Oh yeah we did that a few years ago and it was scams all the way down :)
The crypto ecosystem has scams but it also has genuine financial privacy with Monero, while the average person in a western country has zero options for financial privacy in the traditional banking system.
The only difference is that you apply it to preventing people from controlling the keys to how and where they keep or send their money. Why? Because "terrorists!" "Money Laundering!", Tax evasion!" Oh my! How many of these justifications wouldn't even exist if government wasn't so heavy handed in slathering on endless regulations to criminalize whole areas of human activity that never needed to be harmful or criminal in the first place?
I'll also note here that in many countries, employees at major banks and at major government offices collude with organized crime to a pervasive degree, and actively look at the accounts of people with signs of having come into large amounts of money (but without corresponding protective power of their own) for the sake of extorting or even kidnapping them. I live in one such country. It's easy to bleat about the need for KYC and making sure everyone "pays their fair share" (a thing that anyhow barely functions as claimed even in the most KYC-obsessed countries, since the wealthy use all kinds of legal loopholes and special connections to keep their funds safe) if you live in a place where the powers that be aren't overtly parasitical and criminal. It's a little more difficult to apply the same in other parts of the world.