<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>L0laL33tz wrote</title><author_name>L0laL33tz (npub1mz…q6mak)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1mznweuxrjm423au6gjtlaxmhmjthvv69ru72t335ugyxtygkv3as8q6mak</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>So the Trump&#39;s &#39;crypto* EO is out, and I&#39;m seeing lots of weak bitches cry that its a shitcoin reserve. &#xA;&#xA;Given the fact that the proposed digital assets stockpile would possibly be built on *seized* coins, let me give you a quick introduction to forfeiture law, and why crying for daddy to please please make its pile of flying horseshit &#34;bitcoin only&#34; *literally* the most retarded thing you could be wishing for, ever.&#xA;&#xA;Forfeiture law – or civil asset forfeiture, to be precise – is this fun little game the government plays in which it does not have to accuse you of a crime to confiscate your property.&#xA;&#xA;Instead of accusing you of a crime, the Government claims that the asset itself has facilitated a crime, and can therefore be seized by the Government.&#xA;&#xA;In civil asset forfeiture, there is no innocent until proven guilty. To get your property back, *you* have to prove that the Government is wrong – which turns out pretty complicated seeing how its impossible to prove a negative.&#xA;&#xA;Civil asset forfeiture results in cases that are not filed against a person, but filed against the property itself. This results in fun little cases like US vs. Binance Account XYZ, or US vs. 123 Wilmington Drive. &#xA;&#xA;To extend this idea to Bitcoin, in a civil forfeiture case, the US Government is in theory able to seize *any bitcoin* that has *ever* come out of a criminal transaction.&#xA;&#xA;Made some bitcoin for selling a service? Bought some bitcoin on a P2P exchange? Unless you checked that the UTXO you received has never touched a criminal transaction in its entire history, your coins can be confiscated, and there&#39;s pretty much nothing you can do about it.&#xA;&#xA;As Cato Institute points out in its piece on civil forfeiture reform, forfeiture law is routinely misused to enrich the Government – Philadelphia, for example, has seized over 1000 homes, over 3000 vehicles, and over $44M in cash over an 11 year period. In 2010, the city tried to seize *an entire fucking house* because a woman&#39;s grandson sold less than $200 of weed out of the basement.&#xA;&#xA;If you think that taxes are bad, civil asset forfeiture is straight up evil.&#xA;&#xA;It doesn&#39;t matter whether you participated in a crime. It doesn&#39;t matter whether you know that someone else participated in a crime. If it involved your property, even if said property was fully legally acquired, the Government will come and take it.&#xA;&#xA;Civil asset forfeiture is the most insane Government funding technique that is out there, and you most definitely do not want this declared as a strategic means to pump the Government&#39;s bitcoin bags.&#xA;&#xA;You are *literally* asking the Government to steal your coins with a practice that *every* libertarian advocate wants to see abolished.</html></oembed>