From my point of view, it is worth it to mix, coinjoin, whirlpool your coins. In decentralized ecosystems like bitcoin, everyone agrees on certain qualities, characteristics, properties of the system, usually it is hard to change even a single aspect of decentralized system. (..)
"United we stand, divided we fall..."
I honestly really wish it was that way, but it looks like the authorities have found a way to forcefully change some stuff without changing Bitcoin itself. Let's hope your last quote will still apply even 5, 10 or 30 years from now.
You will not get in trouble if you did not knowingly take money from a criminal that is all I'm very confident of. I mean, dollar bills have cocaine on them. And corrupt ministers give money out all the time. If you was going to jail because a bad guy touched your money, we would all be in jail now!
Tell the centralized exchanges this, not us!
I'm quite sure there would be a problem if there was a clue that your banknotes came from a not-so-legal source. It goes even worse for bank accounts (which are closer to what Bitcoin is): had you received money from a criminal through the bank, don't be surprised if authorities ever call you out for an interrogation.
I would suggest methods that cloak/hide users transactions or coins effectively without making them hard to go through or traced when the law wants them. This's why immutablity should remain a fundamental principle of Blockchain/decentralized tech.
You could tie the important/big transactions and coins to your unique personal identities while still keeping them well hidden, private or anonymous...so that you can easily go through them when requested by the law. Again this is why immutablity is important.
Your statement is quite contradictory, you cannot cloak/hide a transaction without making it hard for authorities to trace it. If the authorities can easily do so, then can the average person who knows how to do a proper blockchain analysis. The idea is that I'm trying
not to link my txs to my identity/fingerprints.
There are risks when you don't mix them as well.
True. It's a double-edged sword. You basically have to choose between the probability of a bad actor trying to analyze the blockchain to find who you are and the probability of someone considering you a suspicious dude because you tried avoiding your identification.