Changpeng “CZ” Zhao and Peter Schiff are supposedly taking their long-running argument to the stage.
The Binance founder has agreed to debate the outspoken economist and gold advocate after Schiff publicly challenged him to a “Bitcoin versus tokenized gold” discussion.
The exchange follows Schiff’s announcement that he’s launching his own blockchain-based gold product — and CZ’s sharp critique that such tokens are “not truly on-chain.”
“As much as you voice against Bitcoin, you are always professional and nonpersonal,” CZ told Schiff on X today. “I appreciate that. Can have a debate about it.”
Schiff replied later: “Absolutely. Several people have already reached out to me offering to moderate. Do you have a preference?”
All this debate talk arrives hours after President Donald Trump granted a full pardon to Changpeng Zhao. President Trump said CZ “wasn’t guilty” and was “persecuted by the Biden administration.”
Schiff’s tokenized gold pitch vs. bitcoin
Schiff recently said that he’s building a tokenized gold platform and neobank, with a blockchain token called Tgold at its core.
The product will reportedly allow users to purchase physical gold through a mobile app, store it in secure vaults, and transfer or redeem it digitally.
Schiff describes it as “real money for the digital age” — physical gold represented on-chain.
All this comes amid a multiyear gold rally, with prices hitting a record $4,380 per ounce earlier this month before settling near $4,128, at time of writing.
Schiff argues that tokenized gold could provide a stable, asset-backed alternative to Bitcoin’s volatility, serving as both a medium of exchange and store of value.
CZ pushes back: “It’s a ‘Trust Me Bro’ Token”
CZ wasted no time in firing back.
On X, he called tokenized gold “a ‘trust-me-bro’ token,” arguing that such assets rely on third-party custodians — precisely the kind of centralized trust structures Bitcoin was designed to eliminate.
“Tokenizing gold is NOT ‘on-chain’ gold,” CZ wrote. “It’s tokenizing that you trust some third party will give you gold at some later date — maybe decades later, during a war, after management changes, etc.”
His comments echo a common view among crypto purists: that true digital ownership requires self-custody and verifiable scarcity — traits Bitcoin has, but gold tokens do not.
As of writing, there is not an agreed-upon or specific time for Schiff and CZ to debate.










