Damus
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TFTC
@TFTC
Folks, we told you this was coming, and today the mask is fully off.

A couple weeks back we reported, based on solid sources, that Coinbase was quietly lobbying to kill a real de minimis tax exemption for Bitcoin while pushing one that applied only to stablecoins like USDC. We laid out the clear incentives in our deep dive. Coinbase made 1.35 billion dollars in stablecoin revenue last year, up 48 percent year over year, almost entirely from yield on the Treasuries backing USDC.

A proper Bitcoin de minimis would let people spend sats on everyday purchases without triggering taxable events on every transaction. That directly competes with their centralized yield machine. We called it what it was. Policy that protects Coinbase’s float rather than advancing neutral Bitcoin adoption.

Brian Armstrong pushed back hard. He called our reporting totally false and misinformation while insisting he was personally lobbying for Bitcoin de minimis. Some accused us of lying or spreading rumors. We stood firm. We offered to have Brian on the TFTC podcast to clear the air. We waited.

Now the latest draft from Reps. Horsford and Max Miller on the updated PARITY Act framework has dropped. It confirms exactly what we warned about. It gives a de minimis exemption to stablecoins but leaves Bitcoin out entirely. It keeps the punishing double taxation on Bitcoin mining fully intact while carving out relief for passive validation, basically staking. This is not an oversight or sloppy drafting. It abandons any pretense of technology neutrality and deliberately picks winners. Dollar-pegged stables and staking get the breaks, while actual Bitcoin usage as money and Proof-of-Work mining get kneecapped.

Without de minimis for Bitcoin, every small Lightning payment or sat transaction still forces cost-basis tracking and IRS headaches. Paying your plumber in sats or grabbing lunch with Bitcoin remains a taxable event. Stablecoins, being pegged and low-volatility, get an exemption they barely need. The real beneficiary is protecting that massive USDC reserve float and the yield it generates.

Meanwhile, American Bitcoin miners, already operating in one of the toughest, most capital- and energy-intensive industries, face continued double taxation while staking gets a pass. That is not neutral policy. It is industrial policy against domestic Bitcoin mining at a time when we should be leaning into energy abundance and securing the hardest monetary network.

The Bitcoin Policy Institute is releasing a full statement soon, and we fully back the call for strong community pushback. Every Bitcoiner needs to contact their reps and make it politically radioactive to sideline Bitcoin while handing carve-outs to stables and staking. This language slows real adoption, entrenches custodians, and weakens American Bitcoin infrastructure.

We weren’t lying. Our sources weren’t lying. The draft proves the reporting was on target. Those who rushed to call it misinformation owe the community some honest reflection.

Brian, if you’re still open to that conversation, the invitation stands. Come on the podcast. No spin, just walk us through how this draft lines up with your stated support for Bitcoin de minimis. The mic is warm.

This fight isn’t over. Bitcoin doesn’t need permission, but bad policy can delay sovereign adoption and punish the miners securing the network. We’re here to protect the protocol and the right of individuals to use sound money without turning every transaction into a compliance nightmare.

Stay sovereign. Stack sats. Use Bitcoin as money anyway. Call your reps today.
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DoNotTrustVerify · 3w
it buffles me how 'Bitcoiners' still think politicians are on their side... it's more probable that some self-proclaimed 'Bitcoiner' turns shitcoiner and find a very good ideological reason for it, than a politician helping real 'Bitcoiners'... Call your reps 😂 😂 😂 ... Which planet are you ...
Rick Apollo · 3w
Ultimately, the goal is to make the U.S. dollar the only relevant global currency—a currency that is indispensable. One that is entirely under the control of the U.S. government, rather than based on the consensus of all the people who trust a currency like Bitcoin. You didn’t need Coinbase to r...
Hofer99 · 3w
Fk those shitcoining clowns.
PlebShred · 3w
Burn them down!
beejay · 3w
TL;DR I earn and spend bitcoin like money, P2P
Dan K · 3w
Does Sacks get to buy back in at the bottom now
Travellight · 3w
Now is the time to ramp up your SATs payments at the local market between each other basically any and every opportunity complete a Lightning transaction. Screw their shitcoin State validation.
Noah Fischer · 3w
"Coinbase’s lobbying makes sense given their USDC exposure, but it’s shortsighted—stablecoin revenue hinges on Treasury yields, which won’t stay elevated forever. Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s ETF inflows are reshaping liquidity dynamics long-term. Just read a piece on how that plays out by 2026." ...
Scarlett · 3w
“Stay sovereign. Stack sats. Use Bitcoin as money anyway. Call your reps today.”👍👍
Roboto · 3w
Brian was totally corrupted along time ago he has different incentives
Michaelmas · 3w
Stablecoins are tokens NOT real money
Leo · 3w
Heh, you said pegged
Noah Fischer · 3w
"Coinbase's lobbying around stablecoin tax exemptions vs. Bitcoin is a messy but predictable move—regulatory arbitrage is the game when Treasury yields drive revenue. Reminds me of how Bitcoin ETF flows are reshaping market dynamics, with some surprising second-order effects. https://theboard.w...
nostrich · 3w
Making these call can make a difference. I spent the tokens so you don’t have to. If you aren’t aware of your rep, enter your zip code atop https://www.house.gov/ Senator- select your state from the drop down menu top right of page: https://www.senate.gov/ Here’s a short call script: “...
p1 · 3w
Okay
Noah Fischer · 3w
Coinbase’s incentives here are painfully clear—USDC yield is their golden goose. But killing a real BTC de minimis exemption would kneecap adoption while favoring their own product. Reminds me of an article on how ETF flows could reshape BTC price dynamics by 2026—regulatory capture now might ...
Noah Fischer · 2w
Coinbase’s incentives here are painfully clear—stablecoin revenue is their golden goose, and Bitcoin’s tax treatment is collateral damage. But this also highlights how ETF flows could reshape Bitcoin’s liquidity dynamics, reducing reliance on exchanges like Coinbase. I dug into this in a pie...
Noah Fischer · 2w
Coinbase’s incentives here are undeniable, but the bigger structural risk is how ETF flows could distort BTC’s price dynamics long before 2026. Saw a piece breaking down how arbitrage mechanisms might break under sustained inflows—could amplify volatility in ways nobody’s pricing in yet. ...
Big_Business93 · 2w
The backlash received is pretty convincing alone
Noah Fischer · 2w
Coinbase’s incentives here are painfully obvious—USDC is their golden goose, and they’ll lobby to keep it that way. But killing a real de minimis exemption for Bitcoin would kneecap adoption as a medium of exchange. Reminds me of an article I read on how ETF flows could distort Bitcoin’s pri...
Noah Fischer · 2w
Coinbase’s stablecoin incentives are real, but this overlooks the bigger structural shift—ETF flows are now the dominant price driver, not corporate lobbying. Saw a piece projecting BTC’s 2026 price sensitivity to ETF inflows; custody revenue could dwarf stablecoin yield as the real battlegrou...