? That’s actually extremely secure
aviationeast@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Just wait until they allow bitcoin transfers over tor… Its a featured not a bug…
jagged_circle@feddit.nl 1 day ago
aviationeast@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Yes but hard to trace. Not impossible to trace but allows government corruption money to flow.
jagged_circle@feddit.nl 1 day ago
Is that a joke? Its a public ledger thats easier to trace than USD
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 1 day ago
What happened in Albania was that a bunch of people, basically, stole most of the money in the country. It caused a civil war. Nobody ever got their money back either.
I would like to say it’s more complicated than that, here, but I’m not sure that it is. My one consolation is that Musk and Trump have not the slightest idea what they’re fucking with or what they’re up against, if it really gets its dander up at them, but that’s at minimum 40% wishful thinking on my part.
UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 1 day ago
The US has infinitely deep pockets, practically speaking. That produces a lot of fraud and embezzlement, but its not like you can just walk away with the real material assets of the country (particularly since so much has already all been carved up and privatized out).
What you can do is break down the flow of commerce passing through the federal government and send a bunch of contractors and federal staffers spiraling into bankruptcy. All those hospitals that rely on Medicare/Medicaid payments, all the MICs that the Pentagon has to pay to keep delivering goods and services, all the folks on SS getting a direct deposit… You could fuck up a lot just by stalling when those payments get processed.
It’s more complicated, without a doubt. But that doesn’t improve the situation. We already saw what happened when the private sector financial flow got snarled up in 2008. Strap in, folks…
PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat 1 day ago
Yeah. American’s wealth is not in the computers of the federal reserve. We have a continent’s worth of resources; armies upon armies of smart, committed, talented people; education; strong businesses; technical knowledge of an incredible variety; and most importantly, we’re still attractive enough (or were, as of last year) to be attracting the best and brightest of the world to come and add to the fire and keep it going. For as much as we’ve been fucking it up for the last fifty years, that all still remains true to a pretty large degree. Everything that happens in the treasury department draws off of that capital. Nothing that happens out in the world depends, at the root, on the computer that Musk now has access to.
But, it’s also true that the financial world is a city in the clouds. Pop the bubble, and sometimes it takes quite a long time to rebuild and inflate back to its former size. Maybe it’s a good thing. Maybe it’s a catastrophe in the making. I don’t know, to be honest. But “strap in” sounds just about fucking right, it’s not going to be simple or smooth.
OpenStars@piefed.social 1 day ago
Sadly, while the myriad ways that this could play out from here are yet unknown, some things really are just flat *that* simple that we can guarantee them.
e.g. tell a child "you better do this before I count to 5! 1... 2... 3... 4... 4 and a half... 4 and a quarter... 4 and uh..." - do you see what we've lost? This was a test, in the same way that every single thing everywhere is always a test. The goalposts are now shifted: this much they can do - there is no use pretending that we will suddenly decide to halt their *next* set of actions, or the ones after that, or the ones after that, etc. "First they came for" is happening now, LIVE.
The ruling by the Supreme Court that a sitting President could do anything he ever wanted - including assassination of any American citizen anytime for any reason, iirc without much if anything in the way of oversight (although I never did get clarity on that point) - *already* ended our "democracy", months before the voting. Biden may not have chosen to use it, but the goalposts had already been shifted even then.
Even if we had elections again 4 years from now, and I see no reason that we would bother (for the same reason that Trump promised us that he had never so much as heard of Project 2025, during the election, except in this case he's outright said that we will not), the ratchet has already been sunk in, and the do-nothing Democrats will do... absolutely nothing about it. Man I sound like a crazy conspiracy theorist or even a subversive agent but... the facts and conclusions should stand or fall on their own merits regardless.
This is the new normal. You've seen the link I'm sure, but here it is again for easy reference: https://youtu.be/5RpPTRcz1no. And the Democrats are silent, to save their own families from the death threats that they are literally and actually receiving (https://www.reddit.com/r/Connecticut/comments/1ieiom5/senator_chris_murphy_on_why_the_democrats_are/?share_id=Ce7meV-39mMJsjvxXgn9N).
Democracy has been on the decline now since before I was alive, so it's not exactly unexpected, just nerve wracking as we go through this transition. It's also simply a natural consequence: this is what the people *want*: to not have to make decisions anymore. We could have... well, in the past we could have done *things*, whereas instead, this is what we've done: nothing. And it is what we will continue to do, I predict, bc it's what we are good at, so long as the price of eggs and gas isn't too awfully high...
technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
The “wealth” of empire is in petrol-dollars, saudi tyrants, environmental destruction, international exploitation, endless violence, etc.
Maggoty@lemmy.world 1 day ago
They’re specifically putting in place a measure to hide that they blocked payments. So the government books will read that it was properly paid but the money won’t go.
I wonder what they could possibly want to do with that money. Politically they could just lie about paying it. They’ve done that to great success already. So for what possible reason could they want to spoof the accounts book?