The US Senate just formalized a four-year halt on the issuance of a CBDC by the Federal Reserve, news that solidifies my bullish stance on the independence of $BTC . I've been watching the market fear a centralized intervention that would erode user sovereignty, and this legal block removes a source of uncertainty that weighed on the safe-haven narrative. What the headlines overlook is that this isn't just a political issue; it's a sign that the decentralized monetary issuance model is gaining traction against state control structures. I operate $BTC under the thesis that any limitation on monetary centralization is fuel for the bull cycle. Technically, I hold my long positions as long as the price remains above the 200-day moving average. If we lose support at $62,500, the scenario changes, but as long as the narrative of digital sovereignty gains legislative weight, buyer pressure should absorb any pullbacks. In the next 72 hours, I expect to see if the institutional market reacts by consolidating levels above $68,000. The outflow on exchanges remains stable, indicating that holders have no intention of liquidating positions in light of this news. Key data: the average daily volume in $BTC remains at $35 billion, with a dominance of 54%. Stability in the pair $ETH also suggests that capital is rotating towards assets with clearer regulatory clarity.