đ§šđȘ A Subtle Bitcoin Shift From Moscow That Most People Missed đȘđ§š
đ§ Bitcoin didnât begin as a geopolitical tool. It emerged quietly after the financial crisis, stitched together by engineers who believed money shouldnât depend on trust in institutions that keep breaking it. For years, it lived on the fringes. Speculated on, dismissed, misunderstood. Yet its core idea stayed intact: a scarce, neutral asset that works without permission.
đ What Iâve been noticing lately, after following central bank behavior and sanctions policy rather than headlines, is how tone has changed. Russia isnât loudly embracing Bitcoin, but Putinâs recent signals suggest awareness. Under growing Western banking pressure, even a partial nod toward Bitcoin as a strategic reserve option feels intentional. Not because itâs revolutionary, but because it exists outside the usual choke points.
đ Bitcoin doesnât solve everything. Itâs volatile. It doesnât scale smoothly for daily state-level transactions. Governments canât control it the way they control reserves or currencies. That lack of control is precisely why it becomes interesting during financial stress. Itâs not about replacing systems. Itâs about hedging against their limits.
đ Realistically, Bitcoinâs future here isnât dramatic. It sits on balance sheets, studied more than used, waiting. When access to banking becomes political, neutrality starts to look less like ideology and more like insurance.
History often turns on quiet adjustments, not announcements.
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