Bitcoin is being crushed between two powerful forces: a regulatory state determined to surveil every transaction, and a financial industry racing to assimilate its technology while neutering its purpose.
On *What Bitcoin Did*, Lauren Rodriguez detailed the FBI raid on her husband for building Samurai Wallet, a non-custodial service FinCEN had explicitly said was not a regulated money transmitter. Prosecutors charged him anyway, setting a precedent that privacy-focused developers can be targeted regardless of legal clarity.
This enforcement is selective. On *Bitcoin And*, David Bennett contrasted the SEC letting a $257 million alleged scammer off the hook with the relentless prosecution of Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm. The goal isn't justice but control. Canada revoked 47 crypto business licenses, and Australian banks block transfers even as crypto payment adoption doubles, all under the banner of fighting money laundering that Chainalysis data shows is statistically trivial.
Meanwhile, legacy finance is absorbing the rails. Mastercard is acquiring stablecoin platform BVNK, grafting high-speed crypto payments onto its global network. Square is enabling Lightning payments for millions of merchants, but the experience remains clunky and merchant awareness nonexistent without grassroots evangelism. The adoption is passive and designed to settle in dollars.
The political winds may be shifting. On *Citadel Dispatch*, Zach Shapiro predicted a rapid replacement of anti-Bitcoin officials in a new Trump administration, moving from an "all-out attack" to a cabinet that understands Bitcoin. Yet the legislative battlefield is more complex.
According to David Zell on *TFTC*, the crypto lobby - led by Coinbase, Ripple, and A16Z - has deliberately reshuffled Congressional priorities. Goals like a strategic Bitcoin reserve and tax reform to treat Bitcoin as money have been deprioritized in favor of market structure bills that benefit token trading and stablecoins. Bitcoin's use as currency is being sacrificed for the crypto casino.
The community itself is fracturing. On *Ungovernable Misfits*, veteran journalists described a shift from technical debate to conspiracy theories and infighting, pushing traditional reporters to the margins. The energy needed to defend peer-to-peer tools is dissipating into cultural warfare.
The result is a system assimilating what it can control and criminalizing what it can't. The fight for Bitcoin's soul is no longer against regulators alone, but against the financial incumbents and industry lobbyists claiming to represent it.
Zach Shapiro, Citadel Dispatch:
- If you look at the way that the Biden Administration looked at Bitcoin and crypto at large, multiple parts of the government seemed to be on all-out attack.
- Going from that to having a president that bought burgers over the Lightning Network at PubKey, that’s appointing not just pro-Bitcoin people but people that understand and hold Bitcoin into really key roles up to the cabinet level, that’s really night and day.





