Bitcoin advocate floats BTC as a solution to US student loan problems

Dennis Porter said that the government should give $10,000 worth of Bitcoin to debtors and lock it for 10 years.

Following United States President Joe *****’s announcement of a student loan forgiveness plan that aims to cancel the debt of up to $20,000 for millions of Americans, a Bitcoin (BTC) supporter proposed an alternative method to pay off the loans. 

Dennis Porter, the CEO of the non-profit organization called Satoshi Action Fund, tweeted that there’s another way for the U.S. government to solve the student loan issue. According to Porter, ***** could give each debtor some BTC worth $10,000 and lock it within a smart contract for 10 years. The non-profit executive explained that the contract should be sufficient to pay off the remaining balance once it is released. 

Community members criticized Porter’s mention of a smart contract as some believe that the Bitcoin network cannot support this. One Twitter user replied to porter and urged him to not just “lump random things together,” while another said that BTC is not the solution for everything.

In a response to the Twitter thread, fintech executive John Wingate told Porter that this can’t be done with only Bitcoin. Wingate also asked Porter if this is his admission that BTC needs to expand its use cases. 

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Despite the criticisms on smart contract compatibility for Bitcoin, Porter stood by his proposal and defended his stance. The executive also shared a link to a guide detailing a method on how smart contracts can be used to time lock Bitcoin:

Porter’s suggestion may be based on the assumption that Bitcoin will work as a hedge against inflation and that its value will increase over time, enough to pay student loan debt. However, for BTC to become an effective inflation hedge, Skybridge Capital CEO Anthony Scaramucci thinks that Bitcoin needs to be in the “billion-plus zone” in terms of the number of users.