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by sofixa
691 days ago
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> which - if it were easy - would be a superior form of money and transacting as any amount from tenths of a cent to billions, moves frictionlessly. We already have that in many countries. Yes, it's subject to AML/KYC regulations, and? Why is that a problem? It's only a problem if you want to remain anonymous (which you don't, really, with crypto), which is a very niche use of money. A lot of it related to crime too, which makes it hard to justify. |
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If governments are acting fairly, some of crypto's use-cases will simply not be adopted en masse. If they're not acting fairly, it will all have huge take up. In that sense it's like a check and balance on democratic values.
This has demonstrably been the case in many countries.
Governments that come down extremely heavy-handed against it, are almost certainly themselves either corrupt in the worst case, or against common democratic principles of freedom and personal sovereignty in the best case.
The common BS trotted out is that crypto os used for financing terrorism. The reality is, cash is used for financing terrorism, banks are used for financing terrorism, and governments are used for financing terrorism.
Why target only crypto for this? Because it's a ruse. It's being targeted for other reasons.
A government truly "for the people, and by the people", would welcome the people being more easily able to transfer value between each other and hold it closer to them without a middle-man they need to trust.