Why We Are Afraid Of Cryptocurrency

If we want to grow as humans, we need to acknowledge our innate preference for safety over progress. Ever since we evolved on the plains of Africa, we have always valued our lives more than the possibility of improving them, and this evolutionary trait remains within us to this day.

As time goes on, we become comfortable with the people in our lives, our surrounding environment, and our daily routines. Our natural inclination is to reject anything that comes along with the potential to disrupt our familiar way of life, whether it be a new person, idea, or technology.

After all, allowing a new person or technology into our lives presents risks. We could end up being disappointed, or we may have to deal with problems that we have never encountered before, and that would make us feel uncomfortable.

Unfortunately, we cannot make progress without feeling discomfort.

bitcoin_fear.png

What does cryptocurrency mean for society and our economies if we can now interact with one other directly, without the need for an intermediary? What happens to the banks and other institutions that we have depended on for millennia to protect us?

The uncomfortable truth is that cryptocurrency is going to change the way we do business, transfer ownership, and govern ourselves. Not to worry though, because crypto wasn't the first technology to threaten our way of life and eventually become integrated into society.

Technology Always Wins

As someone who is alive today, it's hard to imagine a society without electricity or gas-powered vehicles. But there was a time when we lit our homes with candles and got around by horse and buggy.

horse_transport.png

Because they were noisy and dirty, the population was skeptical of the car engine at first. However, the technology improved through multiple iterations until the people preferred cars over traditional modes of transportation.

There are examples of more modern technology that was initially dismissed by the majority, but eventually adopted by society.

Take social networks like Twitter and YouTube, for example. At first, the majority was ridiculing these networks, thinking they'd only be used to share cat videos and breakfast photos.

Now we have major political and business leaders using these platforms to broadcast their thoughts and opinions directly to the people, no longer relying on established (and often biased) newspapers, radio stations and television channels to relay their messages.

When these social networks first launched back in 2006 we either could not, or did not want to acknowledge how disruptive they would be on society. But regardless of our fear, ignorance, and denial, the technology eventually changed the world, and all our lives along with it.

trump_tweeting.png

Crypto's Emotional Component

Depending on the threat level, some technology is adopted by the population much faster than others. Take the smartphone, for example. We didn't have the iPhone until 2007, and by now pretty much everyone in the world has one of these handheld computers.

Money, on the other hand, is something us humans feel very emotional about, and cryptocurrency is a threat to our existing model of money. Unless you're a teenager in the third world, you've probably used cash or held a bank account since you were a kid.

So even though Bitcoin was invented just two years after the iPhone, it has experienced far less adoption by the general population.

Instead of seeing cryptocurrency for what it is (an entirely new form of money that replaces fiat currencies) we wonder how we can trade it to improve our position in the traditional system. Unfortunately, the old system is unsustainable and headed for collapse.

Like prior inventions, cryptocurrency will eventually be integrated into
society, it's just a matter of time. That said, in order for cryptocurrency to reach its true potential, the people will need to let go of their attachment to the old financial system, and embrace the new one.

Until next time...

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Resources

Horse transportation [1]
Trump Tweeting [2]
Fear of Bitcoin [3]



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7 comments
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The part that got my attention is the era of crypto implementation into the society.. Technology will always be on the winning side when people cultivate the right mindset towards it. Of course you know there is a transition from an uncomfortable state to a better one. The banks most of us trust, they failed us by restricting us to our hard earned income in the name of no network.

I can't imagine going to the bank to lay a complaint on my accounts and I'm been told no network. It sounds illogical and cannot be found in the crypto sphere.

Thanks for sharing.

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Hi there,

Yes, as you say, our trust in banks is eroding as they ignore our complaints and deny our requests. The technology behind Bitcoin offers a trustless alternative that we can rely on, if we are willing to assume some personal responsibility. The more trust we lose, the faster crypto will be integrated into society.

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The only remedy is crypto and once people get to be aware, we dont need the government approval to adopt.

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Hey @brennanhm, I noticed you are using the tag 'leofinance' if you want your content to earn $leo tokens you have to publish from InLeo!

Remember you can publish to every Hive community from InLeo, which also makes you eligible for Ad Revenue and Evergreen rewards after the 7 day payout window on Hive, give it a try!

Right now there is a challenge where you can win an InLeo Premium membership for a month!

All you have to do is make long form post using InLeo before January 31st.

Thanks for creating content on the LeoFinance community!

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Hey @anomadsoul

I had issues with the InLeo editor. There's no button to create a hyperlink for example, and the uploaded images aren't showing up in the preview pane. Other issues with not being able to create spaces between paragraphs. I've reverted back to peakd until the bugs are worked out.

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(Edited)

Noted on this, I honestly didn't know people used that button since it's straightforward to add one manually ( [text](link) ) but I can see the need for it, we'll add it in our next update.

If you are using image links from another frontend (ie, writing on another frontend and just pasting the text) then that's the issue, you have to upload them directly to inLeo - our server uses 1/4 of the capacity of other frntends for images, making it less resource intensive.

As for the space between paragraphs it's just a matter of leaving an extra space or adding a <br>, but I can see why this can be an issue for those being used to other editors. We'll add this.

Thank you for the feedback, this exactly what we need to get better.

cc @khaleelkazi

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Thanks for looking into it.

Yes, I uploaded the images using the InLeo editor (not from some other source) and they weren't showing in the preview pane for some reason. As for the paragraph spacing everything was going fine until I reached the conclusion and then for some reason I could not add spacing between paragraphs.

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