JPMorgan Chase parent company is the second most penalized financial institution with close to $40 Billion in fines for 272 violations since 2000.
Jamie Dimon is in no position to criticize Bitcoin with this sort of track record. They should start the hearing with these stats.
Democrats against crypto is the biggest self-own.
20% of American adults own crypto.
And more democrats own crypto than republicans.
We need more politicians like @RitchieTorres who'll push back against the Elizabeth Warren party line.
1/11 This, my friends, is what a "fed sympathizer/apologist" looks like... a thread. So, despite the most reckless Fed (J. Powell's Fed) in U.S. history, evidenced by the explosion in wealth inequality under J. Powell's watch (i.e., for the 1st TIME EVER, under J. Powell, the...
Regarding the SEC complaint against us today, we're proud to represent the industry in court to finally get some clarity around crypto rules.
Remember:
1. The SEC reviewed our business and allowed us to become a public company in 2021.
2. There is no path to "come in and register" - we tried, repeatedly - so we don't list securities. We reject the vast majority of assets we review.
3. The SEC and CFTC have made conflicting statements, and don't even agree on what is a security and what is a commodity.
4. This is why the US congress is introducing new legislation to fix the situation, and the rest of the world is moving to put clear rules in place to support this technology.
Instead of publishing a clear rule book, the SEC has taken a regulation by enforcement approach that is harming America. So if we need to avail ourselves of the courts to get clarity, so be it.
Btw, in case itโs not obvious, the Coinbase suit is very different from others out there โ the complaint filed against us is exclusively focused on what is or is not a security. And we are confident in our facts and the law.
We'll get the job done. In the meantime, let's all keep moving forward and building as an industry. America will get this right in the end.
@42MacroAware f(t) = inflation at time t
f'(t) = rate of change of inflation
f''(t) = rate of change of f'(t), i.e. inflation acceleration
f'''(t) = ?
Are you really looking at the 3rd derivative? The rate of change of the acceleration of inflation?