Cryptocurrencies: From the Promised Revolution to the Manipulated Farce In the beginning, when the Bitcoin whitepaper emerged as a digital manifesto for economic freedom, many of us believed we were witnessing the birth of a revolution. A new system where power would shift from the hands of banks and governments to be distributed among ordinary people, connected by a decentralized, transparent, and fair network. It seemed like the start of a new era. But the promise was lost. What was supposed to be decentralized turned into yet another structure of concentrated power. A few wallets hold the majority of the tokens. Large exchanges, funds, and “whales” move the market according to their interests, transforming the supposed freedom into a new kind of prison – even more chaotic, even more volatile. Meanwhile, brilliant projects with solid purposes, like Nano, which sought instant and fee-less transfers, or Decred, which attempted to implement a truly community-driven governance model, fell into oblivion. Many of these projects were abandoned or cast aside because they didn’t play the hype game, the empty marketing, the “to the moon” at any cost. And then came the memecoins – coins created without any foundation, with funny names, dog mascots, and absurd promises. The market was overtaken by a cult of quick profits, where the more useless the project, the more attention it attracts. Investors became gamblers. The market turned into a casino, manipulated by influencers and pump and dump schemes. It’s ironic, almost comical, that what was born as an alternative to the traditional system is increasingly resembling it – or perhaps even worse. The difference is that here, the illusion of freedom further masks the concentration of power. There may still be hope. Perhaps, in the forgotten corners of this network, there are devs and idealists still building with purpose. But for now, the crypto-revolution seems to have been sold for clicks, memes, and empty coins. #BNBChainMeme #USChinaTensions
If you are making any significant profit, sell your positions. We all know that the current rise of Bitcoin is nothing more than a big manipulation by large institutions.
tralalelo tralala 98
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Clearly, bitcoin pulled all the coins, my wallet is all green, when the correction comes I will get screwed and many others too. How to 'defend' against this? Should I sell everything? Post your opinions.
$BTC Bitcoin has risen, the headline shines, But in the shadows, there are plans to scheme. Big whales, in cunning collusion, Inflame the market, pretend peace. They promise wealth to the unsuspecting, But they have already marked their targets. With false profits, they create illusion, To attract the masses in turmoil. Then they sell high, escape from the ground — And leave the small players in devaluation.
Hello my friend! Certainly, there is no news that would drive the price of btc up, remembering that the fees have only been halted, and American inflation has surged.
$BTC Manipulation my friend, it's that simple. The big institutions creating liquidity. Remember that Trump's tariffs were only paused for 90 days, American inflation surged and interest rates did not decrease.
This rise and manipulation of the market, creating liquidity, remembering that American inflation has surged, Trump's tariffs have not ended. They were only paused for 90 days.
Forecast Analysis
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I said one thing 2 days back that If $BTC holds 85K$ this week then it is bullish for upside next week....
While remain low volume BTC shows strength against the bears and make new support levels above the previous support....
$SUI Cryptocurrencies: From Promised Revolution to Manipulated Farce
Back in the beginning, when the Bitcoin whitepaper emerged as a digital manifesto for economic freedom, many of us believed we were witnessing the birth of a revolution. A new system where power would leave the hands of banks and governments to be distributed among ordinary people, connected by a decentralized, transparent, and fair network. It seemed like the start of a new era.
But the promise was lost. What was supposed to be decentralized turned into yet another structure of concentrated power. Few wallets hold the majority of the tokens. Large exchanges, funds, and “whales” move the market according to their interests, transforming the supposed freedom into a new kind of prison – even more chaotic, even more volatile.
Meanwhile, brilliant projects with solid purposes, such as Nano, which sought instant and fee-less transfers, or Decred, which tried to implement a truly community-driven governance model, fell into oblivion. Many of these projects were abandoned or sidelined because they did not play the game of hype, empty marketing, and “to the moon” at any cost.
And then came the memecoins – coins created without any foundation, with funny names, dog mascots, and absurd promises. The market was taken over by a cult of quick profits, where the more useless the project, the more attention it attracts. Investors became gamblers. The market turned into a casino, manipulated by influencers and pump and dump schemes.
It is ironic, almost comical, that what was born as an alternative to the traditional system is becoming more and more like it – or perhaps even worse. The difference is that here, the illusion of freedom further masks the concentration of power.
There may still be hope. Perhaps, in the forgotten corners of this network, there are devs and idealists still building with purpose. But for now, the crypto-revolution seems to have been sold for clicks, memes, and empty coins.