yourwifes3rdboyfrend

yourwifes3rdboyfrend t1_je4yutp wrote

I now kinda wanna see one of you crazy bastards turn one of these into a functional mechanical keyboard, i know youd find a way, the real challenge would be to find a way to keep the tactile push in feel of the pop it while still having thock.

27

yourwifes3rdboyfrend t1_ivksymc wrote

You cant really have it both ways, you can't not recognize any crypto as a currency, force all action policing through the standard enforcement agiences by declaring it a security, and then have those same agencies use currency laws to skirt the law in their favor when a person holding said securities happens to be bad. Securities are securities, doesn't matter who sells em, the purchaser is owed the lions share, and I say this because in cases in crypto where someone stole your crypto, they use the bitcoin is a security challenge in order to get it back to you, you take that away and international law doesn't have to investigate shit, I admit this is one of the slipriest fucking slopes in history, but last I checked Europe actually gets to vote on individual issues like this, and until yall put forth a referendum on what crypto actually is truly classified as in europe, and vote on that shit, I believe this was the right call

1

yourwifes3rdboyfrend t1_ivkjnpu wrote

Yeah that's the conundrum, you can't really report the police to the police, you have to go to the local media, of you get lucky enough it gets picked up by a major outlet and you get a leg to stand on leverage wise, like this.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicksibilla/2021/09/13/lawsuit-texas-cops-use-cut-and-paste-allegations-to-seize-couples-life-savings/

But not every story makes it national, so a lot of people are just forced to eat it, and even when you do make it national the tactic has been to bounce you from court to court refusing to make a ruling. Hell tyson timbs had to take his lawsuit to the Supreme Court and just got his truck back, a $45000 land rover that he bought with the inheritance he got when his dad died, But yeah a few months later he fell off the wagon, HARD! And at his lowest moment, for 225 dollars worth of drugs they threw him in jail gave him probabtion and house arrest, a 1200 dollar fine, but they also stole his brand new truck, the one he refused to sell at his worst because it was all he had left of his dad, and he like had a receipt, with banking transfers, ya know the kind you would get on a purchase like that because you don't want beef with the irs, and they just turned around and said nope, trucks guilty. That started in 2012

2

yourwifes3rdboyfrend t1_ivjzutl wrote

Weirdly as an american this makes sense to me, if your countries laws of civil asset forfeiture includes speculative assets, and i dont believe ours do, yet, if you sell said speculative assets for a profit you should turn the rest back even if they were guilty, cause if you don't it incentivesis bad actors in government and law enforcement to steal everything they can. It's a serious problem here down south, small town sherifs will pull you over and claim any large amount as drug money, take that money, and your car, because they don't charge you with a crime, your car is charged with a crime, and then your just fucked as the da will tell you he's not giving a trial to a car, and when you allow that to go on long enough you get shit like the cash for kids scandal, it flies in the face of everything I believe too, but it's the correct action, law must only be motivated by law, never for profit.

24