padjo 18 hours ago

Yep, the belief that governments would just give up control of money always seemed incredibly naive to me too.

  • diggan 18 hours ago

    On the other hand, doesn't all "wouldn't it be nice if it was like this?" look naive and wild before they were implemented/fought through?

    Things like "Womens right to vote", "Civil rights" or even democracy was seen as completely backwards and naive at one point in history (and still is in some places), but today we kind of see it as something good to strive for, most of the times.

    I'm not saying it's 100% the same for cryptocurrencies, but isn't there a chance it's something similar at least?

randallsquared 18 hours ago

> nation is going to give up their self-determination because someone thinks countries having self-control

Nations do not have selves. That's taking the analogy too far. I do agree that they will definitely continue trying to exert control, though. It's kinda their thing.

lazide 18 hours ago

Unless they personally can profit from the situation anyway. Then they’ll often do perfunctory PR prosecutions while taking kickbacks. See things like prosecutions around prostitution for one usually pretty clear example.

mothballed 18 hours ago

It would also be delusional to think crypto-bros will give up their self-determination to the nation-state.

  • tw04 17 hours ago

    It's really not. 100% of the time the nation state is winning that battle, as evidence by literally all of human history. Crypto-bros make up a fraction of a fraction of the population and most people don't have sympathy for any of them when the primary use cases of crypto today are extortion and black markets in the western world.

    • mothballed 17 hours ago

      I don't think there's any shortage of history of people fighting the impossible, mostly getting crucified, and occasionally winning, and occasionally just existing as someone that would take the state more money than it's worth to go after.

      You're expecting crypt-bros to act rationally based on utility of outcome. If they're acting ideologically there's no guarantee that will be the case.

pavlov 18 hours ago

I don’t mind seeing the crypto bros hoisted by their own orange-tinted petard.

They supported an authoritarian because they thought they could buy him off with shitcoin corruption billions. Turns out he’s still an authoritarian after he’s taken the money and done the rug pull.

  • pessimizer 17 hours ago

    They supported both candidates, and Harris kept talking about crypto in the face of everybody screaming at her that it was losing her votes. She thought being able to afford Beyoncé concerts with crypto bro cash would offset that.

techterrier 18 hours ago

it's another $5 wrench situation

  • mothballed 18 hours ago

    Sure but now you need a $5 wrench to essentially force a guy to tell you where he buried the gold, rather than just walking to the bank and taking it. I don't see that as some kind of win for the guy with a wrench, especially when you realize the bank manager is way less likely to be a violent nutter sov-cit.

  • rvnx 18 hours ago

    The solution is to store your money on a wallet where you do not have the private key. This way if you cannot access your funds nobody will be able to coerce you.

    • ceejayoz 18 hours ago

      Their solution to that is "rot in jail for a long time, then".

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._Beatty_Chadwick

      • diggan 18 hours ago

        Demonstrating that if you wait long enough (14 years in that case), you can get away without loosing the funds, even from the state?

        > On July 10, 2009, Chadwick was ordered released from prison by Delaware County Judge Joseph Cronin, who determined his continued incarceration had lost its coercive effect and would not result in him surrendering the money.

    • rafterydj 18 hours ago

      In that case the obvious move from the 5$ wrench perspective is to hit you with it until you tell them where the private key is kept, because you would need to have it somewhere.

    • incone123 18 hours ago

      The key must exist somewhere and the wrench may make you reveal that information instead.

    • anjel 17 hours ago

      What 5 dollar wrench wielder is going to believe that, even when it's true?