Why 67 Million Americans Can’t Ignore Crypto – And Politicians Are Ignoring Them!

In the smoky streets of a thousand small towns, the rumor spread like fire: there are sixty‑seven million ordinary souls who clutch something cold and humming: cryptocurrency. The numbers, whispered from the National Crypto Association’s State of Crypto Holders Report for 2026, have turned the bright lights of the American Dream into a candle flickering in a cold chamber.

There is no grandeur in this new collective. These are workers, farmers, shopkeepers, baristas and the ones who still wait for the bus at 4 a.m. They have enough power for the politicians to hear them – yet, like a choir singing before a silent cathedral, they remain unheard.

As if woken by the clang of the factory bell, the Chief Legal Officer of Ripple, Mr. Stuart Alderoty, declares that this is a time for clarity. Tomorrow’s sharp-edged CLARITY Act will pass a test, and the stage is set for yet another parliamentarian dance.

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67 Million Holders

California, the land of sunshine and ambition, leads with nine million five hundred thousand heartbeats of investors. Texas follows, flaunting a sly grin of five million nine hundred four thousand. And Florida, never forgetting its own reflection, shoots up with four million seven hundred and ten thousand dreams. Even in the nubs of the nation, the least sheltered stretch to ninety‑nine thousand.

Mr. Mike Novogratz of Galaxy, laced in his polished aura, told the press that innovation is the gutter into which these hushed souls will tumble, urging Democrats not to cower before the anti‑crypto left – after all, a good story without a villain fades away.

Ripple’s Stance on the CLARITY Act

The leadership of Ripple stands broad‑shouldered, painting the bill as a tin cup of salvation for both the digital playground and the country’s very many souls. Mr. Alderoty, with a twinkle “this is a meaningful step forward” in his voice, signs the ink that stirs the storm. Meanwhile, Mr. Garlinghouse declares that clarity beats chaos like a drum beats nosy neighbors.

Yet, the bastion of skeptics- the community of crypto monks-rise with hushed voices. They mock the bill as a rotten apple: not fit for a country building a cathedral. One among them, Mr. Charles Hoskinson, sprays his pass to the horizon, “It is less a charter, and more a prison.” Yet the bill trembles like a candle in an icy wind, awaiting its fate.

After twists, edits, and the silent watches of monitors, that monumental legislation stays on the edge of the balance, like a soldier standing in a storm, waiting for the command to charge forward.

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2026-05-13 23:32