Capitol Hill seems to be at the wire‑shark edge, poised on the brink of turning the cryptomodule from a niche hobby into a topic as hot as a summer sidewalk in Nevada. The suggestion that the upcoming debate will be a “landmark day” feels less like sober policy and more like the press release of the year’s biggest fireworks show.
Conner Brown, who until recently served as a counsel for Senator Cynthia Lummis and is now steering the Bitcoin Policy Institute, drummed up expectations with a vague mention of “very exciting developments” sprouting from Washington, D.C. – a phrase that would make any passive‑aggressive weather reporter blush.
Power projection
Representative Lance Gooden, a veteran of the House Armed Services Committee, penned an op‑ed that triggers the sense of a family drama. He claims the Chinese Communist Party is building a massive digital yuan empire while also stealthily hoarding bitcoin like a panda hoards bamboo. According to Gooden, the second‑largest economy in the world is gunning to dominate cryptocurrency, a prediction that would make the Pentagon’s sock drawer feel quite uncool.
“The U.S. can’t lose the bitcoin race to China,” Gooden insists. He goes on to brand bitcoin as a “national security asset” and a “tool of power projection.” Such rhetoric is gaining favor among Republicans, perhaps because no one ever prefers the word “risk” on a campaign flyer.
Admiral Samuel Paparo, the U.S. Indo‑Pacific Commander, has reportedly already deployed a live Bitcoin node for battlefield testing. If your confidence in the federal government is shaky, don’t worry – the military has a node ready to tackle any stranger handshake with a block.
During a congressional hearing, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth confirmed that the Pentagon is looking at bitcoin as a way to outmaneuver China. The idea is to use the “proof‑of‑work” algorithm to bolster cyber defenses, because why not turn a cryptographic puzzle into a shield?
A victory for developers
The Bitcoin community just tasted legislative success when the much‑anticipated CLARITY Act passed the Senate Banking Committee with a 15‑9 bipartisan vote. The law grants “BRCA” provisions, which basically protect non‑custodial software developers from having to be classified and regulated as money transmitters – a relief that feels akin to raising your hand in a crowded church, only to hear the pastor say, “You’re more welcome than you think.”
The Bitcoin Policy Institute gave kudos to Coin Center, Peter Van Valkenburgh, and Senator Lummis for ensuring these safeguards slipped into the final committee draft. Advocates are celebrating the vote as an “indisputable win for innovation and the right to code.” In other words, the Senate finally decided that refreshing software is a legitimate national treasure.
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2026-05-21 10:22