To declare that the crypto industry is dying is not to lament its passing, but to applaud its evolution. Anthony Pompliano, that most unapologetic of Bitcoin evangelists, has observed with the poise of a man who has already ordered his coffin that the market is merely a corpse with a pulse. In a May 6 missive upon X (formerly Twitter), he declared that the sector’s long tail of forgotten blockchains and tokens is being pruned with the ruthlessness of a gardener tending to bonsai. The future, he insists, belongs not to the undead, but to those with the audacity to merge with the grand financial opera.
When Pompliano first intoned that “most of the crypto industry is dead and it’s never coming back,” the reaction was, predictably, a symphony of vitriol. One might imagine a Victorian drawing room where a guest remarks that the host’s heirlooms are fakes and is then politely asked to leave. At Consensus in Miami, he was besieged with accusations of idiocy, yet emerged more convinced than ever. “I have been called an idiot,” he mused, “but let us not confuse being labeled a fool with actually being one.”
The crux of his argument lies in the peculiar biology of crypto’s ecosystem. In the real world, failed ventures collapse like house of cards in a hurricane. In crypto, they linger like ghosts at a masquerade ball, their tokens hanging on like party guests who’ve forgotten the time. Pompliano dubbed them “ghost chains”-blockchains that hum with the faintest of activity-and “zombie coins,” whose communities have expired but whose holders cling to hope like a drunkard to a bottle. “Does anyone truly believe,” he asked, “that millions of coins will thrive? I posed this to a crowd, and not a single hand rose. A silence more eloquent than applause.”
Once, crypto was a haven for missionaries-zealots who believed in decentralization with the fervor of a religious cult. Now, it teems with mercenaries, individuals who trade principles for profit with the casual indifference of a man swapping his overcoat for a hat. Meme tokens, scams, and yield farming have replaced the noble pursuit of financial freedom. “If you don’t stand for something,” Pompliano quipped, “you’ll fall for anything. And fall they have, into the arms of Wall Street.”
Here lies the irony: the very institutions crypto once despised are now its saviors. Morgan Stanley, that titan of tradition, plans to offer Bitcoin trading through E-Trade, a move Pompliano called a “narrative violation” so profound it would make Oscar Wilde blush. Meanwhile, crypto-native platforms have begun peddling equities and commodities, blurring the line between digital ledger and dinner theater. Michael Saylor’s suggestion to sell Bitcoin for dividends would have once been heresy; now, it’s just another line item in the financialized ledger.
Yet Pompliano is not a Luddite. He sees value in Bitcoin, stablecoins, infrastructure, and tokenization-though he insists we no longer need “carnivals” or “nonsense.” “We are competing with firms that have money and minds,” he said, “and we need more builders, not more bozos.” As the market cap stood at $2.65 trillion, one might say the industry is dead-but what a glorious death, where the survivors are not the loudest, but the least ridiculous.
The crypto industry is dying.
That is a good thing.
Let the resilient compete on the grand stage, not in the boutique of decline.
– Anthony Pompliano (@APompliano) May 6, 2026

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2026-05-08 03:58