Well, one is defrauding the American taxpayer. The other, Trump is scheming investors. He made 1.3 billion on his crypto, which was a rug pull, and 2 billion on his social media platform Truth social or whatever it’s called. One can argue since he is president, he shouldn’t put official posts on his own platform. And I would agree. I’m not buying his crypto or his truth social stock. But I am paying taxes.Nobody is defending the fraud in Minnesota, but the right wing news sources are all over themselves proclaiming they found something that was already well under investigation with 70 indictments. No doubt there's more, and of course we should be concerned looking for more fraud. I applaud anyone calling out fraud, even if it's a marginal iphone video influencer begging for clicks.
However, at the very same time, the SAME PEOPLE who are screaming about Minnesota an engaged in an unimaginable amount of grift, likely using this as yet another distractionary tactic. As usual, SMH.
I don't like What-about-isms, except when it's the job of a person/agency and they are looking one direction only to ignore their job when it's not politically expedient.
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An Intense White House Response From a Single Viral Video
A video purporting to expose extensive fraud at child care centers in Minnesota shows the relationship between the Trump administration and self-described citizen journalists.www.nytimes.com
We know who Trump is . A used car salesman . His crypto fraud should be investigated. But by who? The FBI? The SEC Has already ruled crypto is not a security, so it doesn’t fall under their purview.
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