@TheDudeWisdom@jeremykauffman could argue that reliance on tech, ai, and automation will reduce human nature to rely on communism over liberty and self reliance. one thing for sure is this timeline is weird and im here for it.
@zordShadowfang@JudiciaryGOP@Jim_Jordan the biden doj sat on the files and didnt share them..
at least we have most of the files.
cases could still come about
@Luciano83348044@WhiteHouse Well you messed up or made more because it's not possible.
No kids? Not married? Not a senior?
You likely just fall into the category of young and successful or middle aged forever lonely.
Enjoy
@damienslash I once was denied entry because i was high on cocaine and I was being disrespectful to the process apparently.
Maybe you should respect your simulated life a bit more, take care of yourself, and try again.
I know you a troll, but this is my story lmao
For the record.
Jamie Dimon says he wants a “level playing field” for stablecoins. What he really wants is to make sure nobody can offer you a better deal on your own money than tradtional banks can. The president is right to call the banks out on this.
We’ve seen this before. In the 1970s, money market funds started paying real yields while banks were locked under deposit caps. Banks cried “unfair” and “unsafe,” lobbied furiously, and lost. Policymakers chose competition over protection; savers got paid, and banks had to adapt instead of suffocating the threat.
Today’s script is the same, just with better technology. Stablecoin issuers now operate under licensing, 1:1 high‑quality reserves, liquidity and risk rules, audits and strict AML standards. This is not the Wild West. Yet Dimon still talks as if they exist with “no reserves, no compliance, no oversight.” He’s not describing reality; he’s describing a story that justifies shutting down a rival funding system.
The Clarity Act is the real battlefield. On paper, it’s about integrating crypto into U.S. market structure. In practice, the big banks are fighting to ensure that anything that looks like a deposit with yield must either become a bank product or be regulated into irrelevance. “Level playing field” in their vocabulary means: everyone wears the bank straitjacket, or no one plays.
Why? Because yield‑bearing stablecoins blow up the quiet cartel behind record profits. Banks live on deposits that pay close to nothing even when risk‑free rates are high. They earn a clean spread and interest on balances parked at the Fed, while passing little of it through. Savers get crumbs; banks get the margin; inertia does the rest. A credible, regulated stablecoin that passes through money‑market yields detonates that racket: with a few clicks, your cash can leave the cartel.
The president’s critique goes straight at this arrangement: Americans should “earn more money on their money,” and banks should not be allowed to undermine laws designed to make that possible or to stall a market‑structure bill so the whole “powerful Crypto Agenda” decamps overseas. He’s not attacking banking; he’s attacking a model that treats low‑yield deposits as an entitlement and regulation as a weapon.
Crypto‑native firms, for all their flaws, behave like they live in a real market: they build new instruments, disclose, and pay up to attract capital. The banks build talking points and hire lobbyists. Stablecoins don’t just threaten their funding; they threaten their chokehold on payment rails and transaction data.
Call this debate what it is: not a fight over “safety,” but a fight over whether a protected deposit cartel gets veto power over technologies that finally let savers earn something closer to the risk‑free rate. In the 1970s, policymakers chose competition.
In the 1970s, banks were forced to stop hiding behind regulation and compete. If Jamie Dimon wants a level playing field, he should stop complaining and start doing the same.
@VincentOshana and the sheriff crying has me thinking he is operating scared.
they are cleaning house.
either way the world is fucked up enough that all of this is totally possible and likely.
be careful with @coinbase predictions - not paying out and obfuscating the closing price.
Trying to receive support @CoinbaseSupport and you guys have effectively built a loop that is designed to tire out and frustrate your users.
I cant make a complaint without a support ticket, cant get a support ticket without receiving an email. Cant receive an email without making a support ticket.
e4e54277-fe7a-5900-bcfd-024b1a4e1044 fix it