While eating greedily and harvesting profits from meme coins, are you pretending to be innocent and denying it? Trump's technique for harvesting is too brilliant.

Recently, Trump has once again flawlessly performed the art of 'cutting chives'. CNBC revealed that he has arranged two cryptocurrency-themed dinners this month—one with an entry ticket as high as $1.5 million, and the other specially customized for large holders of TRUMP tokens: the first 220 wallet addresses can dine with him.

Meanwhile, Chainalysis data shows that in just a few days last month, Trump and his allies easily reaped nearly $900,000 in profits from TRUMP token transaction fees—while 80% of the token's circulation is held by him and his associated organizations.

However, when faced with media inquiries, he responded without changing his expression: "I did not profit from this," and even claimed he "hasn't even looked at it," before throwing out a classic line: "If I own stocks in a company and they go up, I also wouldn't know if that counts as profit."

This dual approach of controlling token issuance, speculating on coin prices, and arranging dinner meetings to incentivize holdings, while publicly denying any 'profit from the coins', perfectly showcases the new type of 'forked personality' of political and business figures in the meme coin era: saying they haven't earned a profit, while the money has already arrived in their wallets.

When fan circle strategies meet cryptocurrency operations, the TRUMP token is no longer just a speculative target, but a conspiracy game of public relations, influence, and market sentiment. And the cost of all this, of course, is still that old saying—paid by the chives.