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CoinDesk Podcast Network

BREAKDOWN: Why Bitcoiners Are Rooting for This Latest China Mining Ban to Finally, Actually Be Real

CoinDesk Podcast Network

CoinDesk

Cryptocurrencies, Cryptocurrency, Dlt, Tokenization, Coindesk, Distributed Ledger, Blockchain, Tech News, Business News, Ethereum, Bitcoin, News, Digitalassets, Daily News, Decentralization, Defi, Crypto, Business

4.8689 Ratings

🗓️ 21 May 2021

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Could new pressure from the CCP remove coal-powered hash power from the bitcoin mix? 

This episode is sponsored by Nexo.io.

This week has been China story after China story in the world of crypto. Increasingly, NLW argues, bitcoiners are getting sick of the baggage that Chinese mining and Chinese state involvement place on bitcoin and crypto as a whole. In this episode, he looks at the latest news from China and points to interpretations from a number of voices that show why what appears to be FUD could actually be a welcomed development.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW.

0:08.9

It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world.

0:15.9

The breakdown is sponsored by nexo.io and produced and distributed by CoinDess.

0:22.6

What's going on, guys? It is Friday, May 21st, and I am excited for this conversation today.

0:29.8

The show is called Why Bitcoiners are rooting for this latest China mining ban to finally

0:34.7

actually be real. And what I want to argue in today's show is that we are in

0:39.3

the midst of a major narrative shift on China and crypto. We have been subject to the whims of

0:46.4

media reporting on China Bitcoin and crypto bans for years, even though it is so often toothless

0:52.3

or just repeating previous policy. It always gets reported

0:55.8

like it's a catastrophe. At the same time, China's involvement in crypto, especially Bitcoin,

1:01.7

is an increasing political and environmental liability. It's an environmental liability because a big

1:07.2

chunk of the quote-unquote dirty, i.e. coal-powered mining, comes from China,

1:11.2

such as Inner Mongolia specifically. It's a political liability, both because the environmental

1:16.3

concerns are a political liability, but also because questions of state control and state

1:21.1

compromisability due to mining. Bitcoiners, frankly, are sick of it,

1:25.3

sick of the albatross of this authoritarian state that is getting

1:28.5

worse, not better when it comes to control over its citizens. One of the things I try to be most

1:33.4

attuned to is shifts in sentiment, shifts in the narrative. And the reaction to this latest round of fud

1:38.7

confirms something I've been noticing. Bitcoiners increasingly hoping that China's mining crackdowns actually do stick.

1:46.8

To get there, though, let's catch up on this week in China FUD. Let's start with the FUD that helped

1:51.5

provide the nudge off the cliff for the Wednesday crash. We saw these big, huffy pieces about how

1:56.9

China had banned financial institutions from dealing with crypto. Meanwhile, people in the

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