Or is it an open secret? Let's see what everyone has to say.


yongman:


Because no one uses Bitcoin for bribery. I'm crazy. I do this to become a grasshopper on the same rope with you and form a community of interests. So I have to keep a backup plan and force you to do the job after receiving the money.


If I use Bitcoin, is there something wrong with my brain? Let's not talk about whether you accept it or not, and whether you spend it or not. The problem is that I don't have any handle on you. If you take the money and don't recognize your relatives, I have no place to report you.

bojie:

Then you really underestimate corrupt officials. I can tell you for sure that cryptocurrency has become a new means and tool for corrupt officials to embezzle money.


The work of combating corruption is becoming increasingly difficult and the challenges are becoming increasingly greater, because the means of corruption are more advanced, the forms of embezzled wealth are more invisible, and the means of money laundering are more sophisticated.


You think money laundering is only about fraud, gambling, and the amount of money involved in corruption. That's child's play. Imagine how terrible it would be if politicians all over the world were corrupt through cryptocurrencies.


You may not be able to understand that a small USB flash drive contains billions of dollars. You may not be able to understand that a bunch of keys contain billions of dollars.


You only need to remember this string of keys to convert encrypted assets into Japanese yen, US dollar legal tender, etc. in many places around the world. What is even more terrifying is that it bypasses the domestic financial system, bypasses banks, and bypasses the foreign exchange settlement system.

Do you know how much RMB has flowed out in the form of cryptocurrencies over the years? You don't know, and I don't know either, but it is definitely not a small amount, legally or illegally, at least hundreds of billions.


jiandan:

A few years ago, there was a legend about a longevity village where all the elderly people aged naturally and none of them had cancer.
Later, experts went to investigate and finally found the reason: the village was too remote, the income was low, and no elderly people were willing to go to the city for medical treatment.


Moreover, the village clinic did not have any equipment to detect cancer. I think the same is true for this question.

crack wei:

It is difficult to cash out. Don’t be fooled by the fact that trading on exchanges is simple now, but it is all done with real names. People without any black spots can trade without distraction, but their cards are often frozen. Would corrupt officials dare to do that?


Moreover, personal bank cards are also real-name registered. If you sell coins one day and suddenly millions of dollars appear on your bank card, do you think you will be caught? Once investigated, you will not be able to explain the source of the funds?


So it’s better to buy a house and store cash for security.

zhangdabao:

The crime of embezzlement defined by the law is embezzlement, not just embezzlement if you say it is embezzlement. If you take someone else's bitcoins and he doesn't tell you, how do you know he took it?

Also, it exists on the Internet, and the server is not Chinese, so how can you say he is committing corruption? Moreover, China does not recognize Bitcoin as a currency. Besides, even if you report it, where can you report it?


Railway police are in charge of different sections. Under which jurisdiction did the officer take the Bitcoin? So taking Bitcoin is neither called corruption nor a corrupt official, at least for now.

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