Basically, it is a useless fad people invest in exactly the same way as they invest in PEZ dispensers, rare beer bottle caps and post stamps.
Some people argue that bitcoin makes a great post-apocalyptic currency, but to me such ideas seem naive.
BTC has no value as an exchange medium. The only real, pragmatic usecases are fueling ransomware, drugs and illicit cross-border transactions.
So: a wasteful, useless thing we all should leave behind.
See his presentation here: https://youtu.be/15RTC22Z2xI
1. People have out-of-band trust relationships in real life which reduce the likelihood of malice. Bitcoin-style anonymous identities undermine trust relationships and are not needed for legitimate (not illegal) transactions.
2. Real life legal systems encourage good behaviors. If you have a dispute with someone, you can sue them. Bitcoin and related systems lack these protections.
3. Existing tools such as public-key cryptography and digital signatures can provide most of the functionality that applications need without the problems that blockchain-based systems have.
Thus, it will always be a niche player, even if that niche is Billions of dollars equivalent. Thus it is always going to be a speculative instrument, and not actually a stable investment.
The merchants that do try and adopt it almost always end up abandoning it.
It's also difficult for the average consumer to use making it several times easier for people to lose their money or have it stolen while offering no real utility advantage.
The core concept of bitcoin is that it is decentralized and away from the prying "government". That's what also gives it its "safe haven" allure in much the same way as gold. The question is, is this really to society's benefit? Just think about this past year with COVID - if government didn't have the ability to impact the financial markets and everything was strictly down to human emotion, I'm sure we'd be in a worse place than we are now. Same goes for 2008. Through its actions, the FED is trying to actively avert financial distress - its goal is stability. As a corollary, if you believe that bitcoin will be there to save the day if the entire modern financial system collapses, then I believe you would be sorely mistaken. I'm not sure how such a technology and government infrastructure dependent currency would be usable in a world that has descended into chaos.
I mean just think about a world where Bitcoin is the only currency. So the mega-wealthy are suddenly some early hoarders of the currency who, by holding onto their currency, see their overall wealth INCREASE (through depreciation and constriction of the monetary supply). A currency's main role should be to promote and facilitate financial activity and trade... They sit their with their thousands of bitcoins whilst the rest of the world is transacting in smaller and smaller fractions of bitcoin.
Imagine back in Medieval times: A king sits on his throne with a pile of gold behind him. If he chose not spend it spend and simply kept taxing his people, he would not only accumulate more gold, but the value of every piece of gold would suddenly increase (in the peasant's economy) as the entire peasant population had less gold to do trade with (depreciation). This would further encourage hoarding money instead of using it - i.e. the whole reason currency depreciation is harmful to financial activity.
If Bitcoin or some yet to be invented tech surmounted all the technical obstacles it’d still be smashed by government for undermining monetary policy.
Bitcoin failed as a virtual currency for mass adoption will continue to stay that way because Lightning has a lot of issues
Any alt coin can't succeed while Bitcoin exists
Bitcoin won't fail first (out of all coins) because there is a lot locked money in it from influential people, they wouldn't rescind control just because other tech is better for regular people
From these points I consider that all coins are now not a currencies but an investment instrument
From there - I don't wish to use my own money to enrich arbitrary people running some arbitrary instrument, which original purpose has failed