Bitcoin Sale: Now 25% Off!
Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $126,210 in October 2025. Today it trades around $89,000. That's a 29% haircut in two months—or as the crypto faithful call it, "a healthy correction." For those keeping score, that's roughly $37,000 per coin evaporated into the digital ether. But hey, at least it's still "mathematically scarce."
The Volatility They Don't Mention
Bitcoin maximalists love citing Gresham's Law and Menger's theory of money emerging from market processes. They're less enthusiastic about discussing what happens when their "superior money" loses 29% of its value in eight weeks. Turns out mathematical scarcity and price stability are different things.
The narrative was simple when Bitcoin went up: "This proves fiat is dying!" Now that it's down: "It's just volatility, zoom out!" The goal posts move faster than the price.
The Swiss Economics Reality Check
Yes, the Federal Reserve can print unlimited dollars. Yes, that's a problem. But here's what the Fed can't do: lose 29% of the dollar's value in two months while simultaneously claiming it's the future of money. Bitcoin manages both tricks simultaneously.
Mathematical scarcity is real. Bitcoin's 21 million coin cap is enforced by code, not promises. But scarcity doesn't equal stability, and stability matters for actual money. Nobody prices groceries in Bitcoin because nobody knows if it'll be worth $126k or $89k next month.
The Real Lesson
Bitcoin demonstrates something important: decentralized systems can work. The blockchain is clever technology. Mining creates genuine network security. The absence of central control has value.
But demonstrating that decentralization is possible doesn't prove Bitcoin is money. It's a speculative asset that sometimes goes up and sometimes crashes 29% in two months. That's not a currency. That's a casino chip with a whitepaper.
The Bottom Line
Bitcoin hit $126k. Now it's $89k. Maybe it'll go back up. Maybe it'll crash further. Nobody knows, which is precisely the problem when evaluating it as money.
The Fed is terrible. Fiat currency has serious problems. Inflation is real. But Bitcoin's 29% drop in two months doesn't solve these problems—it just creates different ones. Sound money needs to be sound, not just scarce.
So yes, Bitcoin is on sale. 25% off from its peak. Whether that's a buying opportunity or a warning sign depends on whether you think wildly volatile digital tokens count as money. Choose wisely.
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