There is a reason for your sarcasm and I doubt that it is because you are neutral about bitcoin.
I am surprised that you say this, because I thought that my dislike of Bitcoin was never in doubt, and I wonder why you have never noticed before yesterday. But for you to then go and suggest that I have predicted the demise of Bitcoin, when I have avoided this claim at every turn is also not very conducive to critical thinking.
As I have said before, I read several news articles about Bitcoin every day, and the hype in both directions can be painful to read. A $20 recovery? We've turned the corner! A $20 drop? This is the beginning of the end. This, all depending on who you read. And by the time I get up in the morning, and read the "predictions" and look at the current price, it can have changed $100 in either direction.
The daily price summary articles are a joy to behold. A lot of figures are shown and followed by if Bitcoin (or Ether, or one of the others) fall below A, then B might happen. If B happens then C might happen next week. But if B does not happen, then D might happen next year. It really is little more than reading the entrails of a frog, because nobody knows where Bitcoin is going. And people analysing Bitcoin can use the exact same figures to argue either point of view.
One might have thought that Cboe BZX Exchange withdrawing the ETF application was a bad thing. Apparently some do. Then Forbes comes along and argues that it is a good thing.
https://bitcoin.com.au/traders-shou...coin-price-drop-financial-specialist-advises/
My view is that any product that jumps around in price every day, sometimes within an hour or less, to the extent that Bitcoin does, and requires the minute analysis devoted to Bitcoin daily is a flawed product.
Also the arguments made by some on this thread that nobody ever lost money investing in Bitcoin are laughable at present. Anybody who started in at over $10,000 are at least 50% down of they sell. OK, if they have not sold, they have not lost money, but overall, they do have less wealth than they used to.
And finally, a completely innocent phrase like a product "took off" is not some backdoor attempt to foist a doomsday prediction. It is a perfectly innocent expression, intended that way, when any product suddenly jumps in demand very rapidly. It can be found every day of the week, and I did resent the claim that was made about using this day to day term.
If I had have used it to describe a plane ride, or a book which was not selling well which suddenly "took off", or in pretty much any other context, would it have been a backdoor method of predicting a plane crash, or getting a book banned? No, I used it to describe a very obvious event.
Norm