Seems like a privileged point of view if you live somewhere with a mostly stable currency (ie not rapidly inflating currency) and easy access to banking
Can you point to an example where cryptocurrency has directly alleviated either of those systemic problems? I wouldn’t think that it’s the currency itself that would cause, exacerbate, temper, or resolve the underlying root problems that contribute to the instability of a sovereign currency or its citizens access to it. To use a practical example, if I was struggling to maintain my finances as a citizen of Argentina, I understand that I can purchase Bitcoin and that may (or maybe not) be more stable than the the domestic fiat currency, but then…how do I spend that Bitcoin without encountering many/all of the same problems I’d hoped to avoid? How do I purchase routine goods and services? How do I pay for my home or utilities? In what way, specifically, does Bitcoin empower an average Argentinian to extend their self-determination and protect themselves from their country’s financial instability? Can Insafely and reliably exchange cash for Bitcoin, and vise versa? If not, then we’re back to inaccessible banking services as the first stumbling block. Assuming I managed to exchange my cash for Bitcoin, how am I storing it safely? If an offline wallet is vulnerable to being lost due to defective storage devices, and an online wallet is vulnerable to malicious actors within and without of the most popular exchanges, and maybe I don’t have great access to the internet?
I have always been skeptical of this idea that cryptocurrency is the solution to uncontrolled inflation/deflation, and an accessible alternative to the unbanked/underbanked people of the world. It seems naive, at best.