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   talk.politics.guns      The politics of firearm ownership and (m      196,508 messages   

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   Message 195,909 of 196,508   
   Mad Dog to J D   
   Re: Go Woke, Go Broke: Eddie Bauer Filin   
   09 Feb 26 04:12:52   
   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, or.politics   
   From: nospam@nospam.com   
      
   J D wrote:   
      
   >Let's take Nike for $200.   
      
   Trump Coin is through the roof Man.   
      
   White men are spending big $$!   
      
   764,000 lost money on Trump meme coins, while 58 profited   
   Natalie Chandler   
   May 7, 2025 3 min read   
   Donald Trump Andrew Harnik/Getty Images   
   Donald Trump Andrew Harnik/Getty Images   
      
   Days before he was inaugurated for a second term, President Trump launched   
   a meme coin brandishing the words “fight, fight, fight." But most of those   
   who invested in it might feel like giving up.   
      
   Of the 2 million accounts that have purchased the $TRUMP coin, 764,000 have   
   lost money on it, according to data that blockchain analysis firm   
   Chainalysis shared with CNBC. Most invested in smaller amounts of the   
   token, the media outlet reported.   
      
   Fifty-eight accounts — known as crypto "wallets" — made more than $10   
   million apiece, totaling roughly $1.1 billion in profits, per CNBC.   
      
   Meme coins, based on internet jokes or fast-moving cultural trends, are a   
   highly volatile form of cryptocurrency. Trump's token gained billions of   
   dollars in value overnight — at least on paper — after he announced it. The   
   value fell after Melania Trump launched her own meme coin a few days later.   
      
   On Monday, Trump promoted his coin on social media and a contest associated   
   with it that offers access to him. People who hold the largest balance can   
   attend an “intimate private dinner” with Trump at his golf club outside   
   Washington, D.C., on May 22 and take a tour of the White House, according   
   to the coin's website. The news prompted the coin to surge over 50% and   
   boosted its total market value to $2.7 billion, NBC News reported. The   
   Trump Organization and its affiliates control most of the token supply,   
   according to the website.   
      
   Around 54,000 wallets have bought the coin since the promotion began,   
   according to CNBC. Bloomberg reports that more than half of the top holders   
   used foreign exchanges, suggesting they are based outside the U.S.   
      
   CNBC reports the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations is   
   investigating the token’s ownership structure and revenue model — as well   
   as World Liberty Financial, a crypto business Trump is affiliated with — to   
   determine whether they pose a direct conflict.   
      
   Trump, who in 2019 said he was "not a fan" of crypto, downplayed the   
   conflicts on Sunday during an interview with "Meet the Press." “I haven’t   
   even looked,” Trump said when asked if he is profiting from his token. “If   
   I own stock in something, and I do a good job, and the market goes up, I   
   guess I’m profiting," he added.   
      
   As president, Trump oversees the federal government's regulation of crypto,   
   which has become friendlier since the Biden administration's crackdown.   
      
   Federal agencies charged with investigating crypto firms and enforcing   
   rules have been stripped, and cases against top crypto firms including   
   Coinbase, Ripple and others have been dropped.   
      
   Trump issued an executive order and created a task force to boost the   
   industry, appointed a crypto advocate as head of the regulatory agency that   
   oversees crypto and proposed a "strategic crypto reserve" for the   
   government to purchase and hold digital tokens.   
      
   Additionally, Trump Media & Technology needs the Trump administration's   
   approval to move forward with its plan to offer bitcoin exchange-traded   
   funds as part of Truth.Fi, its new financial services firm.   
      
   Meanwhile a crypto bill Trump wants to sign has hit a roadblock in the   
   Senate. Democrats balked at advancing it after The New York Times   
   investigated World Liberty Financial and its $2 billion deal with a foreign   
   government-backed fund.   
      
   The business, launched by Trump and his three sons last year, has begun   
   offering stablecoins that could generate tens of millions of dollars a year   
   in revenue for them and their business partners, The Times reports. One of   
   their partners is Steve Witkoff, Trump's longtime friend and Middle East   
   special envoy.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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