One of the most common argument against Bitcoin is that it is “too risky.” some point to volatility, price drops, and uncertainty as reasons to stay away... And decide keeping their money in cash and traditional savings feels safer...
It's important to start by saying that money isn't intended to store value; it's a medium of exchange. Bitcoin has ceased to be digital electronic money (and has become an investment financial instrument), so it's not entirely accurate to compare it to money.
Most people are more accustomed to storing value in money; this even has certain advantages (high liquidity), but this is most often due to a lack of knowledge (or willingness) about investing, as well as the small amounts stored in cash. Imagine you have $2,000-$3,000. Do you invest it in the traditional stock market? To buy 2.5 shares of Tesla?

And then pay a broker's commission? That's ridiculous. That's why people keep it in paper (those who aren't prepared to risk investing in bitcoin).
But what I keep asking is, What is "Safe" being compared to Actually? Because watching inflation quietly destroy your purchasing power every single year is also risk. Depending entirely on a salary that buys less each year is also risky. Trusting a system where your money can be restricted, frozen, or quietly devalued is also risk too.
All these risks have become familiar and native, so to speak.

The differnce is that Bitcoin’s risk is loud, while fiat’s risk is silent. One scares people because it moves fast. The others steals slowly, so people get used to it and call it normal.
Everything new and incomprehensible always frightens with its unpredictability and unknown.
What's your opinion. Do you think people reject Bitcoin because it is truly too risky... or because its risks are easier to see than the risks of fiat?
But it's also easy to see the benefits of bitcoin - the rise in value and those willing to take advantage of it, ignoring the risks.