Search Results
ID: FqnCU+xy/biz/60659729#60676327
7/23/2025, 1:36:53 AM
>>60673297
>regulators
The whims of regulators are not something that should be able to negatively impact the Monero ecosystem and economy.
>You can do this with cash as well and yet everyone is allowed to hold cash.
Cash is legal tender. Cash spending stimulates the economy. Cash is how tax obligations to the State are settled. Cash makes the world go round.
If Monero disappeared tomorrow hardly anybody outside our circles would notice or care.
>*Tor has entered the chat*
I2P>Tor
>Can't speak for the other anon, but sophisticated criminals will definitely be able to do this if if means they can launder their funds more efficiently.
Sure, but we're talking about the dynamics of unsophisticated everyday normies here.
>However, it's important to note that these guys have bills due in fiat to pay in the white market, so it's safe to assume that somebody is going to figure out how to get their xmr into fiat as efficiently as possible. Whether it's atomic swaps, a dex, or some other thing is anyone's guess, but if they can't then they won't have any reason to provide any more of their liquidity then they already have.
Of course, but there's quite a difference in needing to cash out a few hundred or few thousand USD you could afford to lose to pay some bills vs needing to cash out tens or hundreds of thousands in life savings you simply musn't lose, the logistics and risks involved become evermore onerous the higher the figure.
Shit, for smaller amounts you don't even need a DEX, just buy some bullion or consumer electronics and flip directly for cash. That's been SOP for darknet vendors since forever.
But expecting typically risk-averse normies to ape into an unregulated cryptocurrency that's hated by governments and jump through all these hoops with all these risks hovering over their heads when much safer and well-regulated tradfi saving options are available to them is DE-LU-SIO-NAL.
The moonfags here don't want to admit it but its glaringly obvious.
>regulators
The whims of regulators are not something that should be able to negatively impact the Monero ecosystem and economy.
>You can do this with cash as well and yet everyone is allowed to hold cash.
Cash is legal tender. Cash spending stimulates the economy. Cash is how tax obligations to the State are settled. Cash makes the world go round.
If Monero disappeared tomorrow hardly anybody outside our circles would notice or care.
>*Tor has entered the chat*
I2P>Tor
>Can't speak for the other anon, but sophisticated criminals will definitely be able to do this if if means they can launder their funds more efficiently.
Sure, but we're talking about the dynamics of unsophisticated everyday normies here.
>However, it's important to note that these guys have bills due in fiat to pay in the white market, so it's safe to assume that somebody is going to figure out how to get their xmr into fiat as efficiently as possible. Whether it's atomic swaps, a dex, or some other thing is anyone's guess, but if they can't then they won't have any reason to provide any more of their liquidity then they already have.
Of course, but there's quite a difference in needing to cash out a few hundred or few thousand USD you could afford to lose to pay some bills vs needing to cash out tens or hundreds of thousands in life savings you simply musn't lose, the logistics and risks involved become evermore onerous the higher the figure.
Shit, for smaller amounts you don't even need a DEX, just buy some bullion or consumer electronics and flip directly for cash. That's been SOP for darknet vendors since forever.
But expecting typically risk-averse normies to ape into an unregulated cryptocurrency that's hated by governments and jump through all these hoops with all these risks hovering over their heads when much safer and well-regulated tradfi saving options are available to them is DE-LU-SIO-NAL.
The moonfags here don't want to admit it but its glaringly obvious.
Page 1