03-22-2026Price:

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Bitcoin faces regulatory capture from banks and its own lobby

Sunday, March 22, 2026 · from 6 podcasts, 9 episodes
  • Prosecutors target privacy wallet developers despite clear FinCEN guidance, signaling a legal war on peer-to-peer tools.
  • Banks and major payment processors are co-opting crypto rails while choking adoption through payment blocks and selective licensing crackdowns.
  • The cryptocurrency industry lobby is deprioritizing Bitcoin's monetary status to focus on regulatory frameworks that benefit token trading.

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.

Entities Mentioned

A16ZCompany
BasecampProduct
BVNKCompany
ChainalysisCompany
CoinbaseCompany
FATFConcept
KalshiCompany
Lightning NetworkProtocol
Samurai WalletConcept
SquareCompany
WhirlpoolConcept

Source Intelligence

What each podcast actually said

5 Years In Prison For Building A Bitcoin Wallet | Lauren RodriguezMar 20

  • The founders of non-custodial Bitcoin wallet Samurai Wallet were charged with money laundering by the Southern District of New York despite FinCEN explicitly stating their service was not a regulated money transmitter.
  • Lauren Rodriguez argues prosecutors moved forward with the case against her husband knowing FinCEN's guidance, revealing a strategy based on winning convictions rather than truth or justice.
  • Rodriguez describes FBI agents conducting an armed pre-dawn raid on their Pittsburgh cottage, pointing lasers at them before handcuffing them and searching the property.
  • The Samurai Wallet case establishes a legal precedent that developers of privacy-focused Bitcoin tools can face federal prosecution even when operating non-custodial services.
  • Rodriguez warns the war on crypto is not over, signaling that building privacy-preserving tools with clear regulatory guidance can still lead to raids and prison sentences.
  • FinCEN had maintained clear guidance since 2013 that non-custodial wallet services do not qualify as money transmitters, a position it reaffirmed to prosecutors six months before the indictment.

Also from this episode:

Privacy (1)
  • Samurai Wallet operated for nearly a decade on the Google Play Store without issue before the raid, offering privacy features like integrated Tor and a CoinJoin implementation called Whirlpool.

Canadian's Canadia | Bitcoin NewsMar 19

  • Canada's financial regulator FINTRAC has revoked 47 money service business licenses from crypto firms as part of a rapid enforcement wave, with government officials vowing continued monitoring and new measures targeting virtual currency businesses.
  • The host of Bitcoin And argues the regulatory crackdown under AML pretexts is not primarily about crime, but about establishing state surveillance and tax authority over all digital commerce.
  • Citing Chainalysis data showing less than 1% of crypto transactions are illicit, the host contrasts that with FATF estimates that 2-5% of global GDP is laundered through traditional finance, questioning the singular focus on crypto.
  • The host argues the expansion of AML and KYC obligations to social media platforms and Discord servers reveals a broader goal of total transactional visibility, not just targeting criminal enterprises.
  • The episode frames the simultaneous regulatory crackdown and corporate layoffs as two aspects of a system attempting to contain and co-opt a financial technology it fundamentally fears.

Also from this episode:

Markets (2)
  • Crypto.com cut 12% of its staff in what its CEO framed as an enterprise-wide pivot to AI, which the host interprets as a desperate narrative shift following the Bitcoin market downturn.
  • The host identifies a pattern where failing crypto companies rebrand to the hottest narrative, like AI, mirroring past pivots to Bitcoin mining or corporate treasury strategies during previous market cycles.

In A Bad Moody's | Economic NewsMar 18

  • David Bennett argues that Australian banks are refining their crypto opposition by analyzing user behavior, not just transaction size, maintaining a decade-long restrictive posture due to unclear regulation.
  • Arizona Attorney General Chris Mays filed 20 misdemeanor criminal charges against prediction market Kalshi, calling it an illegal gambling operation that bets on elections.
  • David Bennett noted the Kalshi charges are misdemeanors, a surprisingly low severity for a firm valued at $11 billion and seeking a $20 billion valuation while facing lawsuits in multiple states.
  • The BETS OFF bill introduced by Rep. Greg Casar and Sen. Chris Murphy seeks to ban betting on sensitive government operations, with Murphy speculating bets on a U.S.-Israel war with Iran likely came from insiders.
  • David Bennett closed by questioning whether regulators' distinction between gambling and financial innovation is fair or simply serves to block a new form of market-driven information.

Also from this episode:

Adoption (2)
  • A survey of 2,000 Australians shows crypto payment usage doubled from 6% to 12% in one year, but nearly 30% of investors report banks delaying or rejecting transfers to exchanges.
  • Bennett suggests Australia's crypto adoption survey likely conflates Bitcoin with stablecoins, muddying the true picture of decentralized currency usage versus fiat-based payments.
Politics (1)
  • Senator Chris Murphy argued the core fear is that national security decisions in the Situation Room could be driven by officials with hundreds of thousands of dollars riding on the outcome.

Covert Conjugation | Bitcoin NewsMar 17

  • Argentine regulators ordered the blocking of prediction market Polymarket, framing it as unlicensed gambling accessible to minors.
  • David Bennett argues the gambling license rationale is a pretext, with the state's real motive being to secure a revenue share from an activity it cannot prevent.
  • A 2024 U.S. federal ruling held that event contracts are not inherently gambling, but state regulators disagree, a conflict former CFTC chair Caroline Pham predicts is headed to the Supreme Court.
  • Both stories represent forms of assimilation, according to the show's thesis: legacy finance is assimilating crypto rails for utility, while regulators are trying to assimilate disruptive markets into taxable, controllable frameworks.

Also from this episode:

Stablecoins (1)
  • Mastercard is acquiring stablecoin platform BVNK for $1.8 billion, aiming to directly integrate its crypto payment network onto Mastercard's global financial rails.
Adoption (2)
  • David Bennett compares Mastercard's integration of BVNK to a fungal mycelium network, where a single connection point can fuse two massive ecosystems for instant distribution.
  • The acquisition signals a pivot, where major financial institutions now view tokenized money movement as inevitable core infrastructure rather than a speculative sideshow.

Milei's Malaise | Bitcoin NewsMar 16

  • The SEC dropped its entire case with prejudice against BitClout founder Nader Al-Naji, who was accused of a $257 million scam, citing the evolving crypto regulatory landscape as the reason.
  • Bitcoin And host David Bennett calls the SEC's dismissal of Al-Naji's case a tactical retreat that spotlights selective enforcement, allowing an accused scammer to walk free while prosecuting privacy tool developers like Tornado Cash's Roman Storm.
  • The SEC cautioned that dropping the Al-Naji case does not set a precedent for other crypto enforcement actions, a move Bennett views as highlighting the regulator's inconsistent application of its own rules.
  • HIVE attributed its strategic pivot away from Sweden to the 'misapplication of existing tax rules' by local authorities, which made its ASIC mining business economically unviable.
  • The HIVE relocation highlights a pressure point where nations can squeeze Bitcoin mining through regulatory harassment while openly welcoming the more energy-intensive AI industry.

Also from this episode:

Mining (1)
  • Public Bitcoin miner HIVE is phasing down operations in Sweden and shifting that capacity to build AI data centers in Canada, citing hostile local tax enforcement and operational uncertainty.
Energy (1)
  • David Bennett points out the hypocrisy in environmental groups remaining silent on AI's massive power consumption after years of campaigning against Bitcoin's energy use.

Bitcoin's Branding Problem, AI's Impact on Open Source, Can Spiral's Playbook Work for AI?Mar 18

  • Square has enabled Bitcoin Lightning payments as a default option for a large portion of its 4 million merchants, moving from a manual to a passive opt-in model.
  • Steve notes the primary barrier to adoption is now merchant education and awareness, not just technical enablement, as most won't know they accept Bitcoin or can save on processing fees.
  • Merchants with the feature enabled will not be automatically listed on Bitcoin directory services like BTC Map, requiring advocates to inform them and manually add them.
  • The default settlement for merchants accepting Lightning payments through Square will almost certainly be in dollars, not Bitcoin.
  • The envisioned end-state is a single QR code where the customer chooses the Bitcoin payment rail unilaterally and the merchant receives dollars, a seamless flow that does not yet exist.

Also from this episode:

Adoption (2)
  • Steve from Presidio Bitcoin Jam argues the user experience remains clunky, as customers likely need to request a separate Lightning invoice QR instead of using the standard Cash App Pay code.
  • The hosts argue that real adoption will still depend on a 'small, rabid community' of Bitcoiners evangelizing at the point of sale to build foundational usage.

St. Patrick's Day Slop | The Confab 29: Rod and DickMar 18

  • Journalists are now operating in survival mode due to regulatory creep and community infighting, rather than focusing on reporting.

Also from this episode:

Media (3)
  • Bitcoin journalism is collapsing as the space shifts from technical reporting to tribal warfare centered on political conspiracies and personal attacks, according to veteran journalists Rod Palmer and Richard Greaser.
  • Rod Palmer described leaving the UK after state harassment over social media posts, characterizing the experience as an attack by the state's 'many arms and tentacles'.
  • Traditional journalists are being marginalized as Bitcoin media becomes dominated by activists and ideologues enforcing ideological conformity.
Society (3)
  • Richard Greaser observed that conspiracy theories which Americans debated fifteen years ago are now proliferating within the Bitcoin community.
  • The community's focus has moved from technical debates like Lightning adoption or protocol upgrades to cultural purity tests and political theories.
  • The central question has become whether Bitcoin's cultural revolution can survive its own success, shifting the narrative away from price or technology.

CD195: VEXL - P2P NO KYC BITCOINMar 16

  • Zach Shapiro says the Trump administration is poised to rapidly replace key Biden-era, anti-Bitcoin officials at the SEC, IRS, DOJ, and Treasury with a pro-Bitcoin cabinet.
  • According to Shapiro, the executive branch shift will move from a posture of attacking developers and non-custodial tools to one led by a president who has used Bitcoin's Lightning Network.
  • Shapiro cites Gary Gensler's hostile ETF approval, SAB 121 blocking banks, and the IRS's expanded broker definition as hallmarks of the Biden administration's regulatory assault.
  • Shapiro argues the primary policy battlefield will shift from the executive branch to Congress, where Bitcoin legislation must now compete with stablecoin and market structure bills favored by traditional finance and crypto VCs.
  • Shapiro contends that the enduring legal battles for peer-to-peer rights will be fought in the judiciary through his litigation fund, targeting lifetime-appointed judges insulated from political shifts.

Also from this episode:

Adoption (1)
  • Zach Shapiro claims Wall Street's embrace of Bitcoin via ETFs has reduced career risk for supporters and brought mainstream legitimacy, which can act as an on-ramp to the network and potentially to self-custody.

#727: Orange Pilling The Deep State with David ZellMar 16

  • David Zell argues the cryptocurrency industry lobby, led by Coinbase and backed by Ripple and A16Z, is spending its political capital on regulatory frameworks for token trading rather than on Bitcoin-focused tax reforms.
  • Zell claims the lobby successfully reshuffled the legislative priorities of Bitcoin-friendly lawmakers like Senator Cynthia Lummis, pushing for token market structure and stablecoin regulation to take precedence over making Bitcoin usable as currency.
  • A key Bitcoin-specific policy being sidelined, according to Zell, is the de minimis tax exemption, which would treat small Bitcoin transactions as money and remove a barrier to its use as everyday currency.
  • Zell notes that while executives like Coinbase's Brian Armstrong speak in favor of such tax reform, there is little evidence of the crypto lobby spending political capital to advance it, with Coinbase having declined to sign an industry letter supporting the exemption last year.
  • Zell sees the incentive structure as clear, arguing that market structure regulation benefits crypto businesses more directly than removing transaction taxes for Bitcoin users.

Also from this episode:

Adoption (2)
  • The fundamental misalignment, per Zell, is between Bitcoin's monetary use case and the crypto industry's commercial focus on what he calls the 'token casino' and stablecoin yield.
  • The lesson for Bitcoin advocates from this episode, according to Zell, is that political influence for Bitcoin's monetary priorities must be actively defended and cannot be assumed, even from within the broader digital asset industry.