If youâve sold your bitcoin too soon, someone on Twitter is going to tell you: âHave Fun Staying Poor.ââ Itâs a phrase often attributed to bitcoin and virtual reality enthusiast Udi Wertheimer (who declined to comment for this article) but it has taken on a life on its own.
So, what exactly does âhave fun staying poorâ mean?
Youâre most likely to encounter the meme as a response to someone that has just sold bitcoin, or has said he or she would never consider buying bitcoin. In this sense, âhave fun staying poorâ could be uttered as a genuine call to reconsider those decisions.Â
Read more: âItâs Part and Parcel of Cryptoâ: How Memes Drive Narrative and Value
As Coin Centerâs Neeraj Agrawal explained over email, itâs meant to convey âthat failure to open oneâs mind will make you miss opportunities.âÂ
Key to the bitcoin mind is the idea that bitcoin can only go up, while the U.S. dollar (and all other fiat currencies) are destined to collapse. âHave fun staying poorâ is shorthand for that idea.Â
As Bloomberg columnist Jared Dillian recently experienced, being on the receiving end of the slogan is not always pleasant. After disclosing he sold his bitcoins, Dillian says he heard the four-word phrase for the next three days. âIt went a little bit beyond normal Twitter playground trash-talk and crossed over into somewhat frightening territory,â he wrote in Bloomberg Opinion.Â
Like all other in-groups, the bitcoin community partially forms its identity around what it is not. If âhodlingâ defines being a bitcoiner, then everyone else necessarily has âpaper hands.âÂ
Over bitcoinâs illustrious 12 years, it has faced no shortage of detractors. Bitcoinâs obituary has been written and rewritten enough times that someone has already written the quintessential story on the ârise and fallâ of the âbitcoin is deadâ meme.Â
Add in bitcoinâs meteoric price rise over the past 12 months, rewarding those that have hodled, there might be reason to gloat. After all, bitcoin is certainly not dead.
In times when bitcoinâs direction is uncertain (nearly always), or even trending downwards, âhave fun staying poorâ is a way to rally the troops. Investing is a psychologically burdensome activity, even more so with assets as volatile as bitcoin. But the bitcoinerâs investment thesis is simple: buy, hold and forget about it until the worldâs base currency is BTC. So in times of choppy waters, a simple call to action is required.
Agrawal notes the meme reverberates with meaning for those âsteeped in the lore.â Itâs a joke, itâs a show of force, itâs a life raft tossed to those drowning in the sea of âmelting fiat,â as MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor is wont to say.
âBut I donât think an outsider, who is most often the recipient of the treatment, sees that nuance. From an optics perspective itâs terrible,â Agrawal said. âI get what Bitcoiners are trying to do, but I think it hurts more than it helps.â
There are some people who can stomach the abuse of bitcoiners in their mentions. Some may even draw strength from the attacks, secure in their own investment strategies. Take Nick Maggiulli, of the financial blog Of âDollars And Dataâ and COO for Ritholtz Wealth Management, who sold half his BTC at $52,013 in February.
Maggiulli, a recent adopter of bitcoin, claimed a comfortable profit â 5x after taxes, he said. Despite this, he was told to have fun staying poor. As he notes in a recent blog, bitcoinâs growth is all just numbers on a screen until you realize gains.
âI agree that the U.S. dollar is a terrible investment and that printing more money will make the U.S dollar worth less. However, worth less is not the same as worthless. Itâs a slight nuance, but it makes a world of difference,â he wrote.
Sometimes you must kill your heroes. In February, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, an idol among bitcoin enthusiasts, announced that bitcoin was overheated and he was selling. âA currency is never supposed to be more volatile than what you buy & sell with it,â he tweeted. âYou canât price goods in BTC.â
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Taleb further chastised the bitcoin community as â[COVID-19]-denying sociopaths [with] the sophistication of amoebas.â For some, this really stung. Taleb, author of âAntifragile,â had defined key components of the bitcoin philosophy, namely that virtue only emerges through struggle.
âYou should read âAntifragile.â Great book,â Ark Invest analyst Yassine Elmandjra replied. âThere is no long-term stability without short-term volatility,â he said, quoting Taleb.
For others, it was enough to say the obvious. Have fun staying poor.Â