Bitcoin's most distinctive feature is its capped supply of 21 million coins—a hard limit written into its code from day one. This finite nature fundamentally differs from traditional currencies that central banks can print at will. It's precisely this scarcity principle that some regulators and policymakers view with skepticism. Governments worldwide have labeled Bitcoin's fixed monetary supply as problematic, citing concerns about deflation, market volatility, and the challenge it poses to conventional monetary policy tools. Yet this immutability remains one of Bitcoin's core value propositions for advocates who see it as digital sound money.
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GasFeePhobia
· 8h ago
Oh my God, here we go again with the supply cap talk... Governments are really getting anxious. What's there to be afraid of?
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NotSatoshi
· 14h ago
210,000, right? The governments are starting to hype themselves up again. When they can't regulate, they just say there's a problem.
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DuskSurfer
· 14h ago
21 million are hardcoded, the government is panicking, no matter how much they print, they can't produce more.
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SchrodingersFOMO
· 14h ago
The number 21 million, to put it simply, is Satoshi Nakamoto's ironclad promise to us.
The government says there's a problem? That's right, only when there's a problem does it have value.
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PoetryOnChain
· 14h ago
210,000 hard caps are really impressive. The government is getting desperate because they can't control it.
Bitcoin's most distinctive feature is its capped supply of 21 million coins—a hard limit written into its code from day one. This finite nature fundamentally differs from traditional currencies that central banks can print at will. It's precisely this scarcity principle that some regulators and policymakers view with skepticism. Governments worldwide have labeled Bitcoin's fixed monetary supply as problematic, citing concerns about deflation, market volatility, and the challenge it poses to conventional monetary policy tools. Yet this immutability remains one of Bitcoin's core value propositions for advocates who see it as digital sound money.