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Been seeing a lot of pushback from the crypto community lately on Ray Dalio's recent takes on Bitcoin. The Bridgewater guy keeps recycling the same old arguments about why crypto doesn't work, and honestly, the market's having none of it anymore.
What's interesting is how the narrative has shifted. Ray Dalio spent years dismissing Bitcoin as just another speculative asset with no real utility, but the bulls are calling him out for basically running on autopilot with tired talking points. They're pointing out that his critiques don't really address where the space is actually heading now.
The thing is, Ray Dalio's concerns aren't completely unfounded from a traditional finance perspective. But the crypto community's argument is that he's stuck analyzing Bitcoin through an old macro lens that doesn't capture what's actually happening on-chain and in the institutional adoption space.
You're seeing institutional players, real use cases, and actual infrastructure development that didn't exist when Ray Dalio first started criticizing crypto. So when he keeps bringing up the same volatility and regulatory concerns, people are like, yeah we know, that's already priced in.
The broader point here is that the Ray Dalio narrative versus Bitcoin debate has become less about whether he's technically right and more about whether his framework is even relevant anymore. The market's moving on, and the bulls are basically saying that Dalio's analysis is becoming increasingly detached from what's actually happening in crypto markets today.
Interesting to watch how these macro narratives play out in real time.