Close Menu
TheWireHubTheWireHub

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    This AI Cryptocurrency Is Up 111% in One Month. Is It the Next Bitcoin?

    March 28, 2026

    ZenoWell Announces Strategic Cooperation with USound to Explore Advanced Sensing Technologies for Next-Generation Wearable Devices

    March 28, 2026

    I Asked ChatGPT Which Investments Won’t Survive the Next Recession: Here’s What It Said

    March 28, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • This AI Cryptocurrency Is Up 111% in One Month. Is It the Next Bitcoin?
    • ZenoWell Announces Strategic Cooperation with USound to Explore Advanced Sensing Technologies for Next-Generation Wearable Devices
    • I Asked ChatGPT Which Investments Won’t Survive the Next Recession: Here’s What It Said
    • Rancho Santa Fe Financial Planner Richard Rojeck releases second book in Wealth Management Series – San Diego Union-Tribune
    • The best AI-powered dictation apps of 2025
    • Why Mass. is betting on a boom in climate tech
    • Artificial Intelligence: Reality Versus Hype (Opinion)
    • MVB Financial Touts AI Efficiency and Fintech Growth at Virtual Investor Banking Conference
    TheWireHubTheWireHub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Tech News
    • Personal Finance
    • Investments
    • Software & Apps
    • Cryptocurrency & Blockchain
    • More
      • AI & Future Tech
      • Gadgets & Devices
      • Banking & Insurance
    TheWireHubTheWireHub
    Home»Cryptocurrency & Blockchain»Why the shadowy money side of cryptocurrency appeals so much to Trump
    Cryptocurrency & Blockchain

    Why the shadowy money side of cryptocurrency appeals so much to Trump

    TheWireHub.netBy TheWireHub.netDecember 3, 2025No Comments2 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Why the shadowy money side of cryptocurrency appeals so much to Trump
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Thank you for the notice, bro. I’ll fix it as soon as possible and get back to you shortly.

    Under this White House, crypto is to income generation what the presidential pardon power is to justice, something bounded almost exclusively by lines that President Trump himself draws. In that sense, it’s unsurprising that the two have been so often intertwined. Trump’s controversial pardon of former Honduras president Juan Orlando Hernández, indicted by the Justice Department during Trump’s first term in office, leaves a breadcrumb trail back to cryptocurrency. (Trump ally Roger Stone, who’s been eager to claim credit for Hernández’s good fortune, has positioned the pardon as a means of protecting “a haven for Bitcoin entrepreneurs.”) His pardon of Changpeng Zhao — the billionaire founder of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance and advocate for the Trump family’s crypto projects — presents an even more obvious combination.

    By their own admission, the Trumps got into cryptocurrency after their existing financial partners started to question whether those partnerships were worth the costs.

    On the surface, this is a shift. During his first term as president, Trump once described cryptocurrencies as “highly volatile and based on thin air,” warning, correctly, that they “can facilitate unlawful behavior, including drug trade and other illegal activity.” But there’s a lot of money to be made in the hustle-friendly cryptocurrency world, and — let’s be honest — the boundaries of the law have never really served as red lines for the creators of Trump University, the Trump Foundation and the Trump Organization. So less than five years after Trump’s warning, he and his family jumped into digital currency with both feet and open wallets.

    By their own admission, the Trumps got into cryptocurrency after their existing financial partners started to question whether those partnerships were worth the costs. The Trumps claimed to have been “debanked,” in the popular phrasing of the political right, with accounts held by Trump’s private company or linked to Donald Trump Jr. reportedly closed by financial institutions. Why? Well, politics, of course.

    “We weren’t even early crypto guys, but we figured, if they can debank the Trump Organization, if they can debank us, who can’t they go after?” Trump Jr. said in a Fox News interview earlier this year. “And more importantly, who won’t they go after?”

    Except, in that same interview, the president’s son offered slightly more context about when this campaign of persecution had begun.

    “Basically, during the first term,” he explained. “Certainly after — let’s call it January 6, all the nonsense, it got significantly worse.”

    Oh, right. It was after that time the the president stoked an effort to overturn the results of the election and became, however briefly, persona non grata in American politics and society. This was the root of what Melania Trump described as “political discrimination.”

    When President Trump signed an executive order targeting “debanking,” he assailed “[g]overnment-directed surveillance programs targeting persons participating in activities and causes commonly associated with conservatism and the political right” — which apparently includes involvement in the Capitol riot. Since his return to the White House, Trump and his allies have repeatedly framed the federal probe into the riot as a partisan attack, complaining about subpoenas for phone records of legislators who aided Trump’s effort to retain power or suggesting that requests for information issued to banks by special counsel Jack Smith were nefarious, rather than investigatory.

    The pattern here should be familiar, as it mirrors how the right corralled social media over the past decade. Systems aimed at reducing fraud or abuse often swept up right-wing actors, who insisted that they were targeted not for their behaviors but for their beliefs. Republican legislators and Trump himself joined in the chorus and the social media platforms capitulated, scaling back their moderation efforts or being bought out by ideological allies of the right.

    Nearly every element of Trump’s second term in office has orbited around the idea that he (and to a lesser extent his allies) should not have to face accountability.

    The important through line here, though, is accountability. People who’d spread disinformation or engaged in abuse or stormed the Capitol or tried to overturn the 2020 election faced repercussions for doing so — and didn’t like it. Some of those repercussions were ham-handed, certainly, but they were predicated on actions, not on ideas. But repercussions for such actions were both unwelcome and unusual, and that prompted the effort to dismiss them as illegitimate.

    Nearly every element of Trump’s second term in office has orbited around the idea that he (and to a lesser extent his allies) should not have to face accountability. The shadowy money-making element of cryptocurrency obviously appeals to the president, but so does the idea that it’s a space where he and his family and friends can do what they want. Sometimes, those two outcomes overlap: People looking to build relationships with Trump have simply invested millions in his crypto products to earn pardons or access or both.

    People who are old enough — say, at least 1? — will recall that there was a time in which American businesses and entrepreneurs and politicians and others in positions of power held some reasonable expectation of being constrained by rules or laws. They didn’t like this, admittedly, and those constraints were often imperfectly enforced. Both by design and by adoption, cryptocurrency has helped investors sidestep such constraints. By design and in practice, Trump has used his return to the executive mansion to remove the constraints binding himself, his allies and his donors.

    It isn’t simply that the president has bound himself to the crypto industry, to their mutual benefit. It’s that he has worked to impose the ethos on which the crypto industry operates, a winking disdain for the rules and an every-Trump-for-himself approach to power. It’s an ethos that has now suffused the country.

    The American system of checks and balances, it turns out, was not as robust as it seemed when faced with a culture unabashed about leveraging political polarization to treat any checks as invalid. What we now have little choice but to accept is that, while being president may not be based on thin air, it, too, can be highly volatile and facilitate unlawful behavior.

    The post Why the shadowy money side of cryptocurrency appeals so much to Trump appeared first on MS NOW.

    This article was originally published on ms.now

    appeals cryptocurrency Money shadowy side Trump
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    TheWireHub.net
    • Website

    Related Posts

    This AI Cryptocurrency Is Up 111% in One Month. Is It the Next Bitcoin?

    March 28, 2026

    Solana-Based Backpack Exchange Unveils BP Token for Users and NFT Holders

    March 27, 2026

    This Is Why Most Budgeting Advice Doesn’t Work, According to These Money Experts

    March 27, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Should you update to the new Pages, Numbers, Keynote, and Freeform on Mac?

    January 30, 202618

    NH Voters Want Protections Against Cryptocurrency Kiosk Fraud

    January 28, 20267

    Mercado Libre and Agility Robotics Announce Commercial Agreement to Deploy Humanoid Robots

    December 10, 20257

    Money Manager Definition and Key Responsibilities

    March 16, 20266
    Don't Miss
    Cryptocurrency & Blockchain

    This AI Cryptocurrency Is Up 111% in One Month. Is It the Next Bitcoin?

    By TheWireHub.netMarch 28, 20260

    Key PointsBittensor is getting a lot of attention after a major technical accomplishment.Important parts of…

    ZenoWell Announces Strategic Cooperation with USound to Explore Advanced Sensing Technologies for Next-Generation Wearable Devices

    March 28, 2026

    I Asked ChatGPT Which Investments Won’t Survive the Next Recession: Here’s What It Said

    March 28, 2026

    Rancho Santa Fe Financial Planner Richard Rojeck releases second book in Wealth Management Series – San Diego Union-Tribune

    March 28, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us

    Welcome to TheWireHub, your trusted source for the latest insights, trends, and updates in finance and technology. We created TheWireHub with one mission: to make complex financial topics and fast-moving technology news simple, clear, and accessible for everyone.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Our Picks

    This AI Cryptocurrency Is Up 111% in One Month. Is It the Next Bitcoin?

    March 28, 2026

    ZenoWell Announces Strategic Cooperation with USound to Explore Advanced Sensing Technologies for Next-Generation Wearable Devices

    March 28, 2026

    I Asked ChatGPT Which Investments Won’t Survive the Next Recession: Here’s What It Said

    March 28, 2026
    Categories
    • AI & Future Tech
    • Banking & Insurance
    • Cryptocurrency & Blockchain
    • Gadgets & Devices
    • Investments
    • Personal Finance
    • Software & Apps
    • Tech News
    © 2025 TheWireHub. All Rights Reserved.
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.