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Topic: [20-02-2020] Attorney General Says Banks Can’t Refuse Services To Crypto Firms (Read 257 times)

full member
Activity: 2142
Merit: 183
It is foolish to forbid the use of anything solely on the grounds that it can be used to the detriment of other people. Technological progress is irreversible, it is impossible to stop it only by prohibitions. This also applies to cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency should be reasonably regulated by states in terms of the conditions for its circulation within each state.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
Lol... I wasn't trying to get high legally TBH... Where I am located currently there are plenty of ways to get high legally... Stuff grows in public and nobody gives a shit... My routine is kinda all over the place as @NeuroticFish mentioned in the long run it affects your sleep/awake system... I have been a night owl for some years now, I was trying to fix my damn routine... I pulled out a day without sleep then one thing led to another and we were at 3 days just like that. Pulled a 24-hour gaming session over the weekend with my boys without taking a break but I kept my self hydrated so there were plenty of trips to the toilet in between... I drink a shit load of water each day around 7-9 Liters and I'm not even exaggerating, So I guess that's one of the reasons I'm still breathing... But unfortunately, that 20-hour sleep session has done nothing to fix my routine... smdh. So yeah I wouldn't recommend staying up like that, it's not worth it...
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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You should not deprive you from sleep this much. The worse thing it could happen on the forum would be people thinking that you are trolling. But in the real life you can get into serious trouble.

It's free and legal high. I was watching Cape Fear with someone after not having slept for a few days. I had to be talked out of calling the police because I thought it was happening in real time in front of me.

From what I see it takes only the bad (imho) parts of getting high. Doesn't worth it. And although this doesn't cause addiction, it can mess up the whole internal day/night awake/asleep system quite badly for long term.
legendary
Activity: 2422
Merit: 1451
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
I doubt any such case could become reality in the US where it matters most.

Unless you mean it matters to you personally because it would benefit you, this is another common preconceived bias that isn't accurate.  

Contrary to popular belief, no, the US is not the centre of the known universe.  If you think one geographical region "matters" more than another, you probably need to check your privilege.
I'm in Greece so I have no benefit over accepting that the U.S. is the biggest economy in the world. Cheesy It's simply a fact that most blockchain-related enterprises also have their parent organizations doing most of their business in the U.S. also. I'd argue that development of the crypto space is delayed worldwide due to how slow regulation in the world's biggest economy takes is enacted.
legendary
Activity: 3948
Merit: 3191
Leave no FUD unchallenged
I doubt any such case could become reality in the US where it matters most.

Unless you mean it matters to you personally because it would benefit you, this is another common preconceived bias that isn't accurate. 

Contrary to popular belief, no, the US is not the centre of the known universe.  If you think one geographical region "matters" more than another, you probably need to check your privilege.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
You should not deprive you from sleep this much. The worse thing it could happen on the forum would be people thinking that you are trolling. But in the real life you can get into serious trouble.

It's free and legal high. I was watching Cape Fear with someone after not having slept for a few days. I had to be talked out of calling the police because I thought it was happening in real time in front of me.
legendary
Activity: 2422
Merit: 1451
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
Worth noting that it's in Israel!

I doubt any such case could become reality in the US where it matters most. First of all it's hard to define such things in federal jurisdiction, but also banks would fight it back for sure. What's more, is that businesses know better to move their banking offshore where they have guarantees their accounts won't be closed down. Fur such a case to even be brought to court, somebody would have to sue at fist. But serious creditors are never going to bother as they store funds abroad.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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Maybe that had to do something with me not sleeping for 3 days straight...

You should not deprive you from sleep this much. The worse thing it could happen on the forum would be people thinking that you are trolling. But in the real life you can get into serious trouble.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1492
What were you doing not sleeping for 3 days straight? I hope it did not include some items hehehe. Doing that regularly is a fast way to transform yourself from Smeagol to Gollum.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
I'm gonna backpedal here, I was just not thinking straight I guess... Maybe that had to do something with me not sleeping for 3 days straight... Anyway looking at this conversation with a fresh set of eyes ( literally slept for more than 20 hours ), I can clearly see what you guys are suggesting... Bad people will always find a way to hurt people... Like e.g Automobiles aren't made to plough into people but people with bad intentions have done it, Now we can't ban cars in an area of conflict just to prevent loss of life... it may help people flee when their life is in danger... I can see how Bitcoin or other Cryptos can help people in regions which are in conflict... E.g Moving Cash would be a nightmare when there are checkpoints every 2 blocks while with bitcoin all you need is a pen drive.
legendary
Activity: 3024
Merit: 2148
Quote from: gentlemand
I find that a truly bizarre attitude.

Bizarre? You call the pacifist approach bizarre... Well, I guess we will have to agree to disagree on that one...

Quote from: hatshepsut93
Because usually it's not the case, terrorists get funded by states or wealthy individuals, in this specific case Hamas is mainly funded by Iran and its allies. And it's not like they just send some money to the terrorists, they often supply them directly with goods, weapons, food, etc. Terrorism existed  long before Bitcoin was created, and Bitcoin's emergence didn't change anything.

Well, I believe these all things are accommodated via Black money... So there are mechanisms already in place which "allow" the funding to go undetected... 

@DooMAD I will reply to you in the same manner as @gentlemand. Being a pacifist isn't being perverse... I might be a bit naive with what I have said but I'm not a political person... I'm a simple guy who is fed up with seeing innocent blood spilled each day...

What does pacifism have to do with Bitcoin? You can't stop wars by banning Bitcoin, you can't prevent terrorism by banning Bitcoin, in fact there's no evidence that Bitcoin is used to fund terrorism in any significant amounts. If you start taking freedom away from your own people then the terrorists have already won, because that's exactly the point of terrorism - to provoke some negative reaction from the government to cause more conflict.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18748
Ultimately, the ones who do bad things aren't going to care if their use of crypto is legal or not, so it's not going to deter them either way.
Not only that, but terrorism was around long before bitcoin was, as was the drug trade, human trafficking, money laundering, and all the other things that people say bitcoin is linked to. Furthermore, if suddenly some huge fatal flaw was discovered and bitcoin rendered immediately obsolete, all the things I've just mentioned would carry on regardless. All these things are abhorrent and should be condemned, but they are neither caused by, nor reliant on, bitcoin.

I always refer to this answer by Andreas Antonopoulos whenever points like these are raised: https://youtu.be/7S1rHqz43nQ?t=136
Quote
People ask me "Well, aren't you worried about the fact that you can buy drugs with this money?" As far as I'm concerned, I don't know of any form of money that you can't buy drugs with. More specifically, drugs are the second most traded commodity after food in the world and have been for the last 150,000 years. And if you couldn't buy drugs with your money, I would argue it's not actually money.

So one of the criteria of money is that you can purchase products and services, and if you couldn't purchase the second most traded commodity in the world with them, then it's not really money.

legendary
Activity: 3948
Merit: 3191
Leave no FUD unchallenged
@DooMAD I will reply to you in the same manner as @gentlemand. Being a pacifist isn't being perverse... I might be a bit naive with what I have said but I'm not a political person... I'm a simple guy who is fed up with seeing innocent blood spilled each day...

Fair play to you, then.  I just don't see how depriving everyone access to crypto is particularly helpful to the innocent.  Ultimately, the ones who do bad things aren't going to care if their use of crypto is legal or not, so it's not going to deter them either way.  It's only the law-abiding who would suffer as a result.  Therefore, it may as well be open to everyone.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
Quote from: gentlemand
I find that a truly bizarre attitude.

Bizarre? You call the pacifist approach bizarre... Well, I guess we will have to agree to disagree on that one...

Quote from: hatshepsut93
Because usually it's not the case, terrorists get funded by states or wealthy individuals, in this specific case Hamas is mainly funded by Iran and its allies. And it's not like they just send some money to the terrorists, they often supply them directly with goods, weapons, food, etc. Terrorism existed  long before Bitcoin was created, and Bitcoin's emergence didn't change anything.

Well, I believe these all things are accommodated via Black money... So there are mechanisms already in place which "allow" the funding to go undetected... 

@DooMAD I will reply to you in the same manner as @gentlemand. Being a pacifist isn't being perverse... I might be a bit naive with what I have said but I'm not a political person... I'm a simple guy who is fed up with seeing innocent blood spilled each day...
legendary
Activity: 3948
Merit: 3191
Leave no FUD unchallenged
What are your thoughts?

The overwhelming impression I'm left with is that you're allowing fear and prejudice to warp your perspective.  Bitcoin was designed with no borders in place, so your preference for certain nation states to attempt to restrict access because of your views of the regional politics and violence occurring there is, quite frankly, perverse.
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
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Personally I think it's a dumb move

No. It's not dumb. It's a correct step towards normality, a normality where people or companies have to have the same rights (crypto oriented vs classical, for example).
What is not normal is what happens now, where banks deny to do certain things with your own money.
Banks are not law institutions. They can report the fishy actions to the law institutions and those can take over the problem. That's what I'd call normal.
legendary
Activity: 3024
Merit: 2148
How do you imagine the funding of terrorism is happening? You think regular citizens who sympathize with the terrorists send them some money? Because usually it's not the case, terrorists get funded by states or wealthy individuals, in this specific case Hamas is mainly funded by Iran and its allies. And it's not like they just send some money to the terrorists, they often supply them directly with goods, weapons, food, etc. Terrorism existed  long before Bitcoin was created, and Bitcoin's emergence didn't change anything.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
Anything which will prevent further causalities in the region should be implemented right away and that includes both the sides... I don't like or cheer for conflict, I just don't like the fact that human lives are being treated as dirt while all people care about is making money and promote their shitty agendas...

I find that a truly bizarre attitude. The potential actions of a few hundred people should not be dictating the choices of a few million. There are likely more deaths per ten minutes from the drug trade worldwide that there are per year from terrorism in Israel. Whole countries are not cut off because of it.
hero member
Activity: 536
Merit: 500
Like any functioning form of currency, cryptocurrencies facilitate payments between parties and provide a store of value. Will add value to Banks you know.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
So you reckon an entire nation should be denied this service because a few of its inhabitants might use it for nefarious ends? That's daffy. The same goes for every single country on the entire planet. There are no shortage of terrorists elsewhere and some of them are even WHITE.

Well, I agree with you on the part that there is no shortage of terrorists around the globe but the fact that the region has seen so many casualties on both the sides in the past few years that precautions should be taken, it's like America's gun problem even tho people love owning them but they have been used more in Mass shooting than in self-defence over the years... I would say it's no brainer for me, Anything which will prevent further causalities in the region should be implemented right away and that includes both the sides... I don't like or cheer for conflict, I just don't like the fact that human lives are being treated as dirt while all people care about is making money and promote their shitty agendas...
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1492
They will do what is required of them and create more strict regulations to control the cryptospace. Enforcing those rules effectively will be another problem hehehe.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
So you reckon an entire nation should be denied this service because a few of its inhabitants might use it for nefarious ends? That's daffy. The same goes for every single country on the entire planet. There are no shortage of terrorists elsewhere and some of them are even WHITE.



legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
Quote from: coingape.com
Israel’s Attorney General refutes court’s blanket ban on crypto related transactions in banks and financial institutions. The AG disagrees with the two-year long blanket ban on banks dealing with crypto payments stating that “each case should be handled individually to check for any case of money laundering

Personally I think it's a dumb move, Especially with what goes on in the region... I have to say it can be used to fund the terrorists, it's a no-brainer at this point... What are your thoughts? Do you think people in Isreal should be allowed to use cryptos given that more than a million Palestinians hold citizenship of Isreal and the political mess the region is in?

After looking at this conversation with a fresh set of eyes I believe this move should be welcomed. People should never give up their freedom for a false sense of security.

Link: https://coingape.com/israels-attorney-general-says-banks-cant-refuse-services-to-crypto-firms
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