Indeed Venezuelans tend to be more adept at managing cryptos than its neighbors. It is called adaptation to the circumstances. I guess crypto's volatility is nothing compared to the Bolivar which is constantly devaluating itself.
In Panama for example, where the US Dollar is the official currency, almost everyone I know is illiterate about crypto. They think crypto is a scam and you don't hear anyone talking about it. Eventhough 95% of panamanians have an android powered cellphone capable of running a wallet app, no one I know in my social circle knows how to deal with cryptos proficiently.
It seems that the panamanians have grown up to the dependence of the US Dollar fiat opium, with its restrictive and noninclusive policies bringing along all the IMF, OCDE, FATCA and many other cross national institutions fine tuned and designed to control the country's financial system at their mercy.
Hopefully the crypto genie is out of the bottle and it can wreak havoc on all the traditional G8 financial systems they have created to enslave more than half of the world's population by printing sheets of paper not backed by anything else other than their desire to own you.
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I guess I read somewhere lately that Panama is embracing Bitcoin as legal tender... Or talking about it.
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A congress representative just mentioned it and proposed it, but it hasn't been mentioned since then. Panama has to obey to its U.S.A. master, years ago (about a year before the pandemic), China wanted to build a train service going from the capital city to a town bordering Costa Rica, they sent engineers to study the land and the feasibility of it along with an approximate cost for the project's construction. Months later, the U.S. Embassy immediately summoned panamanian diplomatic officials and the project with China was scrapped. We obey to the master, we are the financial puppet of a bigger northern master.