The irony of all these banks and governments banning crypto currency purchases is that all they are doing is strengthening the use case for crypto currencies to begin with. One of the most appealing things about crypto currencies (specifically decentralized ones) is that you are free to hold them and use them however you like.<p>There aren’t restrictions on who you can send them to, what time of the day you can send them, the maximum amount you can send. You don’t have to worry about your bank account being frozen or suspended. You don’t have to wait days for transactions to go through. You don’t need a bank account at all to store them. The more that banks restrict the way people are allowed to use their money, the more it will push people into crypto currencies.<p>State backed crypto currencies are unlikely to succeed in the same way that decentralized ones like Bitcoin are because central control allows the bank or government to print as much as they would like and alter transactions however they see fit. It’s unlikely there will be any sort of public ledger/blockchain or accountability. Eventually people will catch on to this and figure out a way to move back to Bitcoin and others. It may take 10-20 years or longer, but I don’t think this charade is going to last forever.<p>In addition, I am always wary when banks do things like this citing reasons like: “Our goal is to protect our customers. It’s too volatile. It’s used for money laundering.” Banks have never and will never care about their customers. In fact, they benefit from their customers going into debt (credit card fees, loan interest, overdraft fees, etc). How concerned were the banks about issuing loans to customers leading up to the 2008 housing crisis? Money laundering is still primarily done using cash and often with banks turning a blind eye.<p>This is all about banks understanding the threat of crypto currencies and trying to maintain control of the financial system by eliminating any and all competition. They know that widespread crypto adoption will make them obsolete. I think this battle will go on for years, but I think eventually the banks are going to lose. It’s possible that they already know that too.