Who still dares to call Dogecoin an “air coin”? Now even the tax authorities have officially certified it.
News just came in from Argentina: starting January 1, 2025, several of their provinces have officially announced that you can pay taxes with DOGE. That’s right, the same dog-headed coin that crawled out of a meme can now be handed straight to the national treasury.
This isn’t just hype from the community. Political figure Francisco Sánchez personally endorsed it, saying that digital currencies are a “key piece” of the “new Argentina.” A national financial system incorporating a meme coin into its official payment system—if you’d suggested this three years ago, who would have believed it?
The best part is the slap in the face: Those so-called experts who said “DOGE is just a joke” now have to watch the government accepting it for taxes. From a community meme to a national tool, that’s a pretty huge leap.
As for the price? Some people are still fixated on whether it can hit $1. But think about it: when fiat systems start proactively accepting meme coins, can you really use the old logic to define its ceiling? At the very least, market expectations have changed.
At the end of the day, it comes down to one question: Now that countries are starting to collect taxes in Dogecoin, are you still hung up on whether it has “real value”? By the time the Ministry of Finance publishes its DOGE holdings and you try to chase in, you probably won’t even catch a glimpse of the tail lights.
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GateUser-4407ea99
· 12-06 05:34
hm
Reply0
Mr.LiSl
· 12-05 10:12
January 1, 2025? Where did you hear that information from?
Who still dares to call Dogecoin an “air coin”? Now even the tax authorities have officially certified it.
News just came in from Argentina: starting January 1, 2025, several of their provinces have officially announced that you can pay taxes with DOGE. That’s right, the same dog-headed coin that crawled out of a meme can now be handed straight to the national treasury.
This isn’t just hype from the community. Political figure Francisco Sánchez personally endorsed it, saying that digital currencies are a “key piece” of the “new Argentina.” A national financial system incorporating a meme coin into its official payment system—if you’d suggested this three years ago, who would have believed it?
The best part is the slap in the face:
Those so-called experts who said “DOGE is just a joke” now have to watch the government accepting it for taxes. From a community meme to a national tool, that’s a pretty huge leap.
As for the price?
Some people are still fixated on whether it can hit $1. But think about it: when fiat systems start proactively accepting meme coins, can you really use the old logic to define its ceiling? At the very least, market expectations have changed.
At the end of the day, it comes down to one question:
Now that countries are starting to collect taxes in Dogecoin, are you still hung up on whether it has “real value”? By the time the Ministry of Finance publishes its DOGE holdings and you try to chase in, you probably won’t even catch a glimpse of the tail lights.