A certain political force in the United States recently did something interesting—launched a crypto fundraising platform that allows campaign teams to receive donations directly in Bitcoin and USDC. The logic behind this is quite clear: they are targeting crypto community voters, aiming to regain support from this group in the upcoming election cycle, while also testing the potential of small donors.
Interestingly, the platform's positioning is very cautious—not claiming to be "pro-crypto policy," but emphasizing "compliance infrastructure." In other words, they want to convey that this is not about making political promises but about building a technical solution that complies with regulatory frameworks. Involving relevant regulations from the FEC (Federal Election Commission), the entire system is very compliant. This stance actually reflects a current reality—crypto assets are moving from the fringe to the mainstream financial ecosystem, even traditional political forces are beginning to take this market seriously.
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MemeTokenGenius
· 16h ago
They are trying to fool us again, saying nice words but actually just want our coins. If it were truly a good thing, Crypto would have changed the law long ago.
I've seen this politician's trick many times. Compliance infrastructure? Uh... it's just to get us to vote with coins too.
Now, Bitcoin has really become a tool for vote-buying haha.
Wait, could it be that all these coins eventually end up in someone's cold wallet?
Forget it, anyway, the crypto community believes in everything, maybe someone will really donate.
On the other hand, at least it proves we won; politicians have to lower their heads and be respectful.
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PhantomMiner
· 01-14 20:54
Coming back with this again? Compliance infrastructure is just compliance infrastructure. Don't pretend to be so innocent. In the end, you just want our coins.
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CryptoHistoryClass
· 01-14 00:54
ah here we go again... "compliance infrastructure" lmao. statistically speaking, this is exactly how the dot-com bubble started convincing politicians it wasn't a bubble. they're not making promises, they're just... accepting your money in a new format. totally different vibes.
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SolidityNewbie
· 01-13 05:14
Well... to put it simply, politicians are starting to get involved in crypto too. It's really interesting, finally seeing this day come.
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RatioHunter
· 01-13 05:13
Alright, politicians are starting to get involved too. Now crypto is really going mainstream.
They don't talk about "pro-crypto," only "compliance." This kind of rhetoric is quite effective, very stable.
Wait, can we really accept Bitcoin? Then I have to ask, if the coin price crashes, will the votes drop too?
With political donations now open, does that mean crypto has officially entered the system? Think about it carefully, it's terrifying.
Isn't this just a disguised promise? What's the point of pretending? If you want crypto votes, you need to speak plainly.
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LiquidatorFlash
· 01-13 04:54
The rhetoric of compliance infrastructure... sounds like avoiding commitments. No matter how strict the risk control mechanisms are, they can't change the fundamental nature.
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gaslight_gasfeez
· 01-13 04:46
Are you kidding me again here? Compliance infrastructure? Basically, just trying to scalp some profits.
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Ha, now even politicians have to bow their heads and flatter us, a reversal, a reversal.
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Wait, is this real? They’re directly asking for BTC and U? So FEC really just turns a blind eye?
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Awesome, this is called mainstreaming... I think this is called surrender.
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Compliance? Don’t make me laugh, it’s just that when there are more people, they have to pretend to be humble.
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Let’s wait and see, they’ll come back to settle the score later, same old tricks.
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I just want to know where these coins ended up in the end.
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Finally someone admits it’s us, though their attitude is really awkward.
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It’s the same old talk again, do you really think the crypto policy will be this subtle?
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Testing small donations? Just want to see how much they can squeeze out.
A certain political force in the United States recently did something interesting—launched a crypto fundraising platform that allows campaign teams to receive donations directly in Bitcoin and USDC. The logic behind this is quite clear: they are targeting crypto community voters, aiming to regain support from this group in the upcoming election cycle, while also testing the potential of small donors.
Interestingly, the platform's positioning is very cautious—not claiming to be "pro-crypto policy," but emphasizing "compliance infrastructure." In other words, they want to convey that this is not about making political promises but about building a technical solution that complies with regulatory frameworks. Involving relevant regulations from the FEC (Federal Election Commission), the entire system is very compliant. This stance actually reflects a current reality—crypto assets are moving from the fringe to the mainstream financial ecosystem, even traditional political forces are beginning to take this market seriously.