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by disgruntledphd2
113 days ago
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> It does matter, for non-Americans, that America isn't the world police and doesn't dictate laws, norms and how other countries behave. Maybe it used to be relatively fringe to have this point of view, but last few years really vindicated this point of view, and I agree that many countries in the world should continue focusing on decoupling themselves from the US, this particular issue highlights one motivation for doing just so. All of these (American driven) laws exist in basically every country at this point, and it's gonna be a struggle to remove them. Like, how would you even spin this as a good change? I personally regard AML laws as problematic as they weaponise the financial system against its citizens with no democratic right of reply, but that doesn't change the fact that these laws exist basically everywhere and aren't going to be repealed. |
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I'm not American, why would I want American laws to apply to me? How could you possibly spin that as a negative change?
> but that doesn't change the fact that these laws exist basically everywhere
So you're saying that there is a Maltese law (or whatever jurisdiction Binance actually is right now) that is saying Maltese companies cannot do business dealings with anyone from Iran? That's the important part, not whatever the US laws says.