Bitcoin saves lives in Venezuela

in #btc7 years ago

Bitcoin saves lives in Venezuela.
Bitcoin is now an important part of everyday life in Venezuela. Bitcoin is now a popular payment method for Venezuelans, even when buying food, buying airline tickets and even paying workers. Many people in the country rely on crypto paralysis to "save themselves". The rescue of good The hyperinflation in Venezuela made Bolivar, the official currency of the country, very serious and almost worthless. Thousands of ordinary people have begun to enter the crypto money market because they want to save their little savings in their hands.
Bitcoin is now an important part of everyday life in Venezuela. Bitcoin is now a popular payment method for Venezuelans, even when buying food, buying airline tickets and even paying workers. Many people in the country rely on crypto paralysis to "save themselves". The rescue of good The hyperinflation in Venezuela made Bolivar, the official currency of the country, very serious and almost worthless. Thousands of ordinary people have begun to enter the crypto money market because they want to save their little savings in their hands. If a Venezuelan state called John Villar becomes completely unworthy of the official currency, he will do all his work with Bitcoin because he knows the troubles that are going on. According to Villar's statement, the reason why you prefer digital currencies is not political, but survival. Anyone with a smartphone can do Bitcoin operation partly quickly. Internet sites like LocalBitcoin and Colibit function as a stock market where Venezuelans can buy and sell Bitcoin using local bank accounts. The Government's Crypto money has become so popular in the country that the president of the country, Nicolas Maduro, has proposed a crypto money-backed "Petro" government-backed government. Members of the cabinet's cabin have contacted Venezuelan Bitcoin entrepreneurs to decide how such a currency can work. Even though there is little detail, some people in the Bitcoin community are skeptical about this idea. There is little reason to start using a digital currency that Venezuelans already have government in place at the bottom of their beliefs and beliefs already in government.Called "money for crisis" in Venezuela, the money allows helpless citizens to make life-saving purchases. For the last two years, Villar has not found the drugs needed to treat multiple spleens in Venezuela. In Venezuela, such stories are not uncommon among the public as the health system has collapsed due to interruptions. For this reason, Villar buys these drugs from abroad with Bitcoin and carrots them to Venezuela. Authorities have now seen the widespread use of bitcoin trade in Venezuela, but have severely punished citizens who try to mining. All this is even more risky for Villar. Not only for himself, but for his work. Villar is an engineer who has run a biometrics organization and is currently entrusting his financial future to the development of a game that houses alternative crypto money called PepeCash. The work takes place in a small office filled with computers in the industrial area east of the capital. All employees receive their salaries via Bitcoin. His wife, who is an engineer like Villar, is now mostly wheelchair bound: "I do not even have one Bolivar at the moment." Some of the other ambassadors from other digital money projects like Dash are trying to introduce Venezuelans with different crypto money. Earlier in the autumn, Dash sponsored 12 different conferences to raise awareness in the country.5a3204160f254404c0fbece0.jpg