Today, I introduced a bill prohibiting the Fed from issuing a central bank digital currency directly to individuals. Here’s why it matters:
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As other countries, like China, develop CBDCs that fundamentally omit the benefits and protections of cash, it is more important than ever to ensure the United States’ digital currency policy protects financial privacy, maintains the dollar’s dominance, and cultivates innovation.
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CBDCs that fail to adhere to these three basic principles could enable an entity like the Federal Reserve to mobilize itself into a retail bank, collect personally identifiable information on users, and track their transactions indefinitely.
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Not only does this CBDC model raise “single point of failure” issues, leaving Americans’ financial information vulnerable to attack, but it could be used as a surveillance tool that Americans should never be forced to tolerate from their own government.
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Requiring users to open an account at the Fed to access a United States CBDC would put the Fed on an insidious path akin to China’s digital authoritarianism.
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Any CBDC implemented by the Fed must be open, permissionless, and private. This means that any digital dollar must be accessible to all, transact on a blockchain that is transparent to all, and maintain the privacy elements of cash.
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In order to maintain the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency in a digital age, it is important that the United States lead with a posture that prioritizes innovation and does not aim to compete with the private sector.

Jan 12, 2022 · 3:23 PM UTC

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Simply put, we must prioritize blockchain technology with American characteristics, rather than mimic China’s digital authoritarianism out of fear.
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Replying to @GOPMajorityWhip
@deperno4mi hopefully you're following along for us all! @JohnEDeaton1 🇺🇸📈🚀
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Nation-State backed currencies are an obsolete artifact of an old-world. “Borderless” means exactly that. The dollar’s status has long been suspect due to a host of failed policies going back to FDR when he seized the gold.
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Replying to @GOPMajorityWhip
Thank you! This is an important step for privacy & freedom. That said - the dollar is doomed no matter what, just a matter of time. Since 1971 it has become the world's biggest ponzi scheme. There is no pleasant end to that story, but we can hope for sound money on the other side
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Replying to @GOPMajorityWhip
I agree with you, but the US government will never (willingly) give up the power of dominating countries with sanctions. In a country where kinetic conflict is not tenable politically, you’re asking the US gov. to just give up their only leverage over other countries.
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Replying to @GOPMajorityWhip
You can't maintain the Dollar Reserve Status, you've printed too much, your debt cannot even be serviced, let alone repaid. Governments have utterly failed. The World has options now, our futures are now ours to decide once again, and they certainly don't include $USD or US Rule.
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Replying to @GOPMajorityWhip
I don't think we need a CBDC which will eventually head down the path you describe, it's inevitable. Stablecoins already digitize the dollar and do it well. US should suppose stable-coins not create their own CBDC which will lead to tyranny.
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Go Tommy you fiery boomer
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