Wealthy Anon@Inj_pumping
I need you to sit with this for a second.
A sitting US president, the most powerful man on earth, launched a cryptocurrency project where his family quietly pocketed 75% of all revenue before a single retail buyer could even sell their token. No liquidity. No exit. Just a one-way door with a MAGA flag on it. And almost nobody is talking about how utterly devastating this was for the ordinary people who trusted him.
World Liberty Financial (WLFI) wasn't built for you. It was built on you.
The structure was never hidden, it was just written in the fine print that hype cycles don't let you read. The Trump family and insiders: 75% of token revenue. The retail investor who saw Donald Trump's face on the website, who believed this was the financial revolution he promised, who scraped together $500 or $5,000 because they finally felt like the system was working FOR them for once? They got a token they couldn't sell at launch and a front-row seat to watching their money become someone else's net worth.
Think about who bought WLFI. It wasn't hedge funds. It wasn't institutions with lawyers and risk teams. It was regular people. Trump supporters who finally felt included in something big. Crypto newcomers who saw a president endorsing a project and thought "this must be legitimate." People in Ohio, in Texas, in Florida who don't have Bloomberg terminals or insider access, just a phone, a dream, and a wallet they opened because the man they voted for told them this was different. This was theirs.
It wasn't theirs.
Donald Trump was the "Chief Crypto Advocate." Barron Trump, a teenager, was placed on the advisory board. Eric Trump promoted it. Don Jr. promoted it. Melania had her own NFT plays running in parallel. The entire family transformed the Trump name, a name millions of Americans treat with genuine reverence, into a multi-pronged monetisation machine aimed squarely at the wallets of their most loyal followers. This is the part that should make your blood boil regardless of your politics. These weren't strangers being scammed. These were believers. And belief was the product being sold.
Now layer in the conflict of interest that makes this truly historic in its audacity: Trump was simultaneously campaigning on crypto deregulation. He was promising to fire Gary Gensler. He was pledging to make America the "crypto capital of the world." He was dismantling the SEC's enforcement posture. He was, in plain English, using the power of the presidency to remove the exact regulatory framework that exists to protect retail investors from exactly the kind of token structure WLFI was built on. The cop wasn't just looking the other way. The cop was the one running the scheme and had abolished the law at the same time.
This is not speculation. This is the documented, public, on-chain, SEC-filing reality of what happened.
And here's what kills me most. The crypto space spent years fighting for legitimacy. Builders sacrificed. Developers worked for free. Communities organised. The entire movement was founded on one idea: that financial systems could exist that didn't prey on the little guy. That code could replace the gatekeepers. That ordinary people could finally access the same tools as the wealthy and powerful. And then the most powerful family in America looked at that movement, looked at that dream, and saw an audience to monetise. They didn't join crypto. They strip-mined it.
The people who got rich from WLFI had their names on the term sheet.
The people who got poor had their hope on the line.
There will be those who say retail knew the risks. That crypto is always speculative. That nobody forced anyone to buy. And technically, legally, in the fine-print sense, maybe. But there is something categorically different about a president of the United States putting his face, his family, his political brand and his policy power behind a token sale aimed at his own voter base. The asymmetry of information, trust, and power is so extreme it breaks every normal framework for "buyer beware." When the most trusted person in your political world tells you this is the future, "do your own research" is not a real defence against that. It was never a fair fight.
The Trumps will move on. They always do. There will be another project, another launch, another opportunity to convert political capital into financial capital while the people who funded it are left holding bags they can't unload. This is the pattern. This is the business model.
But retail crypto investors deserve to hear it said plainly, loudly and without the usual hedging:
You were not investors in their vision.
You were the exit liquidity for their wallets.
And they did it while calling it freedom.