can shed light on a question I have. I was kicked out of the Mickey B Fresh Telegram group for asking this question (they're very sensitive). On April 23, David Schwartz tweeted (when asked about XRP's all-time high price), "That $3.84 is a misleading number because it includes Korean exchange rates valuing the Won at the official exchange rate, which you could not actually get. It was never possible to actually get $3.84 for one XRP." It's the last part of the tweet that I'm really confused about. "It was never possible to actually get $3.84 for one XRP." The more we're learning about XRP and the new liquidy pools, the more it sounds like XRP actually WASN'T designed to have a high price. Needless to say, if that's true, everyone that has said XRP is going to the moon is wrong. The question I have is what is the truth? Was David Schwartz saying that there was some sort of inherent, built-in limitation to XRP's price back then or was it a poorly worded tweet? I don't know what to believe at this point. If my XRP isn't going to increase in value behond maybe a couple of dollars, I'm not sure I want to hold onto it.
https://ripple.com/solutions/crypto-liquidity/
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