The global banking system is (currently) controlled by the US Government. There's no such thing as an international currency outside their reach.
It's how the US is able to attack Iran's currency from the outside so easily and spike their inflation to the moon.
It's how when the crash occurred, the Fed was able to stabilize the global banking system by shooting hundreds of billions around the planet to international banks (from Berlin to Tokyo).
It's how the US was able to pressure the world's second largest - and fastest growing - economy (China) into floating its currency more freely and 'allowing' its value to climb.
It's how the US was able to dictate terms to the Swiss (of all people, given their history).
The fact that it's international will just make the Feds more frantic about either controlling it / replacing it / destroying it. The solvency of the US Government depends on the FRN standard, and the ability to 'print' at least $15 trillion dollars over the next 15 years. You don't think they'll attempt to kill anything that even remotely threatens that?
And to be clear, what's likely isn't that digital monetary systems will disappear, rather, that bitcoin will be usurped by official standards. The US will merely get the G30 to agree to some common frameworks and regulations, that will stuff the dollar / euro / yen / yuan into a new shiny digital box. The G30 will jump on board with glee, as they all want to control their own currency systems as much as the US does.
It's how the US is able to attack Iran's currency from the outside so easily and spike their inflation to the moon.
It's how when the crash occurred, the Fed was able to stabilize the global banking system by shooting hundreds of billions around the planet to international banks (from Berlin to Tokyo).
It's how the US was able to pressure the world's second largest - and fastest growing - economy (China) into floating its currency more freely and 'allowing' its value to climb.
It's how the US was able to dictate terms to the Swiss (of all people, given their history).
The fact that it's international will just make the Feds more frantic about either controlling it / replacing it / destroying it. The solvency of the US Government depends on the FRN standard, and the ability to 'print' at least $15 trillion dollars over the next 15 years. You don't think they'll attempt to kill anything that even remotely threatens that?
And to be clear, what's likely isn't that digital monetary systems will disappear, rather, that bitcoin will be usurped by official standards. The US will merely get the G30 to agree to some common frameworks and regulations, that will stuff the dollar / euro / yen / yuan into a new shiny digital box. The G30 will jump on board with glee, as they all want to control their own currency systems as much as the US does.