Chamath Palihapitiya, founder of The Social+Capital Partnership, a co-owner of the Golden State Warriors NBA team and a former Facebook exec, sees Bitcoin as âschmuck insurance.â
To Palihapitiya, schmucks are the Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, AIGs, London Whales and other scandal-ridden âmastersâ of the financial services universe that have â since the near-meltdown of the global economy in 2008 â had an almost alchemical ability to turn gold into dross.
Palihapitiyaâs embrace of a better alternative in his Bloomberg commentary âWhy I Invested in Bitcoinâ clearly echoes the frustrations of many Bitcoiners with the dysfunctions of todayâs financial system. Itâs hard not to become cynical when the HSBCs of the world openly welcome massive cash deposits from Mexican drug cartels for years ⦠and somehow manage to still stay in business.
Meanwhile, people who arenât financial masters of the universe donât enjoy such free passes. In fact, when the big money boys misbehave, itâs the little guys who end up taking the brunt of the punishment (see Cyprus, Portugal, etc.)
Bitcoin, on the other hand, is a way to view financial transactions in a whole new light, Palihapitiya writes. He compares it to the âred pillâ offered to the character Neo in the movie âThe Matrixâ ⦠a pill that basically makes the scales fall from your eyes about how things really work.
âIâve told my friends that it is entirely rational to allocate one percent of your assets to Bitcoin â as I have,â Palihapitiya writes. âCall it schmuck insurance. As the 2008 crisis proved, schmucks can cause a world of damage.â