I'm saying it's much harder for the US government to collect taxes from crypto. It's much easier to work with a bank to directly pilfer your account than for them to force people to hand over their private keys. The latter doesn't scale nearly as well as the former.
I had originally figured that you believed that a government would forego its fiscal policies if a monetary crisis ensued, the general assumption for most aficionados of the gold standard (albeit one that is thoroughly disproven by history).
The way the government forces you to make good on your tax obligations is wage garnishment: they tell your employer not to pay you but pay the government instead because you're in arrears. In general, I think you overestimate the willingness of third parties to become criminals for your sake.
Sure, and it's even harder to collect taxes from cash transactions. The thing is that with or without Bitcoin you still need financial institutions, so I'm not sure your tax evasion plan is as brilliant as you think it is.