> not a coincidence that the mundane or stupid reasons happen overwhelmingly more often to people with the wrong political beliefs
RTFA. It doesn't. The author opens with examples where it happened to him. He shows that debanking is disturbingly common in America, with the communication and knowledge around it badly distributed.
Mischaracterising it as an attack on political beliefs plays into the ignorance that gave rise to the problem in the first place.
> The author opens with examples where it happened to him. He shows that debanking is disturbingly common in America
As another post said, it's interesting how he's able to have that experience and simultaneously believe that "This will affect the typical user of the financial system precisely zero times during their lives." (But I don't think he does have the "right" political beliefs, not all of them).