And you and the other guy are illustrating really well what I mean about the bitcoiner anti-democratic point of view.
Running a piece of software isn't voting, and isn't "power to the people," but you guys get so stuck up on this wordplay about how running the software is the real, authentic "voting" that you really kinda miss the boat there.
So what does a real authentic vote look like to you, in a decentralized system?
Who calls for the vote? Who counts them? Who is allowed to vote? Who isn't? Who proposes ideas for a vote?
When the pool of people who understand what Bitcoin is gets totally overwhelmed by people who don't, what keeps really stupid decisions from being made?
When people vote for something that isn't already coded, who is responsible for coding it?
And you and the other guy are illustrating really well what I mean about the bitcoiner anti-democratic point of view.
Running a piece of software isn't voting, and isn't "power to the people," but you guys get so stuck up on this wordplay about how running the software is the real, authentic "voting" that you really kinda miss the boat there.
So, well done with that.