Roger Ver: Prison Made Me a Bitcoin Believer

In a Cointelegraph exclusive interview, Roger Ver bears it all ‒ how his prison experience made him see Bitcoin’s potential, why Bitcoin Cash (BCH) is better than Bitcoin (BTC), and why he believes Bitcoin Cash will appreciate 1,000-fold.

Prison

Most of the crypto community knows that, in his youth, Roger Ver had run-ins with the law; in fact, he was sentenced to ten months for selling explosives on eBay.

However, not many know that this experience not only provided Ver with ample time for reading, but also allowed him to observe how in a closely controlled environment, “commodities” like tobacco, stamps, and noodles become mediums of exchange:

“So when I saw the prison economy and how people were buying and selling things and how things just naturally became used as money in prison, it validated what I had read about theoretically in the economics books as to what the origin of money was.”

BCH will go up in value 1,000 times

Ver is unabashedly optimistic about the prospects of BCH: “Bitcoin Cash could potentially go up 500 or a 1000 times from where it is today. I don't think BTC is ever going to go up.” Ver believes that Bitcoin “committed economic suicide” when it refused to increase its block size. He also claims, pointing to Bitcoin:

“There's nothing that can ever be used as a store of value that doesn't have a secondary use case. It just plain doesn't exist in the entire world. I don't think anybody can think of an asset that's only use case as a store value. It doesn't exist.”

If you want to know why Roger Ver was called “The Dangerous One” in prison, watch the full interview.

Bitcoin.com Forum Closes on July 23   June 24, 2020
Bitcoin.com Is Giving BCH Users a Way to Send Crypto Via Email   June 26, 2020
Roger Ver Claims His Bitcoin Transaction Fees Totaled $1,000 at Times   April 19, 2020
Roger Ver Trashes Bitcoin.​com Coronavirus Layoff Claims as ‘More Bcash FUD’   April 6, 2020
CoinFlex Receives $10 Million Funding for Bitcoin Futures Settlements   Aug. 26, 2019