1. Questioning the News’ Legitimacy

When a company lashes out at the Financial Times like this, it’s no different from a thief yelling at the cops afte-etting caught. The louder the denial, the more obvious the guilt—just like your mom insisting she didn’t take your red envelope money while the drawer rattles. Overcompensating only reveals insecurity.

2. Same Scam, New Packaging

Let’s revisit this guy’s track record:

Launched the TRUMP coin, kept 80% for himself, then dumped it, wiping out 60% of investors.

Promised a national Bitcoin reserve—three months later, not a single coin bought.

Now he’s suddenly pledging to buy $3 billion worth? Believing him is like trusting a pig to climb a tree. This is just another pump-and-dump scheme—talk big to spook the market, then scoop up cheap coins.

3. The Market Isn’t Fooled Anymore

Last week’s playbook was obvious:

Threaten tariffs → Bitcoin crashes.

Walk it back → Bitcoin surges.

This time, "good news" caused a drop—proof that institutions see through the act. Everyone knows his moves are just about accumulating cheap assets for his own fund.

4. The Hidden Endgame

Remember, the U.S. Treasury holds 200,000 Bitcoin—if they wanted to crash the market, they could do it instantly. Dropping a "$3 billion buy" rumor now feels like a distraction:

Pump their own ETF.

Test market sentiment.

Lay the groundwork for a bigger dump later.

Stay sharp—I’ll keep exposing the games behind the headlines. Let’s navigate these bull and bear traps together.