I think the terms got a bit swapped in the title.

It looks more like we're facing a dollar with an increasingly dark future and a Bitcoin resurgence that's very likely (if not inevitable) in the medium to long term.

The United States already has the largest debt in its history, surpassing $39 trillion. Much of it is financed simply by issuing more debt. This can hold up in the short term, but the hole keeps getting bigger.

On top of that, with the “America First” policy, several major countries (China, Russia, and others in the BRICS bloc) are accelerating agreements to trade in their own currencies. We're seeing more and more oil and commodity transactions in yuan. Europe, for its part, is also reducing its exposure to U.S. bonds — not just because of tariffs, but especially due to the loss of confidence in the U.S. as a loyal ally after the Greenland situation.

Without the monopoly of the petrodollar, the relative value of the fiat currency erodes. And that’s exactly where Bitcoin comes in — not just as another option, but as the real safe haven with genuine scarcity: fixed supply, decentralized, and outside the control of any government.

This doesn’t mean the dollar will disappear overnight, but it is clearly losing ground as the world’s single global currency — slowly at first, but the pace is accelerating.

History has shown us that when confidence in fiat currencies erodes, assets with limited supply and true decentralization like BTC become increasingly attractive. It’s pure systemic necessity.

Hyperinflation imminent? Maybe not tomorrow, but the current direction of policies doesn’t seem like the best way to maintain the dollar’s absolute dominance for much longer.