Wikileaks
Boycotts Too Big To Fail With Bitcoin
21
August, 2012
In
his most recent article at Forbes
on Bitcoin, Jon Matonis details that, more than 600 days into the
financial sanctions against WikiLeaks by Bank of America, VISA,
Mastercard, PayPal and Western Union that eliminated 95% of
Wikileaks’ revenue – basically ensuring the whistleblower service
would whither from dehydration under “economic medicine” –
Wikileaks has accumulated more than $33,000 on its public bitcoin
address in over 1,100 bitcoin donations since the blockade began.
Wikileaks is showing the world how they can back up their trashtalk
of Too Big To Fail by steering around the dominant financial system:
What’s
likely, however, is that the amount in donations is even higher, as
the aforementioned figure cannot include bitcoin addresses WikiLeaks
provides for donors upon their request. As can be seen at the public
Wikileaks
Bitcoin Address, most of the donations are under 5 bitcoin or $50
USD with the majority of those around 1 bitcoin.
Although
Wikileaks has been accepting the dominant financial system’s
payment schemes again, there is very little keeping the leak-service
from going all bitcoin. For example, here is listed the top bitcoin
balances on the web. Although public, one cannot tell who the owner
of each account is. The most recent largest account is worth about $4
million.
Bitcoin:
A Way to Fight Back Against the Financial Terrorists?
22
August, 2012
Although
I have followed Bitcoin over the years a bit, I am admittedly pretty
ignorant on the subject. What really caught my eye in the last
couple of days was an article in Forbes detailing the fact that when
the big financial institutions initiated a blockade on Wikileaks, the
whistleblowing organization was still able to accept donations via
Bitcoin.
From
Forbes:
It
used to be that people had secrets and the government was
transparent; now it’s the people that lack privacy and the
government has secrets. Freedom of payments is an extension of
financial privacy and digital cash-like transactions without
financial intermediaries become a critical piece of that foundation.
Money was never intended to act as a form of identity tracking or
payments restriction and this is why the option for anonymous and
untraceable transactions is so vital as society moves to a world of
digital currency.
To
those that don’t support freedom of payments, consider this
financial blockade invoked in the name of political correctness
before you dismiss the inherent value of a nonpolitical unit of
account and of a decentralized medium of exchange. It should be
offensive to most free-minded people that you are not the final
arbiter of how and where you spend your money. Bitcoin restores the
balance.
I
don’t think Bitcoin is THE answer. It could be part of a solution.
Gold could do it. Silver could do it. They key point; however, is
that in a world in which payment is increasingly digital we need more
options for a medium of exchange. Governments themselves should
arguably get out of the money businesses entirely and let people and
business transact with each other however they deem appropriate.
One
thing that each and every one of us needs to agree on is that the
ability to buy and sell certainly shouldn’t be in the hands of
these TBTF (too big to fail) financial terrorist institutions. These
institutions, which have raped and pillaged this country in the last
several years, shouldn’t even exist let alone have this kind of
power. The mere existence of these institutions is an insult to
every single American alive today and an embarrassment to the memory
of our ancestors who aggressively guarded the liberty and freedom
this current generation of leaders is so willing to give away. As
Neil Barofsky, the former Special Inspector General for TARP, so
eloquently put it today:
As
I saw first hand while providing oversight of the bank bailouts as
the Special Inspector General of the Troubled Asset Relief Program
and as I detail in my recently released book Bailout, this perception
was embraced by both Bush and Obama Treasury officials, who
repeatedly turned away my efforts to impose conditions, restrictions
and transparency on the banks. They declared such measures
unnecessary because the banks “would never risk their reputations”
by putting profit over the public interest.
Two
years after the passage of Dodd-Frank, and in the wake of the recent
proliferation of scandals involving the largest banks, many are now
embracing this cinematic truth, with even the banker’s Dr.
Frankenstein himself, Sandy Weil (whose Citigroup was the founding
model of the megabanks of today), picking up a pitchfork and joining
the growing mob of academics, regulators, former bank executives,
Occupiers and Tea Partiers in calling for the monster to be torn
apart.
Read
the Forbes article on Bitcoin HERE.
Read
Barofsky’s piece on the bipartisan support for the financial
terrorists HERE.



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