The remark was brief. The implication was not.
A Fixed Supply Against A Growing DebtCameron has a history of flagging what he sees as prime buying moments. When Bitcoin fell below $90,000 late last year, he told his more than 700,000 followers on X that it was a final chance to buy before a rebound. The rebound did not come as expected — Bitcoin slid further and now trades around $74,000.
Michael Saylor and Anthony Pompliano have made similar arguments, repeatedly framing Bitcoin as a shield against economic uncertainty and ballooning government obligations.
The idea is straightforward: as government debt grows and the purchasing power of fiat currencies shrinks, an asset with a fixed supply becomes harder to ignore.
Loud Voices, Clear InterestsCameron’s latest post adds one more data point to a narrative the crypto industry has been building for years — that the national debt is not just an economic problem but an argument for holding Bitcoin.
Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView


















