@tired.yz:

⋆༺𓆩𝖙𝖎𝖗𝖊𝖉𓆪༻⋆
⋆༺𓆩𝖙𝖎𝖗𝖊𝖉𓆪༻⋆
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Region: FR
Monday 29 June 2026 01:29:56 GMT
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_mcdo.1
mcdo :
a kilogram of steel, cus steel is heavier than feathers
2026-07-11 11:20:50
4
.marreux
♪ :
a kilogram of realising I can't love someone into loving me back
2026-06-29 17:26:32
1852
statjumper17
starjumper17 :
but it's a kilogram
2026-07-11 21:09:07
0
vlad1m1r05
Vlad1m1r :
a kilogram of pretending the weight was never there
2026-07-11 20:48:49
0
musti6934
musti :
a gram of knowing there‘s someone else
2026-06-29 21:30:49
410
jamsinuse
imusinjams :
they're both a kilogram
2026-07-11 17:36:50
0
luhsnapped
snapped :
idk man a kilogram is pretty heavy
2026-06-29 01:47:12
1368
nujabeslover06
Penguin Belimbing :
a gram of not knowing where it goes
2026-07-10 20:09:07
1
ioshahaios
shelly :
feather
2026-07-11 03:49:12
0
privvacc.e7
⃟ :
a kilogram of mixed signals
2026-06-29 20:12:44
330
ahuraaaaaaa
xick :
how long i had already known AND still believed there was hope
2026-06-29 19:35:46
66
christian25436
🤤 :
Trick question guys he said its both a kilogramm so its the same
2026-06-29 15:44:01
117
anca.bc19
anca.bc19 :
comedy app they said
2026-06-29 17:13:36
74
jamazzalean
JayM :
oh wait i can just scroll 😭✌
2026-06-29 18:56:43
54
samcareyspam
sam 2.0 :
oh mate take a day off
2026-06-30 16:45:32
20
am11rrl
Amir :
bro i seen this mid meal. can’t even finish ts nm
2026-06-29 15:14:03
20
.tommicau
tommaso :
realest shi I’ve ever seen
2026-06-29 21:46:19
11
vizzozer1
Vizzozer :
My brain didnt even read all of it the first two times. It just autofilled steel and feathers
2026-06-29 10:16:15
5
gormshie
gormey :
cause steel is heavier than feathers
2026-07-04 14:58:52
4
__.majaa._._
𝔐𝔞𝔧𝔞𓋹 :
why is the screen getting blurry
2026-06-30 18:07:47
3
shidpoop38
Desk Haki :
How about a kilogram of knowing that it was always gonna be this way from the beginning
2026-07-01 01:07:28
4
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Five federal agencies just moved on crypto at the same time, and most people are reading it completely wrong. On June 18, 2026, FinCEN and the US banking agencies proposed a rule under the GENIUS Act, America's new stablecoin law. Four days later it hit the Federal Register, backed by FinCEN, the OCC, the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the NCUA. That is the entire US banking and anti money laundering stack moving together. The rule would treat companies that issue payment stablecoins as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act. In practice that means a written customer identification program: name, date of birth or date of formation, address, and an ID number. The same basics every bank collects. It also means screening against government lists and filing suspicious activity reports. Here is the part most people miss. This is not an ID check on every wallet on earth. The rule covers direct issuer relationships: creating coins, redeeming them, managing reserves, custody. Simply holding a stablecoin is not an account. Regulators drew a line between issuer plumbing and your wallet on purpose. It also fits a bigger pattern. In April 2026, FinCEN and OFAC proposed anti money laundering and sanctions rules for stablecoin issuers. Then came this identity layer. Piece by piece, the US is building the compliance package banks and institutions need before they can plug in safely. Why it matters: the deeper story is integration. Companies that can afford bank grade controls become easier for banks, payment networks, and enterprises to trust. Regulation slows weak players down and makes winners easier to adopt. What it means for you: compliance rails get built before the big institutional money shows up. Watch which issuers can meet these standards, because those are the ones getting wired into the banking system, and that is how stablecoins go from crypto product to permanent payment infrastructure. Follow for the next breakdown. Join us at skool.com/coinpicksgenesis and use the AI system to take advantage of all of this.
Five federal agencies just moved on crypto at the same time, and most people are reading it completely wrong. On June 18, 2026, FinCEN and the US banking agencies proposed a rule under the GENIUS Act, America's new stablecoin law. Four days later it hit the Federal Register, backed by FinCEN, the OCC, the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the NCUA. That is the entire US banking and anti money laundering stack moving together. The rule would treat companies that issue payment stablecoins as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act. In practice that means a written customer identification program: name, date of birth or date of formation, address, and an ID number. The same basics every bank collects. It also means screening against government lists and filing suspicious activity reports. Here is the part most people miss. This is not an ID check on every wallet on earth. The rule covers direct issuer relationships: creating coins, redeeming them, managing reserves, custody. Simply holding a stablecoin is not an account. Regulators drew a line between issuer plumbing and your wallet on purpose. It also fits a bigger pattern. In April 2026, FinCEN and OFAC proposed anti money laundering and sanctions rules for stablecoin issuers. Then came this identity layer. Piece by piece, the US is building the compliance package banks and institutions need before they can plug in safely. Why it matters: the deeper story is integration. Companies that can afford bank grade controls become easier for banks, payment networks, and enterprises to trust. Regulation slows weak players down and makes winners easier to adopt. What it means for you: compliance rails get built before the big institutional money shows up. Watch which issuers can meet these standards, because those are the ones getting wired into the banking system, and that is how stablecoins go from crypto product to permanent payment infrastructure. Follow for the next breakdown. Join us at skool.com/coinpicksgenesis and use the AI system to take advantage of all of this.

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