This abysmal failure to show us all absolute evidence of
illicit money exchanged for fabricated, demonstratively false science papers / assessments is the proverbial «mathematical certainty «that dooms the accusation, and places the whole idea of man - caused global warming in peril of sinking if its promoters can not defend their position against science - based criticism from skeptic scientists.
Not exact matches
Although the lack of jurisdiction over Bitcoin and its links to
money laundering and
illicit marketplaces have raised more than a few eyebrows, the currency offers a simple way for legitimate businesses such as small retailers and professional service providers to accept payments for international sales without facing onerous credit card fees or
exchange - rate surcharges.
In my previous blog post, I showed how one anonymous op - ed writer tried to casually drop the «reposition global warming as theory rather than fact» phrase into his piece to insinuate skeptic climate scientists received
illicit industry
money in
exchange for the promise to lie to the public.
So, if none of those deliver (pardon the pun) evidence clearly showing how skeptic climate scientists agreed to accept
illicit money in
exchange for spreading lies that meet the approval of fossil fuel industry executives, what do we have left?
This was a taller cliff for Niose to fly off because of one other anti-intellectual assertion of his: the insinuation about corporate influence, or as it is better known around the planet,
illicit money paid to skeptic scientists and skeptic organizations in
exchange for knowingly spreading misinformation.
However, owing to increase participation of global investors in the market, the Japanese regulatory body started licensing crypto
exchanges in the wake of increased scrutiny for
illicit activities of tax evasion and
money laundering.
After history's biggest Coincheck hack, the FSA stepped up its efforts to investigate Bitcoin
exchanges, as well as Bitcoin's
illicit use in
money laundering transactions.
Analytics firms are also getting better at spotting
illicit behavior and alerting crypto
exchanges before funds are
exchanged into fiat
money.