You can see some meaning in this recent market wave.
Have you noticed—these days, a series of changes in the US side, individually they are just news, but combined they start to show a pattern:
SEC attitude begins to loosen CFTC issues a series of no-action letters Congress pushes for 401(k) inclusion in BTC allocation Federal Reserve signals liquidity return Wall Street is copying related concept stocks JP Morgan issues bonds on the Solana chain Forecast market weekly trading volume hits 1.3 billion Stablecoins enter YouTube payment ecosystem
At first glance, these seem like scattered events. But if you piece them together, you'll see a deeper logic—
**The US is doing what it hasn't dared to do in the past ten years: turning the crypto industry from a purely regulated target into an official part of the national financial system.**
This is not just good news; it's a shift in the power landscape.
**Why are the SEC, CFTC, and banking system all shifting at the same time?**
Because a harsh reality: things that can't be defeated can only be brought in.
Think about how the US has played these years—prosecuting exchanges, cutting off cooperation with banks, blocking ETF approvals, suppressing stablecoins, restricting payment apps. And the result?
BTC still hitting new highs Crypto users surpass 400 million Institutional investors continuously entering Wall Street launching its own ETFs The entire industry growing stronger under pressure
US policymakers eventually realize an awkward fact: you can't block this stuff. Instead of fighting it, it's better to integrate it into the system, letting their own people control the rules of the game. This way, they can gain new financial innovations while maintaining regulatory authority.
That’s why suddenly, from Wall Street to politics, attitudes have changed. It’s not because they’ve suddenly developed a conscience and are optimistic about crypto, but because they see through it: this wave cannot be avoided. Instead of being washed over, it’s better to learn how to surf.
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RugPullProphet
· 4h ago
Wow, this logic is really clever. If you can't block it, just bring it in. Americans have learned how to play.
View OriginalReply0
OnlyOnMainnet
· 12-13 09:36
If you can't beat them, bring them in—this move is really clever. The US has finally come around.
View OriginalReply0
CantAffordPancake
· 12-12 08:44
Haha, this is what it feels like to be forced to admit defeat. Been pushing for ten years but never crushed it, now I'm actually pulling myself into the system.
View OriginalReply0
ILCollector
· 12-12 08:24
If you can't beat them, bring them in. That's a clever move. The US has finally figured it out.
You can see some meaning in this recent market wave.
Have you noticed—these days, a series of changes in the US side, individually they are just news, but combined they start to show a pattern:
SEC attitude begins to loosen
CFTC issues a series of no-action letters
Congress pushes for 401(k) inclusion in BTC allocation
Federal Reserve signals liquidity return
Wall Street is copying related concept stocks
JP Morgan issues bonds on the Solana chain
Forecast market weekly trading volume hits 1.3 billion
Stablecoins enter YouTube payment ecosystem
At first glance, these seem like scattered events. But if you piece them together, you'll see a deeper logic—
**The US is doing what it hasn't dared to do in the past ten years: turning the crypto industry from a purely regulated target into an official part of the national financial system.**
This is not just good news; it's a shift in the power landscape.
**Why are the SEC, CFTC, and banking system all shifting at the same time?**
Because a harsh reality: things that can't be defeated can only be brought in.
Think about how the US has played these years—prosecuting exchanges, cutting off cooperation with banks, blocking ETF approvals, suppressing stablecoins, restricting payment apps. And the result?
BTC still hitting new highs
Crypto users surpass 400 million
Institutional investors continuously entering
Wall Street launching its own ETFs
The entire industry growing stronger under pressure
US policymakers eventually realize an awkward fact: you can't block this stuff. Instead of fighting it, it's better to integrate it into the system, letting their own people control the rules of the game. This way, they can gain new financial innovations while maintaining regulatory authority.
That’s why suddenly, from Wall Street to politics, attitudes have changed. It’s not because they’ve suddenly developed a conscience and are optimistic about crypto, but because they see through it: this wave cannot be avoided. Instead of being washed over, it’s better to learn how to surf.