🚀 Memecoins: So Bad They're Good
A proper memecoin doesn’t belong to anyone, but to its community as a whole. You could say it’s an attempt to Take the Power Back 🕊️ and launch financial assets that truly belong to the people. In a time when stocks are being propped up by non-stop money printing, it’s only natural that people want to take matters into their own hands. 💸
But let’s be real, memecoins have three major problems:
1️⃣ They aren’t usually community-owned. Sure, no vesting or unlocks, but founders use sniper bots to buy a big chunk of supply at launch, leading to rug pulls—whales eventually dump on the community. 🐋💸
2️⃣ You can't hold a memecoin forever. People want cash, not bags for life. You end up having to sell, leaving the community. 🤷♂️
3️⃣ And the most controversial... they have no utility. 🤔 Some argue that’s the fun part—memecoins are just for holding and trading memes, not being “useful.” But still, a little utility wouldn’t hurt, right?
💡 Solution? Let’s keep it simple:
👉 Unlock a portion of pool liquidity at each price milestone—say, every $1 increase. Distribute the USDT part to holders while burning the token part. 🔥
This way, the community has a real incentive to hold since they’re rewarded just for sticking around, while the supply goes down due to burns. 🏆📉
Rug pulls? Reduced. 🛑 Since USDT liquidity is taken out and given to holders, dumping for profit will require much higher token prices. 📈
Plus, adding some utility within the community makes the meme even stronger! Ideally, the token could be used as a community currency to pay for services provided by members. That’s the true endgame for memes—where they become not just a speculative asset, but a form of decentralized, privately issued money. 🌐💵
Let’s make memes unstoppable! 💥
A proper memecoin doesn’t belong to anyone, but to its community as a whole. You could say it’s an attempt to Take the Power Back 🕊️ and launch financial assets that truly belong to the people. In a time when stocks are being propped up by non-stop money printing, it’s only natural that people want to take matters into their own hands. 💸
But let’s be real, memecoins have three major problems:
1️⃣ They aren’t usually community-owned. Sure, no vesting or unlocks, but founders use sniper bots to buy a big chunk of supply at launch, leading to rug pulls—whales eventually dump on the community. 🐋💸
2️⃣ You can't hold a memecoin forever. People want cash, not bags for life. You end up having to sell, leaving the community. 🤷♂️
3️⃣ And the most controversial... they have no utility. 🤔 Some argue that’s the fun part—memecoins are just for holding and trading memes, not being “useful.” But still, a little utility wouldn’t hurt, right?
💡 Solution? Let’s keep it simple:
👉 Unlock a portion of pool liquidity at each price milestone—say, every $1 increase. Distribute the USDT part to holders while burning the token part. 🔥
This way, the community has a real incentive to hold since they’re rewarded just for sticking around, while the supply goes down due to burns. 🏆📉
Rug pulls? Reduced. 🛑 Since USDT liquidity is taken out and given to holders, dumping for profit will require much higher token prices. 📈
Plus, adding some utility within the community makes the meme even stronger! Ideally, the token could be used as a community currency to pay for services provided by members. That’s the true endgame for memes—where they become not just a speculative asset, but a form of decentralized, privately issued money. 🌐💵
Let’s make memes unstoppable! 💥