Got it. Sell Bitcoin because it’s no longer outside the system.
Bitcoin, a decentralized blockchain with a fixed 21 million supply, is exactly doing what its strongest proponents said it would do: move from fringe experiment to core financial infrastructure. To then argue “because it’s becoming legit, it’s a sell” is logically weak.
The original Bitcoin thesis was that hard‑capped, censorship‑resistant money would eventually be pulled into the center of the system – into banks, ETFs, tokenized credit and regulated rails.
Legitimacy isn’t a betrayal of the thesis; it’s the payoff.
Once you accept that, you can’t coherently say: “I believed in Bitcoin when it was unregulated and misunderstood, but now that the protocol is being wired into mainstream collateral and settlement, I’m out.” That’s just an emotional trade wrapped in pseudo‑principle.
If the reason you bought Bitcoin was precisely that, one day, it would force Wall Street, Washington and global finance to treat its scarcity and neutrality as