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Just caught the latest round of Ray Dalio taking shots at Bitcoin again, and honestly, the crypto community's pushback has been pretty entertaining to watch. The billionaire hedge fund guy keeps recycling the same old critiques, but bulls are making some solid points about why his narrative doesn't hold up anymore.
What's interesting is how Ray keeps leaning on these tired arguments about Bitcoin being speculative or lacking real utility. But the market has evolved way beyond where it was when he first started criticizing it. You've got institutional adoption, actual use cases in remittance and cross-border payments, and a completely different regulatory landscape now.
The bulls aren't wrong when they point out that Ray's framework for evaluating Bitcoin feels stuck in 2017. His whole worldview is built around traditional finance infrastructure, so naturally he struggles to see value in something that operates outside that system. It's like asking someone who spent decades perfecting horse carriages to suddenly appreciate why cars matter.
What gets me is the generational angle here. Ray represents traditional finance's gatekeeping mentality, while the crypto community is literally building the next financial infrastructure. These aren't compatible worldviews, so of course Ray dismisses Bitcoin as a narrative rather than engaging with the actual technology and adoption metrics.
The real test isn't what Ray Dalio thinks - it's whether Bitcoin continues gaining institutional and retail adoption despite the skepticism. And honestly, the fact that we're still having this debate in 2026 while Bitcoin keeps setting new highs tells you something about whose narrative is actually winning.