Then you're kinda missing the point of crypto. The question isn't whether they have the legislative power to destroy it (they don't give a shit about constitutional protections) it's whether they have the power to destroy it in practice.
They can significantly cripple it by shutting down US based exchanges and possibly other draconian measures, but they can't erase the blockchain and they can't shut down the network without completely shutting down the internet.
The gold order worked because gold possession was centralised and they could simply order the banks to hand over records of who did/had recently deposited there. That doesn't really apply to crypto.
We know the camps had a typhoid outbreak and that they were cremating corpses to prevent the spread of disease. If some of these cremation burials have been found it does not prove that they murdered millions of people.
Tbh, I think you're right, although it shouldn't be that way. The average person isn't less dependent on security than technies, they're just less aware of it and expect it served up on a plate.
Kinda like how the average person doesn't know how their car works, they just expect it to work, and if it doesn't they expect a new one or someone to fix it for them.
Eh... discord's UI is passable, but element has a lot of basic things wrong. Like using "spaces" is a bit clunky and I have trouble guiding people to where they are sometimes.
I still prefer it though since it's not run by literal furry pedos who sell you out to antifa. Although I gather they sold out to someone who sends data to the feds instead.
I remember a guy posting about it during the lockdowns. They made everyone mask up and a staff member kept bothering him about chinmasking.
He turned around and said loudly "I get it, I'm a jew, I have a big nose and the mask won't stay on properly, what do you want from me??" This was in Germany. The staffmember panicked, apologised and went off to hide.