You don’t really need to worry about your local currency, whether it’s the dollar or anything else, until producers start demanding a second currency alongside it at a discount. For example, in Argentina, if a butcher prices meat in pesos but also accepts US dollars at a 5% discount, that’s a clear sign the peso is in trouble. The same goes for any country, when merchants start preferring a stronger, parallel currency, it means confidence in the local one is fading. So you only need to worry about the dollar when retailers or producers in the US start saying, “It’s $100 if you pay in dollars, but $95 if you pay in Bitcoin.” The moment that starts happening at scale, that’s when the dollar has a real problem. Until then, the currency’s still holding up.