The story has always followed the same pattern: when a superior technology appears, it ends up displacing the systems that no longer meet the needs of the people. Without asking for permission. Without waiting for validation. It simply... works better.
First they said that the internet wouldn't be useful.
Then that #email wasn't serious.
After that, that #Uber was just a passing fad.
Today they say that #bitcoin "isn't going to work".
The point is that adoption never depends on the opinion of those who represent the model that is being left behind. It depends on the users, on the experience, and on the real value that new technologies deliver.
What makes #Bitcoin different is not just efficiency or costs. It's that it introduces unprecedented concepts in the history of money: verifiable scarcity, individual sovereignty, resistance to censorship, and global settlement without intermediaries. When someone experiences self-custody and a cross-border payment that settles in minutes for the first time... going back to the traditional system feels like returning to candles after knowing electricity.
The technology that solves the problem better, sooner or later, always ends up winning.
