Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne on Gary Johnson, Trump vs. Clinton, and Bringing the Blockchain to the Stock Market
Byrne is funding a documentary that critiques the two-party system and launching a venture to disrupt the financial sector with blockchain technology.
"We have, you may have noticed, in our society, a group of people that call themselves, 'progressives," says Patrick Byrne, CEO of Overstock.com. "The hidden assumption is that they are for progress, or that a more powerful government would be progress. Well, I figure that if they can hijack the word 'progress,' I can hijack the word 'freedom.'"
This is why Byrne describes himself as "pro-freedom" and also why he's supporting the Libertarian Party presidential ticket of Gary Johnson and Bill Weld in this year's election. In fact, Byrne is not only voting Johnson/Weld this year but has been funding a documentary about their run for the White House that's meant as a critique of the two-party system.
Reason TV's Zach Weissmueller sat down with Byrne in Overstock's headquarters in Utah to talk about Byrne's return to the helm of the company after taking a medical leave of absence (0:53 - "I'm actually healthier than I've been in about 30 years."), his enthusiasm for bitcoin and other blockchain-based technology (4:18 - "For five-thousand years, society has accumulated these [centralized] institutions like barnacles on our hull, and now the blockchain lets us scrape those off."), his new venture t0 that brings the blockchain to the financial sector (5:26 - "We now have built a blockchain version of Wall St."), his support of Gary Johnson (11:23 - "He's 'pro-freedom.'"), and his disdain for both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton (15:09 - "I don't consider Donald Trump a businessman.").
Produced by Zach Weissmueller. Camera by Alex Manning. Music by Podington Bear.
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Trump is the Kardashians of business.
Someone help me out here. Why is currency that anyone can make a symbol of freedom? Is it just because it's not attached to a government? Why is it more valuable, freedomwise, than any other thing that people attach value to?
P2P networks are by nature decentralized; this has obvious intrinsic appeal to the freedom-minded.
So, because the whole world has become electronic, freedom must be signified electronically?
I understand what you're saying, I'm questioning why cryptocurrency specifically has become the standard bearer of freedom.
Is the IRS gonna accept taxes paid in bitcoin?
what taxes?
IRS still demands dollars, but if actual economy is de-coupled from dollars (every day prices are expressed as something else) then those who control dollar don't really control much, hence scheme of procuring wealth and labor from the public (what is actually desired) is broken if dollars can't actually procure those things.
Sovereign has to aim gun at public to take the dollars as payment, not just as taxes, in such a situation.
It's what's currently out there, and theoretically has better safeguards and fewer transaction costs.
Cryptocurrency theoretically can be superior money to any before. Fundamentally the mechanism that controls quantity of it is distributed among millions, and is a transparent process to any one of them.
Bitcoin itself is just one example. There are dozens of ways to implement such a notion however, and there are computer-sci type problems involving ledger footprints and transactions that have to be solved for real-world currency transaction volumes.
The best cryptocurrency, the one that actually fulfills the disruptive potential, will not be Bitcoin but new variation from it (like a Litecoin) that doesn't exist yet I think.
What if hundreds of miilions of people start using currency not issued by the govt? What if all the sudden, the gov't had no interest in trillions of p2p goods/services transactions?
My point is, why cryptocurrency (or whatever it's being called now)? Is Bitcoin the new gold?
because it's money which is fungible across the globe. and there's no middleman/broker to squeeze. with gold you could go after the big brokers.
It has the convenience benefits of being an electronic unit of wealth, like the systems run by the banks, but it is resistant to tampering on the part of a few players, like governments or banks.
Kind of hard to engage in quantitative easing bs when you don't control the supply of money.
Just another old white guy.
Just DIE already.
Unrelated, how much of the estate can I expect? Those needs ain't gunna satisfy themselves. And since I'm the one who came up with the inspired notion he should just die already, I should get a bigger share.
/Sarc? My meter needs adjustment.
My point is, why cryptocurrency (or whatever it's being called now)? Is Bitcoin the new gold?
Bitcoin, unlike the Federal Reserve Note, has a hard limit on supply. That makes it superior. I still have a low level of trust in the mechanics of the system, however.
With a blockchain ledger, it should be possible to get back to the days of bank-issued currencies, for better or for worse. A large institution could manage a broad, conservative investment fund and sell shares as a cryptocurrency.
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