If the people chose to adopt a digital currency, that choice should be something that's also revisited periodically. Either directly (i.e. a citizens' initiative to change its inflationary/deflationary policy) or by way of our elected officials (i.e. "Vote for me, my stand on digital currency is X!"), it should be possible for the people to decide a new course of action every so often.
After a few years of living in a digital currency-enabled world, we'd have a sense of whether we wanted to keep the policy the same, change it, roll it back entirely, whatever. If it's something we could vote on, then great, democratic principles intact.
If the people chose to adopt a digital currency, that choice should be something that's also revisited periodically. Either directly (i.e. a citizens' initiative to change its inflationary/deflationary policy) or by way of our elected officials (i.e. "Vote for me, my stand on digital currency is X!"), it should be possible for the people to decide a new course of action every so often.
After a few years of living in a digital currency-enabled world, we'd have a sense of whether we wanted to keep the policy the same, change it, roll it back entirely, whatever. If it's something we could vote on, then great, democratic principles intact.