Yes, and again, Monero is also an overt act of money laundering at a protocol level. I will conceed the fungibility argument. I just can't understand the tainted coins take as a point for Monero. But hopefully we'll just use peer to peer shit and it won't matter anymore.
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Monero is not money laundering at all. It is simply fungible. I don't care about privacy at all, and did not come to Monero seeking privacy. I am a public figure and engage in public commerce.
Monero does not mix or pool funds with tainted funds like Tornado Cash or CoinJoins. It is legally not money laundering. Making it difficult or impossible to tell which input and output is real is legal. Swirling your transactions in with the proceeds of crime is not.