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Borrowed from r/cryptocurrency author: u/poiytrewq1066
These are the 6 U.S. Senators at fault for killing the crypto
industry in the U.S. Vote them out!
You've probably heard by now that, despite our best efforts,
the U.S. Senate failed to even vote on any alternative to the
horrible cryptocurrency provision that may kill the crypto
industry in the U.S. This means that wallet producers, miners,
Dapp creators, and basically everyone else will now require KYC
of their customers/users or face harsh penalties from the IRS
(the U.S. tax collector). These are the 6 Senators (listed in
no particular order) who are responsible for the cryptocurrency
disaster in the Infrastructure Bill. We will remember their
actions and vote them out!
Rob Portman (R-OH) – drafted the disastrous, original
cryptocurrency provision. When Toomey, Wyden, and Lummis
introduced an amendment to fix the provision, Rob Portman
publicly supported their amendment before blindsiding everyone
with his own, worse amendment. Portman has proved himself to be
a puppet for Janet Yellen and Wall Street.
Mark Warner (D-VA) – wrote the worse crypto amendment with
Rob Portman, creating chaos in the Senate and causing Portman
to recant his previous support of the Toomey/Wyden/Lummis
amendment. Because the Toomey/Wyden/Lummis was bipartisan and
already widely expected to pass, Mark Warner’s co-authorship
of the Portman amendment gave the Portman/Warner/Sinema
amendment bipartisan sponsorship, giving it legitimacy to
contend the Toomey/Wyden/Lummis amendment.
Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) – did not write the worse crypto
amendment with Portman and Warner, but signed onto the
amendment later to give it legitimacy. Kyrsten Sinema was one
of the two leaders of the Senate Infrastructure Bill
negotiations, along with Rob Portman. Once Sinema signed onto
the Portman/Warner amendment, it became extremely difficult for
other senators to publicly oppose the Portman/Warner/Sinema
amendment, because it became a symbolic rejection of the
Infrastructure Bill as a whole. This is why we only saw
Republicans who already indicated they would vote against the
Infrastructure Bill publicly commit to the better,
Toomey/Wyden/Lummis amendment.
Bill Hagerty (R-TN) – 99 out of 100 Senators voted to
expedite the Infrastructure Bill, which would have led to an
opportunity for proper consideration, debate, and voting on the
cryptocurrency amendments. Bill Hagerty was the ONLY Senator to
vote against expedition. This forced the Senate to either take
a vote to end debate and force a vote on the whole
Infrastructure Bill within 30 hours, or to take a recess until
September 13, 2021. Once the Senate voted to end debate, it
meant that the cryptocurrency amendments would not even be
voted on without unanimous consent of all 100 Senators. Hagerty
effectively increased the number of Senators who needed to
support a crypto amendment from 60 to 100.
Richard Shelby (R-AL) – 99 out of 100 Senators consented to
vote on the mega-compromise Toomey/Lummis/Warner/Portman/Sinema
amendment which was substantially similar to the good
Toomey/Wyden/Lummis amendment. It was widely expected to pass,
and we would have seen a resounding success. However, Richard
Shelby was the ONLY Senator to refuse to consent, because he
conditioned his consent on the Senate also approving $50
billion in military spending. When this idiotic ultimatum was
rejected, Richard Shelby objected to the cryptocurrency
amendment, leaving Portman’s disastrous, original
cryptocurrency provision intact.
John Thune (R-SD) – the Senate Minority Whip. His ONE job is
to make sure that the Republican senators vote with party
leadership. He failed this TWICE by allowing Bill Hagerty and
Richard Shelby to block the crypto amendments. How hard could
it be to get corrupt politicians to vote with a corrupt party?
Just promise to give the Republicans candy if they vote with
the party. I used that strategy to win my middle school student
government election in a landslide.
Also, fuck Janet Yellen. The unelected, 74-year-old Secretary
of the Treasury was the person behind the cryptocurrency
provision in the first place, as well as the
Portman/Warner/Sinema amendment. It’s no surprise that the
woman who took $7.2 million in speaking fees over the last two
years (almost entirely from banks) was behind this attempt, at
every step of the way, to systematically destroy cryptocurrency
and DeFi. And of course, because she was unelected, we have no
way to vote her out.