Is Trump's $5 Million Gold Card Behind a Giant Cryptocurrency Exchange Withdrawal?
1. On February 26, local time, U.S. President Trump said at a cabinet meeting that if he could sell 10 million U.S. immigrant "gold cards," it could pay off the U.S. national debt and even earn an additional $15 trillion. On the 25th, Trump told the media at the White House that he plans to start selling the U.S. "gold card" priced at $5 million each in two weeks. This "gold card" does not grant U.S. citizenship directly to the purchaser, so it does not need to go through the U.S. Congress, but it will grant rights similar to those of a "green card," serving as a "powerful pathway to U.S. citizenship."
2. Some tourists and American citizens interviewed expressed that Trump's plan is a joke, stating that Trump believes everyone wants to come to the U.S., but that is not the case.
3. Is the Gold Card an "Immigration Business" or a "Cryptocurrency ATM?"
On the surface, Trump's gold card plan is a high-threshold immigration policy reform, but in reality, it exploits the liquidity characteristics of the cryptocurrency market to create massive profits for his family and affiliated platforms. By raising immigration thresholds, promoting cryptocurrency legislation, and binding interest groups, Trump has constructed a closed-loop ecosystem of "wealthy immigration - cryptocurrency asset transfer - policy dividends."
4. The gold card plan is not just about "selling nationality," but also opens up a giant withdrawal window for cryptocurrency exchanges. #白宫首届加密货币峰会 #美国加征关税 #币安HODLer空投SHELL #币安Alpha上新
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