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Whoâs Chris Larsen trying to fool? Even though the Chairman of Ripple claims that âthe company is not involved in this campaign,â their latest PR stunt is as obvious as it gets. Another multimillion-dollar attack on bitcoin, once again using the ESG angle and a set of debunked numbers. The new thing is, Larsen spent $5M to bribe Greenpeace into doing his dirty work. Will the organizationâs reputation be strong enough to destroy bitcoin?
Putting aside the obvious conflict of interest that taking the money of Rippleâs creator to fund a campaign to attack the undisputable category leader presents, Greenpeace did a terrible job with the first ad. They quote one of the most ridiculous claims about bitcoinâs Proof-Of-Work consensus mechanism, that miners could raise the planetâs temperature by two whole degrees. Who in his right mind would believe such a thing?Â
Certainly not the people that they claim theyâre trying to reach. According to the Wall Street Journal, âsome of the ads are aimed at prominent bitcoin backers, such as Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Elon Musk, Block Inc. founder Jack Dorsey and Fidelity Investments Chief Executive Abby Johnson.âÂ
Is there even a chance that the leader of a company who believes we live in a bitcoin-first world or the person who created the bitcoin defense fund would fall for these poorly-researched lies and obvious manipulation? Would the bitcoin miners risk killing the golden goose by destroying the networkâs security model? What percentage of node runners is uneducated enough to consider getting rid of the almost miraculous decentralization that bitcoin fought so hard to achieve?
Chris Larsen isnât fooling anyone. This campaignâs real target is the general public.
What Did Ripple âs Chairman Say, Exactly?
Of course, a campaign against bitcoin counts on the mainstream mediaâs approval and support. However, it was via Twitter that Chris Larsen spoke more candidly about the subject:
âThe time for change is now â as prominent capital market participants drive crypto liquidity, ESG and sustainability will only become more front and center. ETH (2nd largest market cap â for now) recognized this early on and is very close to switching to PoS. We need short-term solutions as well, even if a move away from PoW happened eventually. Bitcoin is and will remain hugely important for crypto globally. Bitcoiners â I know many of you may not believe this, but Iâm not trying to work against you here.â
Whoâs this man trying to fool? As we already established, the general public. For bitcoiners, itâs obvious that this is an admittedly sophisticated attack on bitcoin. The Ripple Chairman links to a Bloomberg article that frames the campaign in the most alarmist way possible.
âSeveral climate activist groups including Greenpeace and crypto billionaire Chris Larsen are launching a âChange the Code, Not the Climateâ campaign, designed to pressure the Bitcoin community to alter the way it orders transactions that already consumes as much power as Sweden.âÂ
We need short-term solutions as well, even if a move away from PoW happened eventually. Bitcoin is and will remain hugely important for crypto globally. Bitcoiners â I know many of you may not believe this, but Iâm not trying to work against you here.
â Chris Larsen (@chrislarsensf) March 29, 2022
However, the author fails to mention that Christmas lights in the U.S. consume more power than Sweden.
BTC price chart for 03/30/2022 on Cexio | Source: BTC/USD on TradingView.com
Poor Research And Outright Lies
The Bloomberg article also quotes Michael Brune, the poor soul in charge of the campaign:
âWe are in this campaign for the long haul, but we are hoping â particularly since Bitcoin is now being financed by entities and individuals who care about climate change â that we can compel leadership to agree that this is a problem that needs to be addressed. Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, PayPal, Venmo, Fidelity â there are lots of companies we anticipate will be helpful to this effort.â
This man is as clueless as it gets. Has he read what Fidelity has to say about bitcoin? His words sound as ignorant as the phrase, âthe campaign believes that about 50 key miners, crypto exchanges and core developers have the power to change Bitcoinâs code.â WHAT? First of all, no, that number is nowhere near enough. Itâs more like hundreds of thousands of bitcoin believers all over the world. Secondly, those people that the campaign is allegedly targeting spent thousands of hours researching bitcoin. People involved in the campaign clearly have not.
The obvious lies come courtesy of Chris Larsen, who claims that âhe feels that Bitcoin wonât continue to enjoy investorsâ support unless it changes.â And outright predicts, ânow a lot of whatâs driving crypto is the enormous liquidity thatâs come from the traditional market players. And generally, those people are not religious about these technologies. So itâs just a matter of time.â
Presumably, the Ripple Chairman read âThe Blocksize War.â He knows itâs NOT a matter of time and a $5M campaign is not going to trigger a protocol change that would lead to bitcoinâs demise. Whatâs he doing, then? Using Greenpeaceâs good name to target the general public and plant nonsensical ESG FUD into their minds. And promoting Ripple at the same time. Thatâs what heâs doing.
Whatâs Really Happening?
The reality is, bitcoin uses precisely the energy it needs to provide financial services to anyone, anywhere on the planet. And it doesnât waste any of it. The network uses the energy for crucial purposes like security, coin issuance, and connection to the real world. Plus, it incentivizes green energy infrastructure and serves as a buyer of first and last resort for renewable energy plants. Among other things.
Featured Image by Markus Spiske on Unsplash | Charts by TradingView
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of Bitcoin Insider. Every investment and trading move involves risk - this is especially true for cryptocurrencies given their volatility. We strongly advise our readers to conduct their own research when making a decision.