BTC is designed to cap off at 21 Million BTC, a concept that revolves around deflation... and other concepts that are libertarian leaning.
Anyone who has studied ethics understands that technology can have political leanings. Robert Moses's Bridges for example, were designed so that African American's would be unlikely to enter certain parts of New York City.
A Bridge in of itself is not pro-segregation or anti-segregation. But when Robert Moses used bridges to block bus traffic to certain areas of New York City, they were being used as pro-segregationist tools.
Technology is NOT politically agnostic. Only the naive or uneducated can believe that.
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DOGECOIN's politics have been explicitly stated. It wants to be a fun and easy coin for people to get into. It is unlikely to last very long (the 100 Billion DOGE soft-cap will be hit rather quickly), but they hope to learn a lot about coins in the meantime.
Bitcoin's politics have been decided as well. Libertarians are beginning to wield BTC as a way to push their values.
I'm simply stating that one of these communities is much funner to work with. Keeping coins "fun" and "easy" resonates with me a lot more than the typical libertarian I hear about BTC.
But any technology project most definitely can implement the ideological beliefs of its creators, if it's designed to do so and succeeds in achieving that design objective.
For example, the World Wide Web was developed to facilitate sharing, exchange and collaboration.[1]. You might say Tim Berners-Lee did have certain belief system and that he did implement those in his design.
The thing with bitcoin is that it is a software protocol, you don't have to apply politics to it. That is like saying TCP/I has a leftwing bias.