đ Jager: the deflationary trap of a modern Ponzi
Guys, I have a simple way to explain Jager.
The madness is this:
Every purchase and every sale takes 5%.
A part is burned, the other redistributed.
It gives the impression that the price always goes up, but in reality, it's just hot air.
The image of apples:
Imagine that we are 1 million buying one apple each.
At purchase, the seller bites 5% off.
At resale, another 5%.
Our apples are already eaten up by 10% from the start.
Then everyone locks their apple under a bell jar.
Since no one exchanges them, we think there are no more â the price skyrockets.
But it's not real scarcity, just a sleight of hand.
The day everyone opens their bell jar, it's a tidal wave: too many apples, the price crashes.
That's the bubble: a Ponzi that only stands with new entrants.
BOB: a true capitalization model
With BOB, it's different:
No bogus taxes.
The idea is to create real value: utility, ecosystem, partnerships, tools.
The image of the farm
Instead of buying an apple and hiding it, imagine we buy a farm.
Every year, it produces new apples.
We can sell them, eat them, or replant.
Value comes from continuous production, not from tax nibbling.
Even if the market moves, the farm always produces.
That's capitalization: real value, not waiting for the next sucker.
The difference
Jager (deflationary Ponzi): tax, nibbles, inflates a bubble â and collapses as soon as the entrants stop.
BOB (capitalization): builds, produces, creates can last.
Conclusion
A system based on tax and forced scarcity will explode sooner or later, like Jager.
A system based on production and real capitalization, like BOB, can grow sustainably.
Guys, remember:
"Does this project really create value, or does it just recycle money from new entrants?"