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Just saw this gaining traction in policy circles - a group of U.S. lawmakers is pushing for a permanent ban on CBDC issuance. Pretty interesting timing given all the digital currency momentum we've been seeing.
The core concern seems to be around financial privacy and potential government overreach. You know how it goes - the debate always circles back to these two points whenever central bank digital currencies come up. Some legislators are basically saying the risks to individual privacy outweigh whatever efficiency gains a CBDC might bring to the financial system.
What's worth noting is that this reflects a broader tension in the policy space right now. On one side you've got the innovation crowd pushing for digital currency adoption, and on the other you've got people worried about surveillance and control. The CBDC discussion has become this weird battleground between those two camps.
I think what's happening here is that concerns about CBDC are forcing a real conversation about what we actually want from our financial infrastructure. Whether this ban proposal goes anywhere is another question, but it definitely signals that privacy advocates have a seat at the table in these discussions now. Interesting to see how this plays out.