Heads up, crypto fans and people who are only here because their nephew keeps talking about “Web3”—Brad Garlinghouse, aka Captain Ripple, is marching over to the Senate Banking Committee. His mission? To politely (read: desperately) ask Congress for laws that aren’t held together with chewing gum and crossed fingers. He’s going to stress how innovation is being strangled by regulatory spaghetti. That’s right, we’re talking *real* spaghetti—a level of chaos Mario and Luigi wouldn’t even touch. 🍝
This testimony is happening at what journalists love to call a “crucial time” for crypto, meaning things are on fire but we’re pretending it’s fine. Why? Lawmakers and agencies won’t settle on the rules—so the industry’s stuck in a regulatory escape room where the only clue is “LOL, good luck.” Companies are peacing out of the U.S. like tourists who just realized their AirBnB is actually a tent. Garlinghouse, meanwhile, keeps trying to tell the SEC that their “enforcement-based approach” is about as useful as a screen door on a submarine. 🚪🌊
Garlinghouse, in what may or may not be a subtle dig, will probably keep reminding everyone that not all digital assets are evil, and that maybe—just maybe—regulations should fit, you know, the 21st century. Ripple’s ongoing legal cage match with the SEC over whether XRP is a security will surely be the example du jour. (Spoiler: This case has been dragging longer than your last attempt to eat healthy.)
For the Senators, this is a rare and magical chance to hear straight from someone who actually knows what a blockchain is (and isn’t just reading random buzzwords off Wikipedia the night before). It shows Washington is maybe, sort of, possibly ready to talk to crypto people instead of just pretending they’re speaking Klingon.
Will Garlinghouse finally get lawmakers to high-five across the aisle and pass bills that explain what the heck crypto is? Who knows! But if nothing else, we can all look forward to some new Senate memes, a fresh batch of bipartisan confusion, and at least one Senator using the phrase “the Google.” 🎤🪄
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2025-07-07 22:43