Cardano Chaos: Hoskinson’s Spite Vote Saga!

Charles Hoskinson calls out Iagon for spite votes and ambassador shaming inside Cardano’s governance battle, as one community voice considers stepping away.

The vote was the easy part. What came after it is what tore things open. Imagine a soap opera, but with more crypto jargon and fewer hugs.

Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson took to X this week, targeting Iagon directly over what he described as politically charged voting against IOG proposals. The trigger, per Hoskinson, was a dispute over Filecoin on Blockfrost. The votes that followed were not procedural. They were payback. Because nothing says “I’m a good citizen” like punishing others for daring to disagree.

“Iagon voted no on IOG proposals out of spite and anger,” Hoskinson wrote on X, posting as @IOHK_Charles. He did not soften it from there. Clearly, this wasn’t a meeting of minds-it was a showdown at the OK Corral of blockchain.

When No Votes Become Weapons

According to @IOHK_Charles on X, Iagon went beyond opposing proposals. The post accused the project of publicly shaming volunteer Cardano governance ambassadors to stop them voting altogether. Because nothing says “democracy” like bullying volunteers into silence.

“People should never be punished for being an ambassador or liking a project,” Hoskinson wrote. He described those targeting ambassadors as scum and signed off with two words. Good riddance. A classic Mel Brooks-style exit, complete with a dramatic flourish.

The logic was cold, he implied. Shame the volunteers. Clear the floor. Because if you can’t beat them, shame them-then blame the weather.

One Voice Goes Quiet

Pete, known on X as @astroboysoup, said the weight of it had become too much. DMs, emails, YouTube comments. People calling him a paid shill, asking him to vote specific ways, telling him what not to support. It’s like a reality show, but no one’s laughing.

“I came to Cardano for the tech and stayed for the people,” he wrote on X. “But oh boy, the people at the moment are too much for me to handle.” A sentiment so relatable, it’s practically a hit single.

He said he was considering stepping away entirely. Renouncing ambassadorships. Deregistering as a DRep. Going dark on X for a week. Because sometimes, the only way out is to disappear like a magician’s rabbit.

Hoskinson pointed to Pete’s situation by name. The fact pattern, he said, was unambiguous. Because nothing says “clear-cut” like a community feud that’s more chaotic than a slapstick comedy.

The Part Nobody Wants to Admit

The ADA price sits low. Pete mentioned it himself, not to excuse what was happening, but as context. “The price of ADA isn’t helping. It brings out the worst in people.” Because when your coin is worth less than a bag of chips, everyone’s a critic.

A user named @Midnight_Whayle put it bluntly on X: the irony was that Iagon’s CEO, while shaming ambassadors for their affiliations, holds the same kind of ties as a project leader. That observation drew no formal response. Because sometimes, the truth is too sharp for even a blockchain to handle.

Javier, posting as @janilom81, acknowledged the personal attacks on Pete were real and said sorry for them. His issue, he wrote, was with people raising legitimate questions being dismissed the moment they did not align with Hoskinson. That thread stayed unresolved. Because in the world of crypto, even the most basic debates can turn into a war of words.

One pattern Hoskinson has fought before. Earlier this year, he went public over a community dispute with Cardano influencer ItsDave_ADA over the Midnight Network bridge design. The shape of it rhymes. Because if it’s not a repeat, it’s not a story.

“Debate is part of it,” Pete replied to a community member on X. “It’s when it turns into personal attacks and purity tests that it stops being useful.” A lesson learned, but probably not heeded by anyone involved.

He has not yet made a final call. Because in the world of Cardano, even the simplest decisions are anything but simple.

Read More

2026-04-26 20:44