#阿根廷总统MEME币争议 In Argentina, where the inflation rate has exceeded 200%, the "shock therapy" of the new president Milley has caused an uproar. This leader, who calls himself an "anarcho-capitalist", raised a chainsaw to cut public spending while throwing out a shocking monetary proposition - neither issuing central bank digital currency nor legal cryptocurrency, but completely abolishing the peso and embracing the dual-track system of the US dollar and Bitcoin.

Milley's economic team believes that the stubborn disease of Latin America's third largest economy lies in the central bank's excessive issuance of currency. When vetoing the central bank digital currency (CBDC), the finance minister bluntly said: "Any digital legal currency controlled by the government is a new inflation tool." Behind this radical stance is the belief of Bitcoin extremists: only decentralized crypto assets can lock the government's hands and feet in manipulating currency.

But the reality is far more complicated than the theory. Full dollarization requires a mountain of US dollar reserves, and the violent volatility of Bitcoin makes business owners terrified. Milley's compromise is to allow Bitcoin and the US dollar to circulate in parallel, and companies can freely choose the settlement currency. Starbucks in Buenos Aires has begun accepting Bitcoin payments, while commodity traders are adding BTC hedging clauses to contracts.

This experiment is rewriting modern monetary history. If successful, Argentina may become the first country to "de-sovereignize currency"; if it fails, it may trigger more serious capital flight. But Mile is betting that in the abyss of the collapse of the credibility of legal currency, the market's spontaneous currency choice is more credible than any government promise. When Bitcoin ATMs are all over Plaza de Mayo, this South American country is becoming the world's largest currency laboratory. $BTC