A popular article from The Wall Street Journal. Rather than being a news report, The Wall Street Journal appeals to the Cunningham's Law and has negative intent. 'Cunningham's Law: The best way to get the right answer on the Internet is not to ask a question, but to post the wrong answer.' — Wikipedia This is not how news reporting should operate. A few days ago, The Wall Street Journal presented me with a long list of questions containing inaccuracies and negative assumptions through their PR team. We told them that there were 'a lot of inaccuracies and baseless inferences.' They asked, can you point out these inaccuracies? If there are just a few factual errors, they can be corrected. But if you start off with negative intent in fabricating a story, those 'inaccuracies' cannot be amended. This affects the entire narrative. Here are several snippets of questions posed by The Wall Street Journal: 'We understand that Zhao Changpeng has actually been acting as an intermediary in the overseas travels of Zach Witkoff and the WLF team... In recent months, Zhao Changpeng has met with government officials from Pakistan, Malaysia, and Kyrgyzstan... We understand that Zhao Changpeng subsequently introduced Mr. Saqib to the World Liberty Financial team, and a week later, World Liberty appointed Mr. Saqib as an advisor. On April 26th, the WLF team arrived in Pakistan and signed a memorandum of understanding with the government.' Subsequently, The Wall Street Journal published an article stating: 'The referrer who helped World Liberty's overseas travels is Zhao Changpeng, the founder of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance... A spokesperson for World Liberty stated that Zhao Changpeng and Zach Witkoff are friends, but Zhao Changpeng does not act as an intermediary.' The fact: I am not an intermediary for anyone. I did not 'connect Mr. Saqib with the WLF team.' They knew each other long before, and I only met Mr. Saqib for the first time in Pakistan. I did not make any 'introductions for World Liberty's overseas travel.' I won't elaborate on other details; you understand... The Wall Street Journal is just a mouthpiece. There are forces within the United States that want to hinder the efforts to make America the capital of cryptocurrency. They want to attack cryptocurrency, global cryptocurrency leaders, and governments that support cryptocurrency.