No.
They die young.
Mostly because of crime.
https://www.oecd.org/dev/inclusivesocietiesanddevelopment/youth-issues-in-el-salvador.htm
Addressing the structural roots of the problem in the country and get a government in charge instead of puppets of the drug cartels. Again, BITCOIN will not solve the issues but will make it easier to launder the profits.
That is good, I hope the Bitcoin gringo that immigrated to El Salvador teaches children to set up bitcoin machines so they can get a good wage and can stay out of the gangs. But I don’t think that will happen. I hope it does, but I’m not naive when I see what forces are at play.
" A surfer, Peterson first came to El Zonte in 2006 to check out the waves. The town has long been a draw for surfers. He was so enamored by it, he bought a home there. The home has a guest house you can rent for $160 per night. In 2014, he opened another “mission guest house” in Punta Mango with three bungalows, each currently available for $200 per night."
Aaron, call Michael Peterson and ask him how that HYPOTHETICAL STORY (PERSON X,Y,Z) with the housing project works, he unironically literally did what I proposed. Ok, he did it in the smallest (and disfunctional) economy in the world but still… how bad is it that the more I look into these weirdos you present us, the darker the story becomes?
He even has a religious center. You can’t make this sh*t up. https://missionsake.com/
Looking back on 1 year of bitcoin -12.534,53 (27,07%) was depriciated. If we compare this to real money, Between 2011 and 2021 [TEN YEARS], the euro depreciated overall by 15.2 % against the Chinese renminbi-yuan, 15.0 % against the United States dollar and by 12.3 % against the Swiss franc. You don’t see an issue but I do and I don’t think the people of El Salvador have to be stolen from.
(Sorry for the massive editing, Aaron. I changed some things I might not have explained correctly.)