Sometimes, loved ones refuse to see your guidance as the easier way to grow. Instead they choose the hard path. It's ok to accept their choices, just try to let them know you want them in your life when they get to where they need to be and have the peace you both need to accept them back. Tough love is tough, and love. ❤️
5000 Sats if you can correctly pick the brother I am traveling with. Actually meeting him in Nairobi airport. You can pick 2. Circle and reply. Share my trip with your followers as I also explore Kenya's Bitcoin community with the help of My First Bitcoin. image
So I have an adventure soon to Kenya for 2 Safari's with a fraternity brother I have not seen in 37 years. He was intense and a little nuts then. Am I crazy? Follow and share for updates. 30 hr trip from San Salvador to Nairobi, Kenya in a few days. image
I like helping people who wish to help themselves and the vision needed to be a Bitcoin disciple.
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Walter Bagehot pinpointed the issues with central banks over 150 years ago. Here is a summary courtesy ChatGPT ———- Walter Bagehot, the 19th-century British economist and journalist, is best known for his book Lombard Street (1873), where he laid out both his admiration for and his worries about the emerging central banking role of the Bank of England. His concerns were not abstract; they came from observing repeated financial crises in London. Here are the key concerns he expressed about central banking: ⸻ 1. Moral Hazard and Discipline • Bagehot worried that if the Bank of England acted as a permanent backstop, commercial banks might take excessive risks, assuming the central bank would always save them. • To counteract this, he argued that central bank lending in a crisis should come at a penalty rate (above market rates) and only against good collateral. This would discourage reckless behavior while still providing necessary liquidity. ⸻ 2. Transparency and Public Confidence • He was concerned that the Bank’s policies were opaque and sometimes improvised. • He argued that a central bank needed clear, consistent rules of conduct in crises, since uncertainty could worsen panic. • His principle: “Lend freely, at a high rate, on good collateral.” ⸻ 3. Reluctance to Accept Its Role • Bagehot worried that the Bank of England often denied its central responsibility, treating itself like just another private bank. • In reality, because of its size and position at the center of the financial system, it was the lender of last resort. He cautioned that shirking this role could lead to devastating runs and bank failures. ⸻ 4. Fragility of Confidence • He noted that financial systems are built on confidence, and that once panic starts, only decisive central bank action can restore trust. • He worried that hesitation or half-measures by the Bank of England would worsen crises, as people would withdraw deposits faster if they sensed weakness. ⸻ 5. Concentration of Power • While he defended the necessity of a central bank, he recognized that concentrating so much financial power in one institution carried risks. • He believed the Bank of England should use its power responsibly, guided by principles that protected the broader system, not just its own shareholders. ⸻ ✅ In short: Bagehot’s central concern was how to balance stability with discipline. He wanted the central bank to act forcefully in crises to prevent systemic collapse, but also feared that careless or overly generous support would undermine market discipline and encourage recklessness.