In a development that has sent traditional financiers into a state of apoplectic rage and their monocles spiralling into gin-and-tonics, the former and once-again Chief Executive of the Free World has apparently amassed a cool billion dollars in cryptocurrency during his first year back in the Oval Office. This, my dear readers, is a sum so vast it would make Croesus weep into his gold-plated chamber pot. The White House wealth, we are told, has not been this concentrated since Harry Truman was allegedly picking stocks from his bathtub. But let’s be honest, Truman never had to contend with Dogecoin or the fluctuating whims of Elon Musk’s Twitter feed.
This news arrives wrapped in the kind of statistical cotton wool that only the truly wealthy can afford. Apparently, the President’s digital fortune has swollen past the billion-dollar mark, making him the first billionaire president in history. Which, when you think about it, is either a stunning indictment of the American Dream or the most literal example of ‘making America great again’ through sheer, unadulterated chutzpah. The exact breakdown of his crypto portfolio remains as opaque as a London fog, but whispers suggest a heavy investment in something called ‘TrumpCoin’ and a mysterious token known only as ‘The Art of the Deal.’ I am not making this up. I wish I were.
The implications are, of course, staggering. We now have a Commander-in-Chief whose personal wealth is tethered to a digital asset class that has the stability of a toddler on a sugar high. One tweet from the man himself could send his net worth into either orbit or the Marianas Trench. This is not conflict of interest; this is conflict of everything. It’s as if we’ve elected the head of a Ponzi scheme to run the central bank. But then again, this is the same government that once considered putting a potato on the dollar bill. So perhaps we should not be surprised.
Let us not forget the sheer, breathtaking absurdity of the situation. A man who once sold steaks in infomercials and lent his name to a university that turned out to be a Trump-branded paperweight is now the world’s first crypto-billionaire president. The free market, that hallowed beast, has spoken. And it has spoken in the language of blockchain and lambos. This is the same free market that gave us Beanie Babies and the Nokia 3310. So perhaps we should take it with a grain of salt, or a double shot of Gordon’s.
The Democratic response, predictably, has been one of howling outrage mixed with a weird sort of jealousy. They have called for an investigation, a special prosecutor, and possibly an exorcism. But the voters, those glorious fools, seem to view this as just another example of Trump’s business acumen. “He’s making money again!” they cry, as if the presidency were a get-rich-quick scheme and not, you know, the highest office in the land. But then again, when have facts ever stood in the way of a good story? Not since the dawn of the tabloid, my friends.
As I sit here, nursing my fourth G&T of the afternoon, I cannot help but marvel at the sheer, unadulterated madness of it all. We have a president who is essentially a human NFT, a walking, talking, tweeting symbol of late-stage capitalism. His wealth is digital, his policies are simulacra, and his legacy will be written in the zeros and ones of a blockchain ledger. It is enough to make a man reach for the bottle. Or, in this case, the keyboard.
What does this mean for the future? Who knows. Perhaps we will all be paid in Bitcoin soon. Perhaps the Federal Reserve will be replaced by a mining rig. Or perhaps, just perhaps, this is all a fever dream brought on by a bad prawn. But until that moment of clarity arrives, we must soldier on, watching the spectacle with a mixture of horror and fascination. Because if there’s one thing we can rely on, it’s that the man in the White House will continue to make headlines, whether we like it or not. And that, dear readers, is worth exactly one billion dollars. Maybe more, if you factor in inflation.
So raise a glass to the new Gilded Age. It may not be gold, but it’s certainly making a lot of people very rich. And very drunk.








