@brezscales @SebikTom Make the food then. Put in the work from lessons they taught you growing up
No matter how old you are, handmade gifts are cherished much longer than anything materialistic
@HexyBastard@Ibeatmyrobots Straight up victimizing yourself without even being mentioned lol
You need to go outside and build some confidence @HexyBastard
Richard Heart’s legal victory against the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on February 28, 2025, isn’t about him—or his behavior—at all. Whether you admire his flamboyant persona or question his lavish spending, those details are beside the point. This win, secured under U.S. District Judge Carol Bagley Amon’s decisive ruling, transcends Richard Heart as an individual and stands as the most monumental legal triumph in the history of the cryptocurrency industry. It’s not a referendum on his actions; it’s a resounding affirmation of what blockchain technology truly is: borderless, decentralized, and beyond the reach of traditional regulatory frameworks.
The SEC’s case against Heart—claiming he raised over $1 billion through unregistered securities via HEX, PulseChain, and PulseX, and allegedly misused $12.1 million of investor funds—crumbled when Judge Amon dismissed it entirely. Her ruling didn’t hinge on Heart’s personal conduct but on a fundamental truth: blockchain operates on a global stage, unbound by the jurisdictional limits of U.S. securities laws. The SEC couldn’t prove that Heart specifically targeted U.S. investors or that his projects’ activities fell under domestic regulation. More strikingly, the court rejected the SEC’s audacious attempt to sue the open-source software itself, cementing a precedent that decentralized technology isn’t a legal entity—it’s a revolutionary tool, akin to free speech in code.
This distinction is what makes Heart’s win seismic. In roughly 95% of prior SEC actions against crypto entities, outcomes have been predictable: settlements with fines or cases dropped outright. Heart’s case shattered that mold—not because of his defiance, but because it exposed the SEC’s overreach into a domain it doesn’t fully grasp. Blockchain’s essence lies in its decentralization, its ability to transcend borders and operate without centralized control. Judge Amon’s ruling recognized this, affirming that HEX, PulseChain, and PulseX aren’t securities in the traditional sense—they’re manifestations of a global, permissionless system that defies antiquated regulatory categories.
The implications stretch far beyond Heart’s projects. This victory signals to the crypto industry that blockchain’s core attributes—its borderless nature and decentralized structure—can withstand regulatory assaults. It’s not about whether Heart bought luxury cars or a giant diamond; it’s about the fact that the SEC’s framework doesn’t fit a technology designed to exist everywhere and nowhere at once. As Heart himself noted, “Today’s decision in favor of a cryptocurrency founder and his projects over the SEC brings welcome relief and opportunity to all cryptocurrencies.” The market agreed, with HEX spiking over 34% and PulseChain and PulseX tokens rallying post-ruling.
This isn’t a personal vindication—it’s a structural one. The dismissal of the SEC’s case marks a turning point, proving that the fight for blockchain’s legitimacy isn’t about any one figure’s behavior, good or bad. It’s about protecting a decentralized future from regulators clinging to centralized paradigms. Richard Heart’s win, stripped of personal fanfare, is the crypto industry’s defining legal milestone, a testamentpotential.
**TL;DR:**
Richard Heart’s SEC case dismissal on February 28, 2025, is the crypto industry’s biggest legal win ever—not because of his behavior (which doesn’t matter), but because it proves block to blockchain’s untouchable essence and a blueprint for its unbound chain’s borderless, decentralized nature trumps U.S. regulatory overreach. Judge Amon’s ruling affirms open-source tech isn’t a security, setting a game-changing precedent for all cryptocurrencies.
Ayy welcome to becoming Wolverine
Make sure you dilute the 5mg of powder in the vial with 1ml of deionized or bacteriostatic water (found in any pharmacy) and not regular water
Inject subcutaneously about two inches east or west of your belly button into a chonky piece of your tummy 0.2ml once daily
In some cases, you can inject locally (knee/bicep) but I recommend going to a doctor to show you exactly where to inject to avoid potential nerve damage
Good luck!
.@realDonaldTrump Awesome Mr. President! SEC, FBI, DOJ, etc, Your president just ordered you to stop the persecution. So you should. He just signed an executive order to protect and promote our ability to develop and deploy code, mine and validate, transact, know our keys, "without persecution." I feel like this order was written to directly benefit me and my people. I pray those that have been doing the persecuting feel the same way, so the benefits are realized.
I'm a leader in this crucial industry: "The digital asset industry plays a crucial role in innovation and economic development in the United States, as well as our Nation’s international leadership."
I'm a hero of promoting the "development and deployment of software:, promoting "participation in mining and validation", promoting transaction on blockchain software. No one promotes knowing your keys (which some call "self-custody.") more than I. No one's projects emphasize running your own code on your own computer, with no middlemen, more than mine.
It would be great to drop a note to the various persecuted people that the status of your investigation or case has changed, so they can enjoy the relief the president issued an executive order to create.
He also banned CBDC's (central bank digital currencies) in the USA, and wants to "protect and promote fair and open access to banking" for law abiding people and projects. Sweet.
I'm not a lawyer, I'm guessing what this means. If the people doing the persecuting didn't think they were persecuting, (which is a different word than prosecuting.) Then someone is going to have to force them to understand that what they're doing is persecution and make them stop, or they'll probably feel their actions aren't affected by this order? Who might one contact to ask the persecution stop?
The President obviously knows that persecution is happening. It's possible some of you doing the persecuting are actually reading this very post. Your president ordered you to stop the persecution. So you must.
Your President understands the importance of what I'm doing, and since you understand it now too, you'll feel great to let us free to make the world a better place.