Bull. If the Fed didn't want you to know this you wouldn't know this. Your investment advice is spot on but the BTC proselyte dogma above needs some real critical thinking. Take that graph, it includes two prior spikes of increases of a factor of ten, both of which were quickly followed by a return to the baseline. Take the supposed inflation link, why should the value of real estate and equities be included in the calculation of consumer inflation, the supposed effect of "printing" dollars on the price of goods and services?
People conflate the effect of ACTUAL increases in the cost of goods and services with the inflationary loss of purchasing power in a currency. When OPEC embargoed the nations who backed Israel in the '73 war the price of oil in the U.S. shot up. The resulting price spike in oil and all products affected when oil prices shot up was counted as inflation but it didn't reflect money supply, M2 was dropping sharply as inflation was spiking. If you look at this chart https://www.longtermtrends.net/m2-money-supply-vs-inflation/you can see just how often money supply and inflation rate are either counter cyclic or disaggregated. For balance in your analyses you should at least consider aspects of MMT.