Has crypto delivered on any of its promises?: Regulators
$340,000
That was Patricia Jennings’s number. Sixty-three years old. Thirty-one years teaching fourth grade in Roanoke. She opened an FTX account after the Super Bowl ads — Larry David, Tom Brady, stadiums with their names on them. Transferred everything. Her entire retirement. On November 11, her balance read zero.
Patricia Jennings is not an edge case. She is the product.
We have prosecuted three exchanges. The pattern is identical every time: accept deposits, commingle with proprietary funds, leverage the pool into speculative positions, discover the customer funds no longer exist. The crypto industry calls each one an isolated bad actor. We call it an industry whose business model depends on the absence of safeguards every other financial system built after learning these exact lessons.
The cypherpunks tell us FTX was not crypto. We have heard this from every industry whose largest institution committed fraud. The scoreboard: Mt. Gox $470 million. Terra/Luna $40 billion. FTX $32 billion. North Korean hackers $2 billion in a single year. The cypherpunks call this censorship resistance. We call it the compliance vacuum that armed Pyongyang.
The pragmatists’ success story is our strongest argument: the more useful the technology becomes, the more dangerous it is without oversight. Tether has never completed a full independent audit.
Where we concede ground: We created the vacuum. The SEC spent a decade issuing guidance-by-enforcement instead of writing clear rules.
What would change our mind: A major crypto ecosystem operating ten years without oversight and producing fraud rates comparable to regulated finance.
Read the full synthesis: Has crypto delivered on any of its promises?