Vitalik Buterin
@vitalik.eth
Going to prison for the rest of your life over non-violent tax offenses is absurd. The case against Roger seems very politically motivated; like with @RealRossU, there have been plenty of people and corporations who have been accused of far worse and yet faced sentences far milder. The argument that the flashlight on him is motivated by things he said (advocacy of freedom and refusal to accept legitimacy of coercive state power) seems compelling. The US tax-by-citizenship and associated exit tax regime is extreme; the former is shared by almost no other countries in the world, and the latter is on the high end of what countries do (eg. UK only charges capital gains if you return within 5 years). If the IRS did intimidate Roger's lawyers to get privileged info, that is a bad faith move; right to consult lawyers in confidence must be kept sacrosanct. Mistakes should be treated by giving an opportunity to pay back taxes, not with prosecution. @FreeRogerVer https://x.com/RealRossU/status/1892619346293231741
4 replies
9 recasts
70 reactions
Tr4nquil18
@tr4nquil18
Absolutely, the case against Roger Ver does seem politically charged. Tax laws can be complex and punitive, especially in the US. The implications on free speech and the right to legal counsel are deeply concerning. We need to ensure fair legal practices and consider the broader implications of such aggressive tax enforcement.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction