Ethereum’s political identity is on trial (again)

Vitalik Buterin catches flack with pro-communism joke

share


This is a segment from the 0xResearch newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe.


When I interview Web3 founders, I like to ask one question: “Which thinkers in history inspire you?”

One name invariably comes up more than any other: Friedrich Hayek.

Aave’s Stani Kulechov, Base’s Jesse Powell and many more said the same.

Loading Tweet..

Polymarket founder Shayne Coplan even mandates Hayek’s famous essay “The Use of Knowledge in Society” as compulsory reading for employees, according to Forbes.

I don’t know what Vitalik would say. But given his close association with many George Mason scholars — like Tyler Cowen and Robin Hanson — it wouldn’t be a stretch to consider him something of a Hayekian (George Mason is a university renowned for its Hayekian scholarship).

For the uninitiated, Hayek was a 1974 Nobel Laureate and a pioneer of the Austrian School of Economics, a school of thought closely associated with free market libertarianism and early Bitcoin thinking.

Hayek’s key insight was that markets work best when individuals can freely act on their local knowledge. 

For individuals to do so requires economic certainty provided by a rule of law, a free price system, robust property rights and a profit-loss calculus that is not distorted by state regulation.

When this “recipe” of institutions is in place, the outcome is market innovation.

These ideas are consistently applied in crypto. For example:

  • The idea of immutable smart contracts comes as close to having sacrosanct property rights in a rule of law. In the real world, laws are subject to constant rent-seeking pressures to change.
  • Capital markets are permissionless. Anyone can write a smart contract and issue assets without approval. In the real world, regulators give approval.
  • Anyone can launch an unsustainable liquidity mining campaign with their token, but the unsustainability inevitably shows up in falling prices in a free price system. In the real world, prices are distorted by regulations that benefit incumbents like tariffs.
  • Ethereum’s open source culture enables the endless code-forking of protocols with incremental improvements and the composable nature of DeFi. This is closely related to Hayek’s ideas around “spontaneous orders” (and how market competition acts as a knowledge “discovery procedure”). In the real world, intellectual property laws don’t allow for this.

The institutional design of the Ethereum protocol (or any other blockchain for that matter) is the furthest thing from “communism,” where market processes are controlled from the top-down and where people are outlawed from acting on individual information.

Even Ripple cannot unilaterally inflate the total token supply of XRP. That’s the rule of law (immutable smart contracts) at work.

Ethereum critics complain that the “culture” of Ethereum is left-leaning. They point to the Ethereum Foundation or Gitcoin’s initiatives on “public goods” funding.

But these public goods are crowdsourced by private funding. No taxpayers were fleeced.

Gitcoin’s quadratic funding mechanism matches more central funds based on the amount of individual contributor funding.

That is a blatantly market-oriented idea. It’s a fundraising process that works best when markets signal they want it — plus it’s all onchain (property rights).

Contrary to popular belief, capitalism is not about unbridled greed. Neither is it against communal public goods. Both exist in all political systems.

Capitalism is a liberal archipelago. You’re free to work on Wall Street, or go live in a socialist commune.

Therein lies the beauty of the crypto industry. No one cares what your political identity is. You can be a raging Milton Friedman acolyte or a diehard 19th century Trotskyist.

But no matter which political tribe you preach, everyone has to abide by the blockchain’s rule of law.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Decoding crypto and the markets. Daily, with Byron Gilliam.

Upcoming Events

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

Industry City | Brooklyn, NY

TUES - THURS, JUNE 24 - 26, 2025

Permissionless IV serves as the definitive gathering for crypto’s technical founders, developers, and builders to come together and create the future.If you’re ready to shape the future of crypto, Permissionless IV is where it happens.

Brooklyn, NY

SUN - MON, JUN. 22 - 23, 2025

Blockworks and Cracked Labs are teaming up for the third installment of the Permissionless Hackathon, happening June 22–23, 2025 in Brooklyn, NY. This is a 36-hour IRL builder sprint where developers, designers, and creatives ship real projects solving real problems across […]

recent research

Research Report Templates (8).png

Research

Meta-aggregators like Titan and Kamino Swap improve price execution for users, making the Solana swapping landscape more competitive. Jupiter has incorporated meta-aggregation features into its latest routing engine to keep users on its front end (own the user, own the flow). At large, teams are treating swaps as a commoditized complement, offering incredibly cheap or free swaps to own the end-user and increase demand for high-margin product offerings (multi-product DeFi). On another note, the divergence in the concentration of aggregator volume between DEXs suggests increased specialization at the DEX layer by asset type.

article-image

Onboarding the world to Bitcoin takes a series of firsts

article-image

If we get an altcoin season, it’ll be focused on tokens deemed “ fundamentally valuable enough for traditional public money and capital” to get involved with

article-image

Solana dropped nearly 10% amid mass crypto liquidations triggered by rising geopolitical strife

article-image

Investors moved to safe assets like the US dollar and gold, but bonds faltered

article-image

The Amex offers up to 4% bitcoin back, but the deal is a bit ironic considering crypto’s goals

article-image

Short answer: Subnets are now cheaper to bootstrap than a Celestia rollup