They don’t need to pass a new law to change your life, they can update “regulations” and call it a day. We sit down to unpack South Africa’s draft capital flow regulations from Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank, why the public comment window matters, and why the process feels like it dodges real democratic accountability.We get specific about what’s being proposed and what it could mean for Bitcoin self-custody, peer-to-peer payments and everyday users who are not trying to “break the rules”, they’re just trying to save, spend and survive. We talk about the undefined threshold, the push to route transactions through licensed Crypto Asset Service Providers (CASPs), and how vague drafting can quietly expand state power over time. We also confront the human cost: the retiree you helped onboard, the small merchant accepting Bitcoin, and the ordinary citizen who suddenly faces the risk of a million rand fine or five years in jail for non-compliance.Then we go to the hard edge: enforcement. Airports, borders, suspicion-based searches, demands for private keys, and even the idea of warrantless searches that echo South Africa’s worst historical instincts. We debate what actually works against overreach: public submissions, legal challenges, mass non-compliance, better OPSEC and building civil society muscle instead of waiting for corporates or politicians to rescue anyone.If you care about property rights, privacy and the freedom to move your money, listen, share this with one person, and subscribe. After you’ve listened, leave a review and tell us: where do you draw the line on capital controls?https://propertyrightsdefense.orghttps://x.com/abcptzahttps://x.com/BitcoinEkasihttps://x.com/OKIN_17https://x.com/OrangeSaaShttps://bitcoinonly.io/https://www.useorange.com/https://btcpayserver.org/https://btcpay386617.lndyn.com/login?ReturnUrl=%2FLinks:www.bitcoinforbusiness.ioX: @gavingreX: @BTC_4_BizPrimal:
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