Despite notions of being honest, hard-working Ayn Rand-styled captains of industry, the majority of bitcoiners take pleasure in scamming companies by abusing RMAs and warranties to trade in blatantly abused hardware
(10+ video cards running inside a cardboard box case, or no case at all, with a box fan as cooling). Similarly, it's pretty commonplace for people to collude with each other, on the main bitcoin forums, to pay off mods and admins to ban or castigate competition as scammers, etc.
At the same time, while being endlessly pleased at the idea of rugged individualism offered by a truly Caveat Emptor economy, as soon as misfortune hits (scammers vanishing with sacks of bit-money, exchanges getting hacked, people defaulting on loans, etc), people immediately want to form regulatory bodies and commissions to reign that sort of behavior in. There's been people trying to literally hire the Yakuza to kill people as vengeance.
Likewise, despite being 'untrackable', people routinely track transactions to see who is funneling money through who.
The whole operation is shambolic as heck, especially when last year the Bitcoin community had some sort of one-sided feud going with a
comedy website of all things.
Overall, the disparity between the veneer of being the wise, liberty-laden currency of the future and what Bitcoin's actually comprised of is huge to the point of making Bitcoin absurd just from a cursory glance. Again, no number of self-important sounding wiki-articles gleaned from some high schooler's economics textbook, no number of reams of fervent support, is going to be enough to really make the community or concept seem like less of a joke.