Interesting discussion.....'The US Treasury and the Federal Reserve banks, with the implicit backing of the productive output of the US economy.
In a theoretical sense, the Fed will peg the money supply and overnight rates rational to the growth of output within the target inflation rate.
In a practical sense, they've not been responsible stewards of the greenback -- especially since that pivotal date in August 1971. Money supply growth has outpaced output growth -- largely as a means of financing federal overspending. And that looks to be accelerating rather than decelerating.
So I totally get why people seek refuge in other fungible stores of value. Still, Buffett was spot on about the fundamental flaw of cryptocurrency.
Of course there are lots of things in this world that is worth a lot of money but in a sense are worthless. People will pay millions for a few selected baseball cards. I could never ever be much of a trader in something like that because I couldn't pay huge dollars for a little piece of paper.
I'm not a bitcoin fan,per se, but I do believe it will go up in value in the future. There's quite a few places that will take bitcoins as payment. Some of the online places that sell gold will take crypto payments. I buy a gold coin from Costco ever so often..I think it will hole it's value.