Senator Warren is only one of a group of Democratic Congresspeople who have been demanding answers about the pardon and the apparent quid pro quo.
Discussion
Senator Warren is only one of a group of Democratic Congresspeople who have been demanding answers about the pardon and the apparent quid pro quo.
@molly0xfff Thanks for your wonderful work 🙏
Question: Isn't/wasn't Binance (and all the other crypto shit) a HUGE reason for the all that drug trafficking that Trump is claiming to fight?
@benjaoming It’s certainly a factor, yes.
@molly0xfff
And he paid the full pardon fee. So why are the public mad at their Glorious Leader?
@molly0xfff Something something autopen.
@molly0xfff I thought Trump was above this stuff. I'm surprised he didn't just say "Changpeng Zhao paid me a lot of money so I pardoned him, what's the problem?"
@molly0xfff Again, liar boy.
@molly0xfff “Legally speaking, I know nothing. I am a legal lycanthrope. A Bruce Banner. A Dr. Jekyll.” — Donald Trump, probably
you see,
Zhao was simply one of the biggest men trump has ever seen, who had tears in his eyes when he dropped to his knees and said 'lord trump, they treated me so unfairly, just ask your very large sons.'
everyone is saying it
Trump said in his latest interview he “was told” Binance’s Changpeng Zhao is “highly respected”, “very successful”, and was unfairly prosecuted — without saying who, exactly, was doing the telling.
Asked about corruption, he bristled: “I’d rather not have you ask the question.”
Trump has portrayed Zhao’s case as part of an unfair “war on crypto”. But Zhao pleaded guilty to knowingly breaking the law; and the indictment depicts a CEO and leadership intentionally violating US laws to keep lucrative customers, enabling terrorist financing and cybercrime.
At the very end of a 60 Minutes interview, Trump was asked why he would pardon someone alleged to be a threat to national security. Trump replied, “I don't know who he is. ... They sent him to jail and they really set him up. That’s my opinion. I was told about it.”
O’Donnell tried again. Trump repeated that he knew “nothing about it” because he’s “too busy”, then described his sons’ success in the crypto business.
When O’Donnell took a third swing at it, asking if Trump was “not concerned about the appearance of corruption”, Trump responded: “I can’t say, because– I can’t say– I’m not concerned. I don’t— I’d rather not have you ask the question.”
@molly0xfff i'm proud to answer the question, he says, not doing that
@molly0xfff While I shouldn't be at this point, I'm completely dumbfounded.
Lies are his life.
Troubling question - lie.
Project 2025 - never heard of it.
Epstein - hardly knew the guy.
Rape victim - don't know her.
@molly0xfff Let us all keep in mind this is from an interview ended by a very Trump-friendly production team. This is the *best* version of his answer.
@molly0xfff @wordshaper Every word he says sounds like someone who never plans on giving up power or leaving the White House.
Trump’s attempt to dodge responsibility for pardoning Changpeng Zhao follows sustained criticism, including from some of his usual allies.
@molly0xfff
Looks like fraud, walks like fraud, and quacks like fraud.
@molly0xfff yes..."makes it look."
Zhao has also been lashing out, recently threatening to sue Senator Elizabeth Warren for defamation over her statement that “CZ pleaded guilty to a criminal money laundering charge and was sentenced to prison. But then he financed President Trump’s stablecoin and lobbied for a pardon.”
@molly0xfff He SHOULD sue her… so her lawyers can find out during discovery that he did bribe Trump for a pardon.
Senator Warren is only one of a group of Democratic Congresspeople who have been demanding answers about the pardon and the apparent quid pro quo.
Trump’s defense of the pardon is poorly timed, coming only a week after the House Oversight Committee published a Republican staff report stating: “The authority to grant pardons is not provided to the president’s inner circle.”
By that logic, Trump’s defense should invite the very same scrutiny from House Oversight Chair James Comer (R-KY). When asked, Comer replied, “I would assume he knew. ... Sometimes he says things and we have to really analyze and give him another opportunity to make sure he didn't misspeak.”
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