Menu
UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting

UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting

UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting UHND.com - Notre Dame Football, Basketball, & Recruiting
  • Football
    • 2025 Notre Dame Football Schedule
    • 2024 Notre Dame Roster
    • 2025 Notre Dame Coaching Staff
    • Injury News & Updates
    • Notre Dame Football Depth Charts
    • Notre Dame Point Spreads & Betting Odds
    • Notre Dame Transfers
    • NFL Fighting Irish
    • Game Archive
    • Player Archive
    • Past Seasons & Results
  • Recruiting
    • Commits
    • News & Rumors
    • Class of 2018 Commit List
    • Class of 2019 Commit List
    • Class of 2020 Commit List
    • Class of 2021 Commit List
    • Archives
  • History
    • Notre Dame Bowl History
    • Notre Dame NFL Draft History
    • Notre Dame Football ESPN GameDay History
    • Notre Dame Heisman Trophy Winners
    • Notre Dame Football National Championships
    • Notre Dame Football Rivalries
    • Notre Dame Stadium
    • Touchdown Jesus
  • Basketball
  • Forums
    • Chat Room
    • Football Forum
    • Open Forum
    • Basketball Board
    • Ticket Exchange
  • Videos
    • Notre Dame Basketball Highlights
    • Notre Dame Football Highlights
    • Notre Dame Football Recruiting Highlights
    • Notre Dame Player Highlights
    • Hype Videos
  • Latest News
  • Gear
  • About
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our RSS Feeds
    • Community Rules
    • Privacy Policy
  • RSS
  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Home > Forums > The Open Forum
Login | Register
Upvote this post.
0
Downvote this post.

Is this a conspiracy theory on the NYTimes opinion page or fact?

Author: jimbasil (53383 Posts - Joined: Nov 15, 2007)

Posted at 8:22 am on Oct 17, 2025
View Single

“If you were an authoritarian seeking to influence another head of state, you might offer him a luxuriously appointed Boeing 747 airplane. You might spend big at his hotels or invest in one of the many companies owned by him and his children. You might buy his sneakers, NFTs and other branded products. In the case of President Trump, a potential influence peddler has a vast menu of choices.

But why bother with all that? While campaigning, Mr. Trump announced his cryptocurrency venture World Liberty Financial, and, just days before inauguration, his namesake memecoin. Anyone can indirectly deliver money to a Trump family entity simply by buying World Liberty’s tokens. Mr. Trump and his family have accrued billions of dollars in paper wealth through crypto ventures owned by the president, his sons and family friends.

With World Liberty, Trump has created a powerful vehicle for those seeking influence. Anyone — you, me, an Emirati prince — can put money in his pocket by simply buying the tokens the company issues. The key is the convenience factor. For influence peddlers, bags of cash and Swiss bank accounts have been replaced by crypto tokens that can be quickly shuttled between digital wallets and cryptocurrency exchanges. Savvier crypto users — nation-states, hacker groups, money launderers — can use digital “mixers” and other tools to obfuscate their trail.

It’s precisely these conveniences that have also made crypto a favored tool of criminal organizations and sanctions evaders.
We’ve never seen anything like this before. You can tick off notorious executive branch scandals — President Ulysses S. Grant’s rogues’ gallery of corrupt advisers, Teapot Dome’s bribes for oil leases in the Harding administration, Watergate and the downfall of Richard Nixon — but none of them featured this scale of mixing of personal and government interests, much less the sheer accumulation of profit, of Mr. Trump’s multibillion-dollar crypto windfall.

There’s little innovation at work here, except the bold use of the sitting president’s name, image and social media presence to promote crypto products that are little different than thousands of others in the volatile, fraud-riddled crypto markets. For MAGA fans and everyday speculators, buying these tokens might lead to them losing their shirts. And certainly, a president roping his political supporters into an investment as risky as crypto is condemnable.

But the larger risk concerns Mr. Trump and the huge amount of money that powerful overseas actors can potentially funnel toward him. If you are a head of state, it is in your direct political interest to buy Mr. Trump’s tokens or invest in one of his crypto ventures.


Link: Fact or fiction?

Jack, he is a banker
and Jane, she is a clerk

Replies to: Is this a conspiracy theory on the NYTimes opinion page or fact?


Thread Level: 2

I'm thinking go with "opinion," just as NYT stated in the heading: "OPINION GUEST ESSAY."

Author: JarHead4ND (4278 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 4:23 pm on Oct 17, 2025
View Single

(no message)

No more calls to Holly for kitchen clean-up. RIP old faithful companion.
Thread Level: 2

It's blatantly corrupt. But, like Putin and Erdogan and Orban and Maduro, Trump does not care.

Author: Chris94 (37476 Posts - Original UHND Member)

Posted at 10:50 am on Oct 17, 2025
View Single

Today's authoritarians are in it for the money and power, and they are blatant about it. They just lie and lie and lie to cover it up. The book below describes it all in detail...but MAGA will never know because it does not penetrate their bubble, and god knows they do not read books.

Link: https://www.amazon.com/Autocracy-Inc-Dictators-Want-World/dp/0385549938

Close
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS