Why governments won't ban/kill Bitcoin but will contain it as Store-of-Value (SoV) 1) Enforcement cost > control benefit - A true ban drives use off-grid (Tor, mesh, cash ramps), destroys visibility, and raises policing costs. Containment via KYC perimeters is cheaper and yields data. 2) Better telemetry inside the tent - With ETFs, exchanges, and custodians, governments get biometrically tied identities, flow analytics, and seizure paths. A ban forfeits that intelligence. 3) Tax and fee capture - Capital-gains, trading, and withholding taxes + Wall-St. fees create dependable revenue. Bans cut a growing tax base and antagonize large financial donors. 4) Financial-stability risk of a ban - Now that pensions, brokers, and banks hold paper Bitcoin, prohibition would trigger losses, lawsuits, and collateral stress. Regulation avoids systemic jolts. 5) Geopolitical arbitrage - A global ban is unlikely to synchronize perfectly. Any major hub offering permissive rules attracts capital and talent. Containment preserves competitiveness while limiting MoE. 6) Legal drag & optics - Speech/property/innovation arguments slow blanket prohibition in rule-of-law states. "Regulate and protect consumers" polls better than "ban and confiscate". 7) Energy & industrial coalitions - Mining as flexible load helps grids, monetizes stranded energy, and brings rural jobs. Those lobbies resist outright bans; regulators prefer conditional allowances. 8) Paperization gives a steering wheel - ETFs/futures/structured notes dampen volatility, centralize price discovery, and make policy nudges effective. You don't need a ban if you can steer. 9) Seizure & prosecution value - Law enforcement has repeatedly seized Bitcoin. A ban reduces cooperative custody and pushes value where seizure is harder. 10) Narrative management > martyr creation - Bans create martyrs and adoption surges. "Invest, don't transact" plus perks for CBDC/stablecoins normalizes behavior without revolt. 11) Innovation insurance - States want optionality if Bitcoin tech (or reserves) becomes strategically useful. Regulate now, keep the option to lean in later. 12) Precedent risk - Banning a major asset class spooks broader markets. Incremental containment avoids setting a weaponizable precedent against other assets. These are some of the reasons that make me quite confident, there won't be any Outright prohibition (criminalize possession/usage broadly). I'd put the odds at ~10% or lower over the next 5 years in US/EU/UK. It would require a massive crisis + political alignment + judicial acquiescence. Possible, not probable. I'd say extreme edge case. The odds for - Partial/sectoral bans & hard throttling (merchant MoE suppression, node/platform de-platforming bursts, strict KYC travel-rule, custody only) - are higher - ~30%. My base case is SoV-allowed containment (~60%) - Paper Bitcoin dominates, self-custody tolerated but inconvenienced; MoE pushed to CBDC/stablecoin rails. Banning Bitcoin is expensive, leaky, and counter-productive for governments. Containing it - paperizing price, taxing flows, steering payments to CBDC/stablecoin rails - delivers control, telemetry, and revenue with fewer riots. Price can still compound inside that cage; freedom lives only in the relatively small, well-kept self-custody sleeve. More context: View quoted note β†’

Replies (7)

Bitcoiners could stop the advancement of the surveillance state by putting just 10% of their holdings into fuck you money aka Monero. It would make people learn about digital cash and why privacy is a necessary prerequisite for a functional society. Greedy Bitcoiners that signed up for a couple percentage more fiat denominated bucks while calling Monero a shitcoin ignoring it completly never signed up for freedom.
You are ignoring the point that for the people at the very top, it's not about making as much money as possible because they print the money. If you want some more context, look at the posts at the bottom of this note: View quoted note β†’ To be more concrete, you're ignoring the point that permissionless technology β‰  permissionless adoption. View quoted note β†’
in the words of my 98 year old great aunt, "you worry too much". i'm sorry this is a low IQ response to your research. but coming from someone who worries a lot... you're worrying too much.
If 18 blocks can just be rolled back it means its completely centralised. Its a shitcoin. It is fuckyoumoneyindeedz, but YOU are the one being fucked. Go study bitcoin, put in your 100 hours and then come back. image
It's very possible that you are right, mate. I just have put a lot of effort into acquiring the resources I've acquired and would like to keep them.
good point. i was just rolling out of bed and vision was blurry. going to go have another read, because looks like there's a lot of interesting info in there. i was shocked to see someone reducing their bitcoin exposure to 15% and not shy to say so on Nostr! provocative!
↑