Author: TechFlow
From Wall Street to blockchain, "insider trading" is not a new term.
In the past, insiders were somewhat ashamed and tried to hide, but now they've completely exposed themselves without any pretense.
In early 2025, Trump issued a MEME coin and manipulated the market under the name of "crypto strategic reserve". Now, Trump waves the tariff stick, playing political drama and repeatedly changing faces, pushing this conspiracy of power and capital to a historic high point.
When a president becomes a trader, and regulation becomes a fig leaf, the world has become an arena of a giant insider trading scheme - and you and I are merely prey in this game.
White House Turns Casino: Trump's Face-Changing Trick
[Rest of the text continues in the same professional translation style, maintaining the specific translations for crypto-related terms and names]
According to OpenSecrets, the Pelosi couple's investment return reached 56.15% in 2021, and their investment portfolio profited 70.9% in 2024, significantly outperforming the S&P 500 index's 25% increase and surpassing investment legends like "stock guru" Buffett (with a 26% return), David Shaw, the "actuarial king" of Wall Street, and Jim Simons, the "father of quantitative investing".
The Arrogance of Power: The Ultimate Bullying in Financial Markets
Why do we hate insider trading so much?
Because it is bullying by the privileged class against ordinary people who follow the rules.
In financial markets, ordinary investors work hard, take risks, and seek only one thing: fairness, fairness, and more fairness.
When a national leader can arbitrarily manipulate the market through policy announcements and allow their confidants to position themselves in advance for profit, this is no longer just an insider trading issue, but a complete distortion of market mechanisms by power.
Traditional insider trading mostly relied on insider information for profit, acting secretively and at least knowing their actions were dishonorable.
Now, Trump not only directly creates insider information but also openly advocates it without concealment, displaying an attitude of "what can you do to me?"
In this era deeply hijacked by power and capital, if even the most basic market fairness cannot be guaranteed, then so-called globalization and free market economics are nothing more than a solo performance by power elites.
Perhaps this is the ultimate form of contemporary capitalism—power directly controls the market, with the elite class brazenly harvesting global wealth, while most people can only serve as ignorant pawns in this massive insider trading game.