@s1fab@fawollo13@fanpage No. Solo se mangiassero vermi (e non venitemi a dire dei ratti di fogna, animali straordinari che non offenderei mai associandoli ai fascisti)
@MicGamba@LeonardoPanetta E questo tizio è pure un giornalista, cioè qualcuno che dovrebbe "mediare" e produrre informazioni. Ma gli mancano gli strumenti culturali per non fraintendere un video di pochi secondi
I am the personal financial advisor to the 47th President of the United States.
I have made him $4.05 billion in one term.
Let me say that again. Four point zero five. Billion. One term. The presidency of the United States, upon proper management, outperforms every asset class in recorded financial history, including venture capital, petroleum futures, and the sovereign wealth fund in Abu Dhabi that manages $1.7 trillion and employs nine hundred analysts. I benchmarked it. We beat them with a staff of four and a leather binder.
I keep a binder in the residence. I call it The Number. The Number was $3.4 billion in August. The Number is $4.05 billion now. The Number has never gone down. I update it every Friday at 6 AM, before the briefing, like a surgeon checking vitals on a patient who can only get healthier. The cover is leather. The tabs are color-coded by sector: Crypto, Finance, Hospitality, Media, Other. "Other" includes a Boeing 747-8 valued at $400 million, gifted to him by the Emir of Qatar while he was sitting President. There is no asset class for that. I invented one. I call it EAGLE-7.
Crypto is seventy-five percent of the portfolio. $3.02 billion. I want you to sit with that figure. Three billion from digital tokens and stablecoins. From a man who in 2021 called Bitcoin "a scam against the dollar." His words.
The flagship holding is Trump Media's bitcoin stockpile. He holds 42% of the company. The company sold shares to institutional investors. Used their capital to purchase bitcoin. His personal stake from that maneuver alone: $1.15 billion. He drafts national cryptocurrency regulation from the Resolute Desk. Signs executive orders on digital asset policy. Handpicks the SEC chair who will enforce them. His bitcoin goes up when he does these things. The investors' stock goes down.
That's a conflict of interest.
I'm kidding. I've never used those words in that order. That's the investment thesis.
Then there is Alt5 Sigma. I need you to understand Alt5 Sigma. Alt5 Sigma was previously known as Appliance Recycling Centers of America. Founded in 1991. In Minnesota. It recycled dishwashers. Then it became a biotech. Then a digital payments company. Then Zach Witkoff, son of the President's special envoy, became chairman, and it became the primary vehicle for purchasing World Liberty Financial tokens. In 1991 it recycled dishwashers in Minnesota. In 2025 it funneled $562 million to the President's family through a Rwandan subsidiary convicted of money laundering. The CEO was removed. The CFO was fired. The auditor was replaced. Twice. The stock went from $8 to $2. We received $562 million from it. I put it in the binder.
I logged it in the binder on a Thursday. I used Garamond. It felt appropriate for a company whose journey from kitchen appliances to international money laundering spanned exactly thirty-four years.
The stablecoin is where the architecture gets beautiful. USD1. $136 million in projected interest over the remaining term. I will show you the math because the math is the point. $3 billion in circulation. Times 4% annual return. Times three years remaining in office. Times the family's 38% share. The UAE purchased $2 billion of USD1. Then Binance promoted it. Pumped circulation from $2 billion to $5 billion. Binance's founder had pleaded guilty to money laundering violations.
He received a presidential pardon in October.
I pardon you. You promote my stablecoin. My stablecoin generates $136 million. The pardon cost nothing. The coin cost nothing. The oath of office cost nothing. The entire apparatus of federal clemency was converted into a revenue instrument and nobody filed a complaint.
That's yield.
TRUMPcoin. $385 million. A memecoin with the President's face on it, launched days before inauguration. Every person who bought TRUMPcoin at launch and held it has lost 90 cents of every dollar. Every person who bought it made the President $385 million richer on the way in. That's the product. The product is not a coin. The product is belief. We are very long belief.
His sons received a 13% equity stake in American Bitcoin. A New Yorker investigation determined they contributed, and I quote, "nothing else of obvious value." I would characterize their contribution differently. They contributed the single most valuable commodity in American commerce, worth more per ounce than lithium, more per gram than fentanyl, more per syllable than any word in the English language. Proximity to the man who pardons people.
That's due diligence.
Hospitality. $271 million. Mar-a-Lago now generates $50 million a year. It generated $10 million when he took office. Initiation fee: $1 million. You are paying $1 million to eat dinner in the same room as the man who controls the Department of Justice. I set that price. It is undervalued.
Saudi Arabia. The Crown Prince visited the White House. Then Dar Al Arkan signed licensing deals estimated at $10 billion. Hotels in the Maldives. Golf clubs in Riyadh. A tower in Jeddah. He sat next to the man who ordered a journalist dismembered and said, quote, "He knew nothing about it." Then he signed the hotel deal. I have the term sheet. Our fee is 2-10% of revenue. We do not ask what happened to the journalist. That is not in our mandate. $106 million is in our mandate.
That's client retention.
Finance: $340 million, predominantly Persian Gulf sovereign wealth fund arrangements structured through intermediaries whose names I am not going to say in this format. Media: $116 million. Legal fee fundraising and branded merchandise: $128 million. The Qatari jet: $150 million. I have already mentioned the jet. I mention it again because a sitting foreign head of state gifted the sitting American President a $400 million flying palace with gold-plated fixtures and a master suite, and not a single member of Congress has asked a follow-up question. Not one. Not in committee. Not in writing. Not on camera. Five hundred and thirty-five legislators. Zero questions.
Now. I am required by my own conscience, which is vestigial at this point, to disclose downstream performance.
Every public-facing investment vehicle associated with this portfolio has collapsed for outside investors. I will read them.
TRUMPcoin. Down 90%.
American Bitcoin. Down 80%.
Trump NFTs. Down 80%.
Trump Media stock. Down 60% since inauguration.
Alt5 Sigma. Down 75%.
The family's positions were structured to extract value before these declines materialized. The retail investors' positions were structured to supply the value being extracted. There were approximately 600,000 retail wallets holding TRUMPcoin at peak. Retirees. Day traders. People who believed the branding. Their aggregate losses capitalized the portfolio. Their savings became his tab in the binder.
That's liquidity.
I want to address the competitive landscape. I am a financial professional. I benchmark everything.
In 2016, the President stood at a podium and called Hillary Clinton "the most corrupt enterprise in political history." He said she "turned the State Department into her personal hedge fund." The accusation that ended her career was $153 million in speaking fees. Combined. With her husband. Over fifteen years. Goldman Sachs paid her $225,000 per speech. He said the word "crooked" so many times it became her legal name.
$153 million. Fifteen years. Two people.
I made him $4.05 billion. In one term. By himself.
A 26-to-1 ratio. I wrote it on the whiteboard in the residence.
Then there was the Biden family. "The Biden Crime Family," he called them. He held rallies about it. He got impeached over investigating it. The Republican House spent two years and $3.5 million in taxpayer funds to uncover, per their own final report, approximately $24 million in Biden family income over five years. Hunter Biden's Burisma salary was $1 million a year, later reduced to $500,000. The Chinese payments were $664,000. The House Oversight Committee called it "influence peddling at the highest level."
$24 million. Five years. Ten family members.
My client made that in two days. I have the math. $4.05 billion divided by 365 days is $11.1 million per day. The entire Biden investigation, the impeachment, the hearings, the Fox News segments, the "CRIME FAMILY" hats, all of it, for an amount my client earns before his Wednesday morning briefing.
The ratio is 168 to 1. I put it on the whiteboard next to the Clinton number. The President saw it. He laughed. He did not ask me to take it down.
"Drain the swamp," he said in 2016. I drained it. Into the binder. The swamp is now a portfolio. It is the highest-performing portfolio in the history of public office, and the man who built it ran for President on the promise that he would stop people from doing exactly what I help him do every single day.
That's positioning.
When the New Yorker published the full accounting, $4.05 billion across five sectors, and asked the President whether he saw a conflict of interest between the office and the fortune, between the pardons and the profits, between setting crypto policy and holding $3 billion in crypto, he told the New York Times six words.
"I found out that nobody cared."
He was right. He has been right about that singular fact since the beginning. Nobody cared when he launched the coin. Nobody cared when he pardoned the convicted money launderer who pumped his stablecoin. Nobody cared when a dishwasher recycling outfit in Minnesota became a $562 million pipeline to his family through a subsidiary that had been convicted on three continents. Nobody cared when 600,000 wallets evaporated so the leather binder in the residence could gain another tab.
He found out nobody cared. Then he monetized the finding at a rate of $11.1 million per day, every day he has held office, including Sundays, including holidays, including the morning he sat next to the Crown Prince and said the murdered journalist had it coming.
$4.05 billion. One presidential term. Zero indictments. Zero congressional hearings. Zero audits. Zero consequences of any kind for any person at any level of the operation.
The chart goes up. It only counts his money.
There is another chart. It has 600,000 wallets on it. Retirement accounts. People who believed a dishwasher recycling company in Minnesota was a sound vehicle for their savings.
We do not publish that one. I filed it under EAGLE-7.
Just a reminder: in 1982, when Great Britain was attacked by Argentina, starting the Falklands War, the United States did not come to their aid because the Falklands are not in the North Atlantic and the British did not bitch about it.
In 1956, when the French and British attacked Egypt, causing the Suez Crisis, despite the fact that France and Great Britain are in NATO, the United States not only refused to assist, but went to the United Nations to condemn them for attacking Egypt.
In 2019, when Turkey decided to attack Syria, the Trump administration had the Pentagon send out an official notice that they did not support the campaign and would not send troops.
So kindly shut the fuck up, everyone in the White House.
I am an ex-Palantir executive, and it is factually correct that @PalantirTech intended to take over the US government while heavily funding the effort. Many of my ex-colleagues are now installed inside the USG apparatus. There is a reason the C-suite of $PLTR has me blocked. The enemy is within, and we are currently an occupied nation. 🇺🇸 We basically have a terrorist entity deeply embedding itself into the USG.
Per chi ancora difende questi genitori senza conoscere i fatti, ecco cosa è realmente successo. Cercate di leggere tutto prima di commentare.
Nel 2021 Nathan e Catherine, con tre figli piccoli, si trasferiscono in un casolare fatiscente a Palmoli: niente acqua corrente, niente energia elettrica, niente bagno interno, niente riscaldamento. I bambini crescono senza scuola, senza pediatra, senza vaccinazioni, senza parlare italiano, senza saper leggere né scrivere. Per quattro anni nessuno sa nulla.
Poi, nel settembre 2024, la famiglia si avvelena con funghi tossici raccolti dal padre, convinto di essere un esperto. Si ritrovano tutti privi di sensi fuori dal casolare. Non chiamano il 118. Li trova un vicino contadino per puro caso e dà l'allarme. Senza di lui probabilmente non staremmo qui a discutere. In ospedale i genitori rifiutano il sondino naso-gastrico per i figli perché fatto di silicone. Il bambino se lo strappa da solo e la madre impedisce che venga rimesso. Durante un avvelenamento. A dei bambini.
Da lì partono le segnalazioni. I carabinieri descrivono una situazione di "sostanziale abbandono". I servizi sociali propongono un percorso: ristrutturazione della casa, visite mediche, incontri educativi. I genitori accettano, poi si tirano indietro e dichiarano di non essere più interessati. Catherine fugge addirittura a Bologna con i figli, facendo perdere le proprie tracce per settimane.
Quando torna, il Comune di Palmoli — un paesino di 850 anime — offre gratuitamente una casa vera: tre camere, due bagni, riscaldamento, tutte le utenze. Rifiutata. Un imprenditore offre un'altra casa gratis. Rifiutata. Un geometra e una ditta edile si offrono di ristrutturare il casolare a costo zero. Il padre doveva solo firmare un foglio. Ha rifiutato perché i lavori sarebbero stati "troppo invasivi". Per le visite mediche dei figli hanno chiesto 150.000 euro, cinquantamila a bambino. La figlia più grande nel frattempo s'è beccata una bronchite acuta, non curata e non segnalata.
Il loro stesso avvocato a un certo punto ha rimesso il mandato, dichiarando di non poterli più difendere perché rifiutavano sistematicamente ogni proposta.
A novembre 2025 il tribunale sospende la responsabilità genitoriale e trasferisce i bambini in una casa famiglia con la madre. E qui si arriva all'ultimo capitolo. Catherine nella struttura si è comportata in modo "ostile e squalificante" verso le educatrici, ha preteso che i figli seguissero regole diverse dagli altri bambini, ha screditato il personale davanti ai figli chiamandole "cattive persone". I bambini, influenzati dalla madre, hanno iniziato a compiere atti aggressivi: HANNO ROTTO PERSIANE PER FABBRICARSI BASTONI CON CUI COLPIRE LE EDUCATRICI e hanno messo in pericolo una neonata ospite della struttura. Il padre, al contrario, è sempre stato descritto come collaborativo.
Risultato: pochi giorni fa il tribunale ha disposto la separazione della madre dai figli e il trasferimento dei bambini in un'altra struttura. A 18 mesi dall'inizio della vicenda, nessun progetto di ristrutturazione del casolare è mai stato depositato in Comune.
Quindi, prima di gridare allo scandalo e allo Stato cattivo, chiedetevi: quante possibilità sono state offerte a questa famiglia? Quante case gratuite, quanti lavori dignitosi, quanti percorsi di aiuto? E quante volte hanno detto "NO"? Non si è arrivati a questo punto per cattiveria delle istituzioni, ma per l'intransigenza sistematica di due genitori che hanno anteposto la propria ideologia alla salute, alla sicurezza e al futuro dei propri figli. Lo Stato non ha tolto dei bambini a una famiglia. Lo Stato ha protetto tre bambini da chi avrebbe dovuto tutelarli e non l'ha fatto.
E sapete cosa mi fa davvero rabbia? Che in Italia ci sono migliaia di famiglie che vivono in condizioni di indigenza non per scelta, ma perché la vita le ha messe in ginocchio. Famiglie che dormono in case fatiscenti, che non riescono a pagare le bollette, che non hanno i soldi per curare i figli. Famiglie che darebbero qualsiasi cosa per avere anche solo una delle opportunità che questa coppia ha rifiutato con arroganza. A loro nessuno offre una casa gratis con tre camere e due bagni. A loro nessuno offre ristrutturazioni a costo zero. A loro nessun imprenditore consegna le chiavi di un B&B. A loro nessun programma televisivo dedica settimane di copertura. Vivono nell'invisibilità, e nessuno si indigna.
Ecco, se proprio volete indignarvi, indignatevi per loro. Per chi lotta ogni giorno senza che nessuno gli tenda la mano, non per chi quella mano l'ha avuta, più e più volte, e l'ha schiaffeggiata ogni singola volta.
Riccardo Ricciardi che demolisce in aula Tajani e Crosetto è una gioia per occhi e orecchie. Ecco perchè la Meloni non viene mai in Parlamento. Ha il terrore e manda gli sparring partners.
@annacisint Gravissimo che una europarlamentare utilizzi una foto falsa, creata con l’intelligenza artificiale, per attaccare la leader del secondo partito italiano. Gravissimo.
Mentre il popolo iraniano combatte per la libertà, Schlein e la sinistra si inchinano agli ayatollah e al regime del terrore. Come sempre, dalla parte sbagliata della storia.
Difendiamo la libertà, non l'ideologia!
#lega#patriots
BREAKING: MARCH FOR MEASLES? Anti-abortion rally becomes a disease super-spreader event as measles rips through the conservative attendees.
Thousands of anti-abortion activists flocked to Washington, D.C. for the annual March for Life — and according to health officials, they didn’t just bring signs and slogans. They brought a flurry of measles diagnoses.
As reported by The New Republic, the January 23 march and concert on the National Mall has now been flagged as a measles super-spreader event, with multiple confirmed cases reported in the weeks that followed. The D.C. Department of Health says infected individuals visited numerous locations across the city while contagious, triggering exposure alerts.
This wasn’t some fringe gathering. The march drew top Republican leaders, including Vice President JD Vance, House Speaker Mike Johnson, and Rep. Chris Smith. It also drew something else Republicans have spent years cultivating: vaccine skepticism.
“Many on the right oppose vaccination,” The New Republic noted, making the event a perfect storm for the spread of a potentially fatal but entirely preventable disease.
Health officials say the outbreak may have spread through high-traffic hubs like Ronald Reagan National Airport and Union Station, and through religious sites including Catholic University of America and the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.
Meanwhile, the U.S. is already dealing with major measles outbreaks in South Carolina and Texas — both Republican-run states, both home to large anti-vaccine movements. Texas was forced to lock down an ICE family detention center last week because of measles. South Carolina is facing its largest outbreak since 2000.
in a Sunday press release, DC Health put it bluntly: “DC Health was notified of multiple confirmed cases of measles whose carriers visited multiple locations in the District while contagious. DC Health is informing people who were at these locations that they may have been exposed.”
Here’s the bitter irony: the same politicians who claim to be “pro-life” keep undermining vaccination campaigns that literally save children’s lives. While public health officials beg people to get vaccinated, Republicans in power wink at conspiracies, push “religious exemptions,” and treat science like a political inconvenience.
The result? A national march that didn’t just spread ideology — it spread disease.
You can’t claim to value life while sabotaging the most basic tools to protect it. And after this fiasco, the label “pro-life” is looking less like a principle — and more like a punchline.
Please like and share to spread the new
This video should unsettle anyone who takes the United States seriously as a nation.
Because it exposes something dangerous: the trivialization of the world's most consequential office. It shows how carelessly the power, credibility, and accumulated moral authority of a superpower can be squandered for a few seconds of viral attention.
In any other major democracy, this behavior from a head of state would trigger a constitutional crisis. Paris would burn. Berlin would convene emergency sessions. In the Nordic countries, resignation would follow within hours. Across functioning democracies, the public, institutions, and political class would recognize this for what it is: an assault on the dignity of the state itself. Leaders are not free to perform as entertainers without consequence. National honor is not personal property, it's held in trust.
But the United States is not just another country with a provocateur in charge. It is the linchpin of global order. It maintains formal alliances and security guarantees with forty to fifty nations. It underwrites the financial architecture, trade systems, and diplomatic frameworks that billions of people depend on daily. When the American president speaks—or posts—it doesn't land as satire, meme, or personal whim. It reads as a signal about what the country is becoming.
American power has never relied solely on carrier strike groups or economic output. It has rested on something more fragile and more valuable: trust. The belief that beneath domestic turbulence lies institutional seriousness, predictability, and a baseline commitment to dignity. That belief is now disintegrating in real time.
Millions of American companies operate globally. They negotiate multibillion-dollar contracts in environments where reputation is currency. Boardrooms in Frankfurt, Singapore, and Dubai aren't debating whether a post was clever—they're asking whether the United States remains a reliable partner. Whether agreements signed today will be honored tomorrow. Whether American leadership has devolved from institutional to purely theatrical.
Consider tourism, which sustains millions of American jobs—airlines, hotels, restaurants, museums, entire regional economies. Soft power isn't an abstraction. It materializes in flight bookings, conference locations, study-abroad programs, and decades of accumulated goodwill. A quiet, decentralized boycott doesn't require government action—only a collective sense that a nation no longer respects itself.
Now picture this image being studied by foreign ministers, central bank governors, defense strategists, and sovereign wealth fund managers. Picture them asking a coldly rational question: How do we write binding thirty-year agreements with a country whose public face will be this, relentlessly, for years to come? How do we plan for the long term when the tone is impulsive, mocking, and unbound by the gravity of office?
This is where the real calculus begins. Trillions in foreign capital depend on confidence that America is stable, credible, and rule-governed. That confidence is now being traded for what, exactly? Applause from an online mob? A dopamine rush from manufactured outrage? Content designed to dominate the news cycle rather than serve the national interest?
Every serious nation eventually confronts this choice: burn long-term credibility for short-term spectacle, or safeguard the reputation previous generations bled to build. The United States spent eighty years constructing an image of reliability, restraint, and leadership under pressure. That image wasn't born from perfection—it came from a visible commitment to standards that transcended impulse.
This isn't a partisan issue. Europeans who value democratic norms recognize something ominously familiar here. Americans—Democrat and Republican alike—who believe in responsibility and restraint should see it too. Power attracts scrutiny. Leadership demands discipline. A superpower cannot behave like a reality TV contestant without paying a price.
The presidency is not a personal broadcast channel. It's a symbol carried on behalf of 330 million people and countless international partners who never voted but whose lives are shaped by American decisions anyway. Every post either reinforces or erodes the idea that America can be counted on when it matters most.
So the question is no longer whether this is offensive. The question is whether this is who America chooses to be: a nation that trades a century of hard-won reputation for viral moments. A country that replaces statecraft with content creation. A republic governed like a season of reality television.
History offers a harsh lesson here. Great powers don't fall because enemies mock them. They collapse when they begin mocking themselves—publicly, proudly, and without grasping the cost until it's far too late.
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