Now that Trump is in office, launching his own crypto ventures and asking for legislation establishing (light) digital asset regulations to appear on his desk by August, his supportersâ voices drown out those of the bitcoiners who warn how abandoning cryptoâs principles could endanger their community.
âTrying to is really dangerous for everybody, because the message of what bitcoin does ⦠gets glossed over this tool for the Republican Party,â says Erik Cason, author of the book Cryptosovereignty.
In a panel titled âAre Bitcoiners Becoming Sycophants of the State,â he elaborates to a crowd on the conference floor: âThe amount of dick-sucking going on towards the political establishment here is shameful and disgusting,â he says. âYou can own bitcoin today and exit from this fucked-up establishment that’s designed to steal from you and redistribute that money towards war and horror.â
Among resounding cheers, an older man stands up and pumps his fist in agreement. A man behind him slaps his leg emphatically.
Politicians âneed us more than we need them,â Bruce Fenton, founder and CEO of fintech company Chainstone Labs, continues. âWe should refuse meetings with them ⦠We’ve invented nerd money that they can’t stop with all their tanks.â
Not only is the state dangerous as a vehicle of war, they say; itâs also risky to align with one political party, because it could provoke a reactionary backlash. Next time Democrats take over, Cason fears, theyâll âgo after bitcoin and crypto hard.â
Bitcoiners âneed to understand that we’re our own political contingency now, and pandering to either side is a massive disservice,â he tells me after the conference. âBitcoin isn’t for the right or the left. It’s for the bottom, not the top.â
Bitcoin purists might have hoped for vocal support from Ross Ulbricht, the former operator of the dark-web market Silk Road (where users could use bitcoin to buy drugs). Ulbricht became a symbol for crypto operating unburdened by the stateâs rules when he was sentenced to life in prison in 2015. Trump pardoned him earlier this year.
Ulbrichtâs freedom has been such a key issue for the bitcoin community that David Bailey, CEO of BTC Inc, which organized Bitcoin 2025, made sure to communicate to Trump during the 2024 campaign how high priority pardoning Ulbricht was for his voting bloc. But Ulbrichtâs appearance at the conference is paradoxical: His anti-state sentiment has been sanctioned by the very state he wanted to bypass.
âThe impression people have is that bitcoiners just care about money,â Ulbrichtâs mother, Lyn, whoâs been attending the Bitcoin Conference for years working to free her son, tells me, âbut many are idealistic and caring.â A movement of donors and activists large and small in the bitcoin, crypto, and Libertarian communities got her son out of prison, she says.
When Ulbricht walks onto the main stage, lanky and self-assured in a long, red tie, he doesnât thank Trump directly (heâs âthankful that we elected himâ). Nor does he thank Bailey for his advocacy, or even his mother for her tireless efforts. He thanks the audience, whom he urges to âstay true to our principlesââfreedom, decentralization, and, he stresses, unity. âItâs more important than ever,â he says, as bitcoinâs popularity spreads.