[quoting AOC, which I just noticed - I think ours came first.]
Sure, in the same way that you'd rather be forced to fight Tiny Tim than Mike Tyson.
And someone who sees human liberation in Bitcoin cries cult, that's funny.
I can definitely see the similarities. In mmt, the world as we know it was created by the greeks two or three thousand years ago.
No. Moneys are created at many different times, by institutions and laws of varying design and effect; not by some assumed magical transition from an original state of barter and contract among merchants that no one can point to ever having originated in the historical record prior to coin-gold-token-moneys. This is a speculative myth like in drstrangelove's account with its strange void (very typical for the argument) regarding identifiable actors, times, places, institutions or laws prior to the 20th century.
Notwithstanding that "the Greeks" were the first to widely introduce coinage to the Mediterranean world, ca. 700s BCE forward, money had existed -- as a record of debts and credits -- at least since the advent of writing, most of the earliest writings still in existence (and thus possible to study) being records of credits, debts and payments. Mosler's glancing reference to "the Greeks" in some blog (it's hard to tell where you are getting your quotations, by the way) is not a source or a foundation for your wild overstatements, dada, at least read his book or, better yet, Kelton's, or one of Hudson's.
As for pre-literate societies, Graeber describes at length how the anthropological studies are overwhelming in showing personal credit and trust was the original means of exchange, not coin, gold, or tokens. Tokens appear to originally come into existence not as a means of commodity exchange but as a symbolic way to pay off debts that are unpayable (the taking of lives, basically) so as to avoid and minimize chains of vengeance and vendetta. They are not initially spendable for commodity exchange, nor does the idea seem to occur until much later. Mandated use of gold and coin indeed arose as ways for stakeholders (conquerors, states and other authorities) to feed armies, establish market exchange under their control in given territories, and demand taxation or corvee labor in return.
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