Yeah, the canceling out thing is hard to ignore. UoA and deep liquidity (hence easy arbitrage) is a tough thing to break from.
Was thinking other day though, that if you stretch out the time between trades, then you can more clearly see how it's different trading pairs, since usd price for things fluctuates a good deal over even relatively short times. I think it's a gradually then suddenly thing in the end. Maybe we slowly chip away at USD UoA as markets freeze up here and there, and people use BTC (or xmr..sigh) increasingly.
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Yeah, you're trying to squeeze into a short note what may be a short essay to articulate properly. Not that I could do it, nor that I even fully agree with your claim. But I know you've thought about it a good deal, so maybe have more of a point than comes across in shorter replies.
maybe this example helps?
if a 2010 Toyota Camry is $6,000 and a Bitcoin is $87,000
then it is .069 Bitcoin (nice) per Toyota Camry.
.069 BTC/Camry
look ma! I eliminated US dollars and am on a Bitcoin standard!
no you dumbass **USD is how you got that proportion**
that number (.069 BTC/Camry) is USD DENOMINATED
there are NO Bitcoin denominated prices.
ALL prices and price charts are USD denominated as long as USD is the unit of account.
bitcoiners do not understand unit of account.
it does NOT change because you do division.
#bitcoin
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