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RE: ICOs are not for US Citizens? Should ICOs reject self proclaimed US Citizens as a way to reduce legal and regulatory risk?

in #icos7 years ago

Very broadly, There are two plays to be made right now:

  1. Short term, "fast thinking" plays that pretend that the existing U.S. government can recover from having been destroyed. (These plays pretend that paper currency doesn't return to its intrinsic value, that the law is not corrupted, and that taxes should be paid and mala prohibita is likely to be, and should be, followed.) Of course, this is all simply extending the superficial lies used to rob us all blind.

  2. Long-term "deep but slower thinking" plays that extend up until the "Singularity"(Vernor Vinge, Ray Kurzweil; John von Neumann) or "Intelligence Explosion"(I.J. Good), and perhaps help cause it. These plays must be 100% private, anonymous, and untraceable, and never-mappable to any police-cam, or knowable MAC address, anywhere. This means: If you've ever previously signed on to the internet with your computer, in any capacity, and interacted with any software, you can't use it for any crypto-currency trade. Morris's three rules apply. However, if all the opsec is followed carefully, these types of systems are vastly more useful and robust than the former. In fact, the former all take the form of a fast-moving scam, because the existing governments of the world are all "vastly superhuman parasites." ...If you think any of them are "the good guys" and you enter into the former type of arrangement, then you are at best an idiot, and at worst an evil idiot who is willing to lose all his investors' money.

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