Logo
Top Stories
Media Ratings
Latest
World
Sports
All Golf Football Boxing Basketball NFL MMA Tennis Formula 1 MLB
North America
USA Canada Mexico
Europe
United Kingdom Austria Belgium France Italy Germany Portugal Russia Greece Sweden Spain Switzerland Turkey Ireland
Asia Pacific
China South Korea Australia Singapore India Malaysia Japan Vietnam
Latin America
Brazil Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Chile Ecuador Uruguay Venezuela
Africa
Egypt Ethiopia Ghana Kenya Morocco South Africa
Middle East
Israel Lebanon Syria Iraq Iran United Arab Emirates Qatar
Crypto
Entertainment
Politics
Tech

About us, Contact us, Contribute, Privacy Policy, Review Guidelines, Legal Notice

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
  • Top Stories
  • Latest
  • USA
  • United Kingdom
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • Asia Pacific
  • Latin America
  • Middle East
  • Sports

Home » Concern Trump may try to flee the US in 2028

Concern Trump may try to flee the US in 2028

Alternet by Alternet
2 months ago
0 0

During his 2024 presidential campaign, Donald Trump disavowed familiarity with Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation plan for autocratic takeover of the US. That disavowal proved as truthful as Trump’s promise not to disturb the East Wing of the White House.Curtis Yarvin, whose philosophy punctuates the main tenets of Project 2025, supported Trump’s campaign because he thought Trump would overthrow democratic institutions and replace the presidency with a “Monarchist CEO,” who would run the country like a for-profit corporation. Profiting from office like no other president in US history, Trump is well on his way. On Oct. 28, Forbes reported that only ten months into his second term, Trump has nearly tripled his net worth, from $2.5 billion in 2020 to $7.1 billion today, largely from crypto schemes and pay-to-play federal transactions. Accumulating corruptionLast week, Trump announced a list of 37 wealthy donors funding his 90,000 square foot $300 million gilded ballroom. Donors include several billionaire individuals, along with data-analytics company Palantir, defense contractor Lockheed Martin, Microsoft, YouTube, Apple, Comcast, Amazon, T-Mobile, Chevron, Google, Hard Rock International, and Meta, most of whom have already seen or expect to see a surge in federal contracts.In The Corruption Chronicles, Issue One compiled a partial list of other ways Trump has monetized the presidency by transforming it into a vehicle for his own private gain. From selling access to his administration to using foreign visits to attract financial support for his own businesses, Trump has officially turned his presidency into a for-profit venture. Examples of illegal, shady, or ethically suspect activities to date include:Every nation Trump visited on the first official foreign trip of his second term had ongoing private business deals with the Trump OrganizationTrump has made billions of dollars through crypto ventures since last November, including his (and Melania’s) launch of memecoins — cryptocurrency products widely understood as having no utility92 percent of the top 25 investors in Trump’s cryptocurrency memecoin scheme appear to be foreign nationalsThe United Arab Emirates’ investment fund, MGX, recently made a $2 billion investment into the cryptocurrency exchange Binance, using a stablecoin called USD1, created by a firm with close financial ties to the Trump familyTrump accepted a $400 million luxury jet from the royal family of Qatar which could cost American taxpayers up to $1 billion to retrofit into Air Force OneAfter private prison company GEO Group gave $1.75 million to pro-Trump super PACs and Trump’s inaugural committee, Trump awarded them a 15-year government contract to reopen an immigrant detention facilityPrivate investors spent $148 million to attend an exclusive dinner with Trump at his golf club in the northern Virginia suburbs of D.C. in MayThe Pentagon, according to the Financial Times, recently awarded a significant contract to Unusual Machines — a drone company in which Donald Trump Jr. owns millions of dollars of stockTrump is selling a new $5 million “Trump gold card” investment visa to give wealthy foreigners permanent US residency status and the ability to make political contributionsTrump raised Mar-a-Lago membership fees to $1 million, up from $200,000 in 2017Donald Trump Jr. co-founded a Trump-aligned private club in Washington, D.C., charging a $500,000 membership fee to rub shoulders with administration officials, “with no danger of running into reporters” Trump is now demanding a quarter-billion dollar private payment, threatening to sue the federal government he “runs” if he doesn’t get it.Billionaires can’t directly fund government agenciesAfter openly soliciting and accepting sums of money the corporate media is reluctant to call bribes, Trump most recently announced a $130 million “gift” to help pay military service members during the government shut down. Timothy Mellon, of the Carnegie-Mellon robber-baron dynasty, wrote the check. Mellon, who donated even more than Elon Musk to get Trump re-elected, is a recluse who opposes immigration and programs for the poor, while he supports deep tax cuts for the rich.A long-standing federal law prohibits Mellon’s type of “gift” for several reasons. The primary issue is Article I of the Constitution, which directs Congress, not the executive, to control federal spending. Because of Art. I, a president’s ability to spend money or incur debt requires explicit congressional approval. The Antideficiency Act protects the balance of power at the same time it guards against foreign and domestic private influence over federal affairs.Trump ignored this Constitutional constraint and seems to regard federal assets, including the armed forces, as his personal property. By letting a wealthy heir cut a check for the military, Trump circumvented the Constitutional framework under which both he and Congress are supposed to operate, and permanently sealed his contempt for Congress.Project 2025 and the roots of Trump’s takeoverThe New Yorker reported that Yarvin, the Project 2025 philosopher, proposed “that the U.S. government be replaced with a monarchy led by a ‘CEO-king’ that would have “absolute power, dismantle democratic institutions, and liquidate the existing government bureaucracy.” But earlier this month, Yarvin lamented on his Substack that Trump hadn’t gone far enough, fast enough.Perhaps Trump’s unprecedented 13 billionaires serving as his “cabinet” can read Yarvin’s lament and get to the part where he intuits that Democrats’ 2026 midterm blowout will bring a tsunami of legal reckoning. Yarvin is so fearful of what he calls “liberal vengeance” to come that he has publicly revealed plans to leave the country. There’s also speculation that Trump and his enablers will do the same rather than face legal fire if Republicans can’t rig the 2026 midterms. What really may be driving Trump’s private ventures abroad is his predator’s sense that his second coup attempt, like his first, will fail.Sabrina Haake is a columnist and 25+ year federal trial attorney specializing in 1st and 14th A defense. Her Substack, The Haake Take, is free.

Read Full Article

Tags: Donald TrumpPresidential CampaignTrump
Login
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Related Posts

Federal officer who shot Renee Good ‘in hiding’: report

by Alternet
12 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

X is acting to comply with UK law, Keir Starmer tells MPs amid Grok row

X is acting to comply with UK law, Keir Starmer tells MPs amid Grok row
by The Impartial Reporter
12 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

Lebanon arrests Syrian accused of funding Assad loyalists

by Ynet News
13 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

Pakistan signs crypto deal linked to Trump family to explore stablecoin payments

by The Express Tribune
14 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails

Trump’s war on the Fed threatens global financial stability, European central bankers warn

by CNBC
18 minutes ago

...

Read moreDetails
Load More

Trending Topics

Africa Artificial Intelligence Asia Australia Biden Canada China Donald Trump England Europe Force France Gaza Germany Hamas IDF India Iran Israel Joe Biden Kamala Harris Lens Lions London Manchester Moscow NATO Netanyahu Nvidia OpenAI Palestine Paris Premier League Presidential Campaign Putin Republican Party Russia Sport Trump Ukraine Ukraine War US Election Vladimir Putin World Zelensky

Popular Stories

  • Register now: Applications open for the world’s top fintech companies of 2025 list

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Take over institutions, help is on the way, Trump tells Iranian protesters

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Radioactive zinc containers offloaded in Philippines after months at sea, now in safe location

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Death toll from Iran’s crackdown on protests jumps to at least 2,571, activists say

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trump tells Iranians to keep protesting, says ‘help is on its way’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Top Stories
  • About us
  • Africa
  • Latest
  • Asia Pacific
  • Business
  • Comment Policy
  • Contact us
  • Contribute
  • Entertainment
  • Europe
  • Media Ratings
  • Middle East
  • Politics
  • Privacy Policy
  • Review Guidelines
  • United Kingdom
  • User Agreement
  • Video
  • World

MACH MEDIA

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Google
Sign Up with Linked In
OR

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Back
Home
Explore
Ratings
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Top Stories
  • Media Ratings
  • Latest
  • World
  • Sports
    • All
    • Golf
    • Football
    • Boxing
    • Basketball
    • NFL
    • MMA
    • Tennis
    • Formula 1
    • MLB
  • North America
    • USA
    • Canada
    • Mexico
  • Europe
    • United Kingdom
    • Austria
    • Belgium
    • France
    • Italy
    • Germany
    • Portugal
    • Russia
    • Greece
    • Sweden
    • Spain
    • Switzerland
    • Turkey
    • Ireland
  • Asia Pacific
    • China
    • South Korea
    • Australia
    • Singapore
    • India
    • Malaysia
    • Japan
    • Vietnam
  • Latin America
    • Brazil
    • Colombia
    • Costa Rica
    • Cuba
    • Chile
    • Ecuador
    • Uruguay
    • Venezuela
  • Africa
    • Egypt
    • Ethiopia
    • Ghana
    • Kenya
    • Morocco
    • South Africa
  • Middle East
    • Israel
    • Lebanon
    • Syria
    • Iraq
    • Iran
    • United Arab Emirates
    • Qatar
  • Crypto
  • Entertainment
  • Politics
  • Tech

MACH MEDIA