loan I've ever had was from college, and I paid that off a long time ago. While debit cards do cost merchants fees, they're much less than credit cards. As I've grown into a crypto mindset, my hands are not clean yet, but they will be in time. I'm aware and taking steps. Everyone can and should consider the same out of principal, even if it's a little more work.


Thinking ahead:

I understand that few people want to spend their crypto as it's hopefully going to appreciate in value, but something has to give eventually. In the meantime, we can stop borrowing and reward ourselves with healthier financial habits that reduce our need to do so in the first place.

As I learned long ago when I charged a huge engagement ring I thankfully got back before the wedding was called off, you DO NOT spend more than you make. That's how you avoid burying yourself in debt. I got out of it years back, but it sucked. It was like diving in the deep end of life lessons all at once.

"But, but... I need stuff and have never missed a minimum payment..."

  • Great, then find ways to make more income to buy those things. Don't be entitled and lazy. Earn things.
  • Paying your minimum payment is just about the worst thing you can do outside of not paying it at all. Stay trapped in their web of interest if you prefer, but I think that's a fairly bad idea. Pay as much as humanly possible, as fast a possible, and watch the lifetime of your debt shrink faster than you think.

If you've previously or are currently living beyond your means, is the answer getting more credit? God, what a terrible idea, yet millions of people want easy street... which will royally screw them over later. Forgive me, but unless it's an emergency, it's borderline stupid. Instant gratification has its cost. You will pay a lot more than $1,000 for that flight when it's finally off your tab in 3 years.

Aside from those in poverty or unable to earn income for a valid reason, that there are likely two simple solutions. No, ask Mommy and Daddy for more money is not one of them.

  1. Attack your spending habits by prioritizing, budgeting and cutting back what you buy. Easy answer. Say hello to less of everything except stress.
  2. INCREASE YOUR MEANS. The right answer for long term growth and financial freedom. I'm biased, but I get the sense that many people in my culture seem to be too fucking lazy to approach this stepping stone.

Both of these theoretically reduce the need to borrow, which reduces bank leverage. But, so many people seem to think they've at their limits with their current situation or career. FALSE. Perception and the path of least resistance is often reality these days.

Get on your horse and push some PERSONAL limits, not your credit limits...

Hell, I quit a really comfortable corporate job I was working full-time at to pursue a home business I built AROUND my full-time job. It's not impossible. It takes vision, passion, effort, dedication and consistency. These components pay off over time if you don't quit. Sadly, I feel that many people quit too soon because they don't know what it's like to push through discomfort and resistance to get to the next level.

With two income streams for about a year and a half, I was making far more money that I ever needed. I just stashed it away. I'm frugal, so it was just excessive. I got my business off the ground and then quit my corporate job to pursue my passion on my own. ~5 years later, here I am, still completely free and proud of every dollar I've earned the right away.


My main point here is that if you need more means to cover your costs, GET MORE MEANS. DON'T INCREASE YOUR EXPOSURE AND COSTS. Doing so might mean finding another income stream, but so be it. Maybe your partner or children need to help too. Would you rather elevate your lives or stay in a rut? To get out of the rut, you have to build and do more than you were doing, which got you there in the first place... or really strip things down and rebuild more wisely from scratch.


To overtake the banks, it will be a battle. We all need to do our part and lead by example, or else we'll be very disappointed.

For once, we're the 1%.

That's my two cents for now... my biased and passionate personal views for motivation, and certainly not qualified financial advice.


@steemmatt

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Banks even charge businesses to deposit cash in the UK. That's why businesses are so keen to offer 'cash back' at the point of sale.

It seems that they have all bases covered... 😬

Awesome post Matty, and you really do bring up a good point. Of course many will say that if I just change it won’t make a difference ? But that’s not true, it always has to start with someone and then the Domino effect comes.

Every dollar we don't spend with credit saves a percentage of a fee the banks would get, and potential future compounding interest they'd get plenty more money from. Aside from person-to-person activism, it's literally as simple as dollar-by-dollar.

Your words always resonate so well. Thank you. I just wish everyone else was as pragmatic and ambitious as you.

Well that was a nice message to get. I never really considered myself pragmatic before, but that's a good assessment now that I think of it. Thanks.

Agreed, at a certain point we need to straddle the crypto side of the line more. It's a process, but more and more solutions are popping up.

On a less related note, I found some 90% closeout toys at the nearby department store that I just listed on eBay for 8X the money. Got to love the arbitrage!

Are the toys being discontinued or were they slow sellers at the retail spot? Either way, profit will come and you'll feel like a genius each time one sells. Keep your shipping costs down with recycled packaging if possible. I've shipped over 4,000 things and have only ever bought one mailer (outside of some free mailers I paid the tax on after a promo code).

It's easier said than done. Credit cards are like crack and it's a hard habit to kick if you start it. There are certain times when going into debt may be the best option, but being irresponsible (which is incredibly easy to do) is usually the most probable outcome.

You're right. It takes a mindset shift after thinking about the mechanics of credit and banking for the normal consumer. I don't want to use my credit anymore, even if it means that I do without sometimes or have to wait longer until I have the funds. Usually this delay squashes any impulse buys. I don't touch my investments or savings to make sure I'm not borrowing from my future either.

Taking out a mortgage or buying necessities to get by are vastly different uses than spending credit on bar tabs or excessive clothes. Every dollar not spent with credit is a way to change the tide. The less spent, the more debt can be paid off.

i was helping crypto before there was crypto. don't own an bank account (they pissed me off some years ago and i stopped using it). It helps that some 30 years ago some banks run away with people's money so we had a strong cash culture, it is changing with years and there is more and more cards but still not as in "first world countries".
The thing is businesses need to start accepting crypto, that would be the best way to move from the banks

Right on. Thanks for your service! I've really tried to make a stronger effort to redirect my home business to a cash model to stop using services like PayPal and my bank. I'm trying to sell more and more off of eBay and other commerce sites to accomplish this. If reseller platforms more formally accept crypto, I'll be first in line to accept as my preferred payment method if possible. Everything is plastic in my city these days, or Venmo/PayPal. Cash is almost a hassle for lots of people when it used to be king.

I'm unbanked and have not touched a credit card in 8 years. No loans, no debt, no problem.. My wife has to have a, bank for our business but jointly no debt or loans...

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What a great post about the big changes in our financial world.

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