Your Bank Hates You—Here’s Why Bitcoin Doesn’t




Banks have spent centuries perfecting the art of making money off their customers while keeping them financially dependent. They wrap themselves in an image of trust and stability, but the truth is simple: banks exist to extract as much profit as possible from you while giving as little as possible in return. And most people never question it.

Bitcoin, on the other hand, doesn’t need you to trust it. It operates on pure mathematics, transparency, and a fixed supply that no institution can manipulate. It’s time to pull back the curtain on the traditional banking system and understand why Bitcoin flips the script.


The Big Lie: Your Money Isn’t Really Yours

When you deposit money in a bank, you assume it’s still your money. In reality, the moment it enters their system, it becomes theirs. You are nothing more than an unsecured creditor—your money is a liability on their books, and they can use it however they see fit. They lend it out, invest it in risky ventures, and rake in billions in profits, all while giving you a pathetic fraction of a percent in interest.

And if you ever try to withdraw a large sum? Suddenly, the bank wants to ask questions. Where did you get this money? Why do you need it? They may even limit how much you can take out at once. It’s not about security—it’s about control.


The Racket: How Fractional Reserve Banking Works

One of the biggest scams ever legalized is fractional reserve banking. This system allows banks to hold only a small fraction of customer deposits while lending out the rest. In the U.S., banks used to be required to keep about 10% in reserve. Today? That requirement is zero. They can lend out nearly all of your deposited money, creating money out of thin air.

This system fuels inflation, artificially expands credit, and increases systemic risk. And guess who pays the price when it collapses? Not the banks—they get bailed out. You, the customer, are left with devalued savings, rising costs, and financial instability.

Bitcoin doesn’t play that game. There is no fractional reserve system. You own what you hold, and no one can lend it out behind your back.


The Bank Fees & Interest Rate Scam

Banks are masters of the nickel-and-dime game:

  • Overdraft fees punish you for not having money by taking more of your money.

  • Loan interest rates skyrocket while banks borrow from the Federal Reserve at near-zero rates.

  • ATM fees charge you for accessing your own money.

  • Wire transfer fees? A tax on moving your money, even though the process is mostly automated.

Meanwhile, inflation erodes your savings, and banks laugh all the way to... well, the bank.

Bitcoin? No middlemen. No arbitrary fees. No interest rates designed to squeeze you dry. Just peer-to-peer transactions, secured by a decentralized network.


Enter Bitcoin: Opting Out of the Madness

Bitcoin offers something revolutionary:

  • A fixed supply of 21 million coins—no central bank can print more.

  • Self-custody—you hold your own money, no permissions needed.

  • Instant transactions with minimal fees, no matter where you are in the world.

  • A global, decentralized network that no government or institution can manipulate.

Unlike banks, Bitcoin doesn’t require you to trust it. You can verify every transaction, every supply issuance, every rule of the system. There are no hidden fees, no fine print, no “policy changes” that suddenly take away your access.


The Transparency Factor: Bitcoin vs. Banks

Banks operate in secrecy. They loan out your deposits, make high-risk bets, and when things go wrong, they change the rules or beg for a bailout. The 2008 financial crisis showed us exactly how fragile and corrupt the system really is.

Bitcoin, on the other hand, runs on a public ledger. Every transaction is verifiable. No insider deals, no backroom manipulations, no hidden schemes. You don’t have to take anyone’s word for it—the system is open-source, and anyone can audit it.


The Takeaway: Banks Need You, But You Don’t Need Banks

The traditional banking system thrives on ignorance. It wants you to remain dependent, obedient, and financially illiterate. But Bitcoin offers a way out.

With Bitcoin, you are your own bank. You decide when and how to access your wealth. You don’t need permission, you don’t need intermediaries, and you certainly don’t need to beg for access to what’s already yours.

Your bank hopes you never wake up to this reality.

Bitcoin is the wake-up call.

Tick tock, next block.

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