The Michael Fanone Show
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit michaelfanone.substack.com [https://michaelfanone.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_7] Two point two billion dollars. That’s what Donald Trump made last year — not his companies in some abstract sense, him, personally. And the reason we know the number is that his own White House dropped his annual financial disclosure with his signature at the bottom. The year before he returned to office, his businesses brought in $622 million. One year back in the White House, that number more than tripled. Go line by line through where the new money came from, and almost all of it traces back to people, industries, and foreign governments that need something from his administration. This is the most corrupt administration in American history, by a long shot — and don’t take my word for it. Presidential historians who study this for a living looked at 250 years of records and couldn’t find a single president who started new businesses on his way into the White House and then kept personally cashing in on them while he governed. One called it completely unprecedented. Another called it one of the greatest betrayals of the American social contract since the founding. So let me take you through it piece by piece, because each story is bad on its own, but you only understand what this really is when you see them stacked together. Start with crypto, because that’s where the bulk of it came from. To date, Trump has pulled roughly four billion dollars in a single year out of the family’s crypto ventures — and remember, this is a man who used to trash crypto as a haven for drug dealers and scammers. Right up until he stood to gain. Once he saw the upside, the family launched World Liberty Financial right before the election, built so the house always wins: seventy-five percent of every token sale flows to a Trump entity after expenses. He gets paid whether the coin goes up or down. That one company put $799 million in his pocket last year. Meanwhile his administration spent the same year pulling back crypto enforcement and gutting the rules. Then he pardoned Changpeng Zhao — the Binance founder, the richest man in crypto, and a business partner of his family’s own venture. The president of the United States used the pardon power on his business partner. Say that sentence out loud and tell me it isn’t as corrupt as it gets. Now look at who else is paying. Days before the inauguration, an investment firm tied to the government of the United Arab Emirates bought forty-nine percent of World Liberty. A foreign government, buying half the president’s company. Months later the Emiratis got something they wanted badly — approval to import advanced American AI chips, over the objections of our own national security officials. Our people said don’t do this. They lost. The chips are moving, and the filing shows investments that generated more than $200 million for Trump. Then the memecoin. He launched Trumpcoin three days before the inauguration, and the industry threw a party in Washington they called the Crypto Ball. Weeks later the SEC announced that memecoins don’t fall under its oversight, reversing the position it held under the last administration. The coin made him more than $600 million. And here’s the part his supporters need to hear: the price has collapsed about eighty percent. He got paid on the way up. The ordinary people who bought in because his name was on it ate the loss. That’s not a conflict of interest. That’s a con job. Then the real estate. First term, the family publicly swore off new foreign deals. This time, no such promise. New licensing deals in Saudi Arabia — including one involving the Saudi government itself — and in Qatar, which also handed the United States a Boeing jet that Trump now flies as Air Force One. In Vietnam, officials fast-tracked a Trump golf development while their country was desperate to talk him out of steep tariffs. Middle East deals alone brought in at least $35 million. None of these governments is confused about what they’re buying. Access to the American presidency is for sale, and they’re paying the man who holds it. Then the media money. After January 6th, Meta and other platforms banned him. They’ve now settled his lawsuits and agreed to pay him millions. ABC settled. Paramount paid him millions over the editing of a 60 Minutes interview. And while those checks were clearing, his FCC chairman was threatening broadcasters’ licenses and his Justice Department cleared the merger putting CBS News and CNN under one owner. These companies need his government’s permission to operate. They paid him first. Call it a settlement if you want. I call it offering their god a sacrifice they know will get his attention. His defense, when he got asked about it, is ridiculous. He said he never speaks to the people who run the money, then said you know why I’m profiting? Because the stock market is going up. The Times reported he meets with his financial advisers for updates — but set that aside, because the bigger problem is simple math. The stock market didn’t buy half his crypto company. The stock market didn’t pay him for his name on a Saudi tower. A rising market doesn’t explain a foreign government wiring money into your family business four months before you approve its chip deal. His own defense doesn’t survive contact with his own disclosure. The sons-run-the-business line is just as hollow. Sure, Eric and Don Jr. manage the operations. But the trusts they control exist for one beneficiary — their father. The money lands in his account every single time. Here’s what every other president understood. Jimmy Carter put his peanut farm in a trust run by an outside trustee. A peanut farm. George W. Bush sold his stake in the Texas Rangers before he ran. Lady Bird Johnson handed her radio stations to an independent trust. For 250 years the standard was that you don’t just avoid corruption, you avoid the appearance of it. Historians say holding office usually cost presidents money. Trump looked at that entire tradition and saw suckers. Eric Trump said it plainly before the election: we can’t just sit out in perpetuity, and I won’t. There’s the whole philosophy. The presidency isn’t a public trust anymore. It’s the family’s biggest asset. And he’s not even hiding it. That’s what the disclosure proves. He put every dollar on a government form, signed his name, and handed it in — because he’s decided nothing and nobody will stop him. So far he’s been right. Whether this is happening isn’t up for debate anymore. He documented it himself. The only real question left is what we do with a president who’s openly for sale — and whether we’ve quietly decided to live with it, and be taken for the fools he thinks we are. 🟧 Paid subscribers get 15% off your next merch order🟧 Founding Members get 20% off for life You’ll get the link in your welcome email. GET DISCOUNTS BELOW! ENJOY!
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