What's the issue with the law-abiding group of people? We indeed have a two groups of people here in this forum - one, who wish to comply with the KYC request and pay taxes and two, who wish to remain anonymous. But if we really want bitcoin to become a new world currency, regulation is the only way towards it. Bitcoin will never be able to become mainstream if we resist regulation, in that case, it will stay only as a parallel currency system like it is today! There will definitely be a few crypto-friendly countries, but majority of the world governments will become more hostile against it!
If someone agrees to comply to these absurd laws, let them do so. The main issue is that, once they do, it becomes mandatory for
all of us. The second group, which wishes to remain anonymous, is always going to be at a disadvantage because of the first. It's just like the first group is enforcing the second to comply.
I would
not mind laws that are not intruding my private life, but unfortunately that's exactly what these laws do. I agree with the adoption of stuff that fights against crimes, but here in Romania we have something called
presumption of innocence and I think I have the right to have it.
One of the issues I see with the mindset of the vast majority of people is that, as you have also mentioned in your post, most think that the law-abiding group pays taxes while the second doesn't. I pay my taxes and everything I do is legal, although I'm looking to be as anonymous and private as I can be. Yet, it's funny how people would get angry at me over my $60 Amazon order I supposedly haven't paid taxes for when there are trillions of USD moved around every year by politicians and high-tier personnel nobody cares about and nobody pays taxes for.
At this point, looking at how things evolve and that apparently
even YouTube is moving towards identity verification, I think I'd honestly rather see Bitcoin as a parallel economy or an underground currency than submit to shitty laws and regulations. Let me be free, under my own cloak, living in a non-Orwellian state. The worst thing is, the "Bitcoin & crimes" excuse has been used so exhaustively that it honestly surprises me seeing how people don't realize the regulations are a plan to defeat BTC and everything Satoshi wanted to create!
Realistically, Bitcoin cannot be a world currency. The authorities know that, yet they push heavily for absurd laws that only lead to more control from their side and least decentralization and freedom on ours. Nobody will ever be able to convince me that a country leader will ever support a currency they cannot control. They're leaders because they want
control and power.
Regulation is fine, but
limited and
non-intruding one. If wealthy owners have a lot of privileges we don't have access to and have lots of ways to get away with tax payments, I can't see why Bitcoin owners should be this limited. Ah, precious metal regulations are coming as well.. looks like I forgot for a moment that the average Joe should
not be allowed to exit the wage slavery class, according to the current system we're living in.
You see, we're living in a world where we want fairness although the ones giving us orders are the least fair. As long as you don't have evidence that I'm doing anything illegal with my decentralized currency, what I do with my coins should be nobody's business.