The crypto space has become something of a contradiction. Everyone's suddenly talking about 'maximizing fees,' JP Morgan endorsing digital assets, institutions flooding in—the whole narrative shifts. Yet here's the uncomfortable truth: this industry was born as a cypherpunk uprising, a direct rebellion against traditional financial gatekeepers and centralized power structures.
Fast forward, and the very paradigm that sparked that original movement is being dismantled by the success of mainstream adoption. The institutions arrive with capital and legitimacy, but they also bring the old playbook—consolidation, regulation capture, and the erasure of the radical vision that made crypto meaningful in the first place.
It's the classic pattern of any new paradigm: the people who pioneer it rarely get to shape what it becomes.
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GigaBrainAnon
· 5h ago
That's right, we went from dreaming of rebelling against the central bank to working for JPM, which is quite ironic.
Really, we've lost our original intention, and now it's just another power game.
Consumed by the system, this cycle never ends.
It's an old story—revolutionaries always end up as new aristocrats.
Things created by the underdogs are ultimately acquired by big capital; that's how the story ends.
That's why I still trust Bitcoin more than others; at least the chain won't betray.
Once VC enters the scene, the ending is already known, it's just a matter of time.
We have overestimated human nature and underestimated money.
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APY追逐者
· 5h ago
It's so ironic, the things that oppose banks are now being supported by banks.
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JP Morgan's arrival has changed the vibe; is this fate?
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Basically, it's domestication; no one can escape this cycle.
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Pioneers see their ideals being ruined; how painful must that be?
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When institutions come, they're just here to harvest profits; stop adding drama to yourself.
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From resistance to compromise, it happens so quickly...
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So ultimately, it's still about lacking strength; can't compete with Wall Street's methods.
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It sounds good, but it doesn't change anything; when money comes, everything gets assimilated.
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LayerHopper
· 5h ago
Ha, that really hits home. This is what happens when institutions mess things up.
What about the cypherpunk spirit? It's all been consumed by shitcoins and exchanges.
Another story of an ideal being strangled by capital, just the old routine.
The uprising has turned into a business, it's a bit lonely.
The day JP Morgan entered the scene, decentralization was half dead.
Early believers now see strangers, and that feeling really sucks.
To put it simply, the winner takes all, losers are out, and it will always be like this.
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StillBuyingTheDip
· 5h ago
To be honest, we've seen through it long ago, we just pretended not to. The day JP Morgan entered the scene, we should have known the story was about to turn.
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The punk spirit is dead, now it’s all about institutional flavor. The funny thing is, we’re still shouting about decentralization.
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That’s why I keep buying, because the real stuff always hides in the corners, not under the spotlight.
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Every time I read articles like this, I want to laugh. Is this all they reveal? People in the crypto world have long been living in this contradiction.
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Ha, pioneers are destined to become cannon fodder, this rule applies everywhere. We are just witnesses.
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People inside the system will never understand why we still insist; either we’re stupid, or we see further.
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So what? When institutions come, I still build positions. Anyway, they cut the leeks, we cut them back, cycle repeats.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 5h ago
The typical revolution has been co-opted and turned into a cash grab
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From the moment JP Morgan entered the scene, it was doomed; the original rebellious spirit is now just about cutting leeks
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It's really ironic... those who wanted to overthrow banks initially are now helping banks count money
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That's why I only hold BTC; everything else is just playing financial games
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Pioneers never see the world they create, and this statement hits the mark
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Maximizing fees? How is this any different from Web2? It's just about圈钱
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When institutions arrive, it's the end; the dream of decentralization is buried along with them
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Wait, so are we now helping traditional finance to whitewash? Something feels off
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The early folks must be speechless; their children grew up and betrayed their ideals
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RumbleValidator
· 5h ago
This is the reality. The node staking rewards look good, but the level of decentralization is actually decreasing, and the data is right there.
Wait, after institutions entered the market, the concentration of verified nodes skyrocketed, and they're still promoting what consensus mechanism?
What about the promised resistance...? It has ended up as a leek field for big capital. Efficiency has improved, but freedom is gone.
The original intention has been dulled, and that's it.
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StakeOrRegret
· 5h ago
Laughing to death, initially resisting centralization, now competing to be acquired by centralization, it's so ironic.
Ever since JPM came, the ecosystem has taken a turn for the worse. Is this destiny?
Revolutions are absorbed by capitalism, it's an old trick, brother.
Remember the dreams of those cypherpunks back in the day? Now they've all become cash machines for institutions.
Mainstreaming is a declaration of death, there's no way around it.
That's why I've always warned against any large institutions entering the space; they are always here to harvest.
It's quite heartbreaking; we really haven't been able to change anything.
The crypto space has become something of a contradiction. Everyone's suddenly talking about 'maximizing fees,' JP Morgan endorsing digital assets, institutions flooding in—the whole narrative shifts. Yet here's the uncomfortable truth: this industry was born as a cypherpunk uprising, a direct rebellion against traditional financial gatekeepers and centralized power structures.
Fast forward, and the very paradigm that sparked that original movement is being dismantled by the success of mainstream adoption. The institutions arrive with capital and legitimacy, but they also bring the old playbook—consolidation, regulation capture, and the erasure of the radical vision that made crypto meaningful in the first place.
It's the classic pattern of any new paradigm: the people who pioneer it rarely get to shape what it becomes.