Crypto To the Rescue The next step in this astonishing drama: crypto. The platform TallyCoin somehow and almost miraculously navigated all the compliance regulations and became a viable way to use crypto to crowd fund, thus bypassing banks (so long as you don't convert your crypto to dollars). Very quickly, the platform raised $1M for the truckers. This was all put together by a group of truckers calling itself HonkHonk Hodl. That means, of course, hold crypto don't sell. Almost immediately, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Canada's FBI) sent letters to many crypto exchanges demanding that any assets flowing through their systems that are known to be intended as donations to the truckers must be reported immediately. At the same time, the truckers are being told to leave. Yes, all these actions are clearly political, clearly totalitarian, and clearly relying fundamentally on the control of finance to shore up regime power and crush political opposition. Yes, crypto can help bypass the system, but it still must deal with three huge barriers: 1) the exchanges and platforms deal with enormous burdens in regulatory compliance, 2) the onramps to obtaining crypto are ever more intrusive, 3) the offramps to moving crypto out of digits and into cash are highly regulated. None of this is the fault of crypto. It is a failure of the transition. As we go to print, we are watching very carefully for signs of a run on Canadian banks. This is what happens when the government starts threatening to seize funds. The outage reports at the Royal Bank of Canada look rather extreme, and ATMs are starting to announce new hours. Many Twitter users are reporting that the ATMs are empty. This could get very ugly very fast. What if there is contagion? (As an aside, the one word hardly spoken during this incredible drama is Covid. It was never really about a virus.) The Great Transition On the matter of compliance, the burdens are stunning. For any nonprofit organization to receive crypto and turn it into cash, there are only a few options out there. Getting approved requires piles of documentation and approvals. Clearly regulators are doing everything possible to throttle this sector and progress in FinTech generally. Since 2013, I've written about the possibility of a fully private monetary system. It seemed like a wonderful ideal. Someday, we will get there. But the transition has become extremely complicated, as government authorities attempt to use their existing regulatory hold on conventional money and regulated exchanges to institute a China-style social credit system. Even now, I cannot believe that I just typed those sentences, which I used to hear only from very fringy commentators. Now the fringe is the fabric. Anyone who has not paid attention to the conspiracy theories of the last year has failed to anticipate most of the news. Many of the world's wisest minds have observed that the main means by which powerful states seize and retain control is through the money of the realm. Guns help. Prestige helps. But in the end, it's the control of money that keeps the people in servitude. It's nothing short of an inspiration to observe how blockchain technology is finding ways around this problem. I've been spending time examining Solana's Switzerland-based platform for decentralized finance and contracts and it's truly remarkable. The proof-of-history protocol seems to have provided a solution to the scaling problem that afflicts many blockchain tokens, giving us astonishing speed (710K transactions per second, or 50 times credit cards) while ensuring transparency, almost zero fees, and no censorship.The more time you spend with the mind of architect Anatoly Yakovenko, the more impressed one is. So yes, there seems to be a strong basis for the astonishing rise of the token SOL. Truckers, Crypto, and the Future If you find all this stuff a bit mindblowing, I get it. Crypto was once for geeks only. Now it has become a tool for saving the working class from obliteration by hegemonic forces within the ruling-class financial structure. The workers' revolution is taking a different path from what anyone in the 19th century could have ever imagined: from diesel to crypto to freedom. Or so we can hope. Jeffrey Tucker |
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