GreekTrader.Crypto | BTC + ETH + Pinot Noir

1.1K posts

GreekTrader.Crypto | BTC + ETH + Pinot Noir banner
GreekTrader.Crypto | BTC + ETH + Pinot Noir

GreekTrader.Crypto | BTC + ETH + Pinot Noir

@agrigoropoulos

https://t.co/HPl2kU8sVj - Kerdos Trading | https://t.co/5vUfK4xFQX https://t.co/JqcH9maJfb Trading since 1975 - Wine & olive oil producer - chef - art & antiques collector

Paris|Cannes - Prague - Greece Katılım Mayıs 2009
445 Takip Edilen150 Takipçiler
Coin Bureau
Coin Bureau@coinbureau·
Coinbase released their Q2 earnings yesterday. By most accounts they were good results with revenue exceeding expectations. A harbinger of change in a stormy crypto sea? $COIN
English
55
20
269
39.2K
Cake Wallet
Cake Wallet@cakewallet·
So what % of your portfolio is #crypto? Any tips?
English
9
2
12
1.6K
Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman·
“On Wall Street, if you want a friend, buy a 🐶.”
English
273
355
3.6K
744.5K
Ash Crypto
Ash Crypto@AshCrypto·
BITCOIN ETF APPROVAL IS COMING !
English
280
205
1.5K
169.5K
Simply Bitcoin
Simply Bitcoin@SimplyBitcoin·
NEWS - KPMG Touts #Bitcoin Benefits, Including Payments, Social Causes and Financial Inclusion (DailyHodl)
Simply Bitcoin tweet media
English
24
68
309
11.9K
Bitcoin Archive
Bitcoin Archive@BitcoinArchive·
NEW: Jack Dorsey's Block reported $2.4 Billion 'revenue' from #Bitcoin in Q2.
Bitcoin Archive tweet media
English
158
408
2.8K
140.4K
Crypto Casey
Crypto Casey@cryptocasey·
Interest in crypto is going parabolic 🚀 despite the bear market 🤙 Appreciate all the support 🖖 Onward & upward, fam ❤️
Crypto Casey tweet media
English
50
38
443
22.9K
Miles Deutscher
Miles Deutscher@milesdeutscher·
Anyone else keep instinctively searching for the bird logo on their Home Screen before remembering it's now X?
Miles Deutscher tweet media
English
139
38
492
63.3K
Heidi
Heidi@blockchainchick·
People bitching and complaining about how “toxic” the crypto space has become. These people are bored and have nothing better to do with their time. BUT this phase of the market is a great time to accumulate. Don’t waste this opportunity or get sucked into their negativity.
English
23
23
228
11.3K
Altcoin Daily
Altcoin Daily@AltcoinDaily·
Oh you like crypto? Name your top coin.
English
943
60
572
183.4K
Luke Broyles
Luke Broyles@luke_broyles·
I got into #Bitcoin because I wanted to preserve my purchasing power. I stayed because I accepted #Bitcoin was a historical moment. I became obsessed because I realized #Bitcoin is the largest humanitarian effort of the 21st century.
English
42
115
741
29K
MetaLawMan
MetaLawMan@MetaLawMan·
SEC v. Coinbase There is something Congress could do now to put the brakes on the SEC’s “regulation-by-enforcement” attack on the crypto industry. Here's what I mean... Background: The Supreme Court recently invalidated the Biden administration's student loan forgiveness plan. It did so on the grounds that Executive agencies cannot implement policies having a significant impact on the U.S. economy unless Congress has given a clear statement that it intended to give the agency that authority. This legal principle is called the “Major Questions Doctrine.” The Supreme Court opinion quoted Nancy Pelosi, who said that the President did not have the power to forgive student loans—only Congress could do that. This decision stopped the Department of Education from forgiving hundreds of billions of dollars in student loan debt without first getting that authority explicitly from Congress. So how does this relate to Congress' ability to put the brakes on the SEC’s war on crypto? Congress could assert this same principle--the Major Questions Doctrine--by filing an amicus brief in the SEC's case against @Coinbase. An “amicus brief” is a way for an interested party to assist the court by providing its perspective on an issue of importance.  Here, the application of the Major Questions Doctrine is an issue of enormous importance under our system of Separation of Powers designed in the Constitution. An amicus brief from the House of Representatives (or House Financial Services Committee) could say: 1. Congress has not granted the SEC authority to regulate crypto exchanges. 2. We consider the question of which Executive Branch agency (if any) will be given authority to regulate the crypto asset ecosystem (including crypto exchanges) to be a Major Question under existing Supreme Court precedent. 3. It is the prerogative of Congress to answer this Major Question--not the SEC. 4. Congress is currently considering various pieces of legislation to establish a comprehensive regulatory framework for the crypto asset ecosystem, and for crypto exchanges in particular.   5. Thus, we support Coinbase’s motion to dismiss this case now. Would this have an impact? The judge presiding over the Coinbase case (Judge Failla) will know that the Supreme Court would give substantial weight to a formal declaration from Congress on the applicability of the Major Questions Doctrine. And federal judges don’t like to get reversed. While Coinbase will make a cogent argument for application of the Major Questions Doctrine in its own motion to dismiss, a formal statement from Congress declaring crypto regulation a Major Question would add significant weight to the argument. There would be nothing unusual about Congress taking this action. Just last week, 36 members of Congress filed an amicus brief in the Supreme Court on a related issue. In that brief, they argued that Executive Branch “agencies exploit general or broad terms in statutes to engage in policymaking functions of questionable legality…”  Sound familiar? An amicus brief may be the best available tool for Congress to stop the damage being caused by the SEC’s regulation-by-enforcement approach to crypto--at least until legislation is passed regulating the space. The filing deadline for amicus briefs in the Coinbase case is August 11.
English
57
176
712
114.5K