It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a rich man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a regulator. And so we find ourselves, once again, peering into the murky depths of Donald Trump’s financial empire, this time illuminated by the ghastly glow of cryptocurrency. The report that the former president has pocketed a cool $1bn from a crypto venture is less a revelation than a confirmation of a creeping rot. We are not merely talking about a single man’s greed; we are talking about the systemic failure of two great nations, the United States and the United Kingdom, to police the Wild West of digital finance.
Let us cast our minds back to the Victorian era, when the City of London was the epicentre of global capital. Then, as now, there were scams and swindles. But there were also men like William Gladstone, who understood that a nation’s financial integrity was a matter of national honour. Today, we have politicians who glibly accept millions from opaque crypto schemes, and regulators who seem paralysed, as if they have been sedated by the very technology they are meant to oversee.
The Trump crypto windfall, reportedly linked to a token called ‘TRUMP’ or some such tawdry brand extension, is just the latest symptom of a broader intellectual and regulatory decadence. We have allowed a handful of tech bros and charlatans to redefine money itself, while our financial watchdogs bark at the wrong trees. The US Securities and Exchange Commission spends its time pursuing petty infractions, while billion-dollar scandals slip through the net. Meanwhile, the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority, once the gold standard of regulation, now seems more concerned with ESG ratings than with actual fraud.
This is the fall of Rome in slow motion. When a republic ceases to enforce its own laws, it ceases to be a republic. The Anglo-American model of capitalism, which prided itself on transparency and rule of law, is now a byword for cronyism and legalised theft. Trump’s crypto fortune is not an anomaly; it is the natural conclusion of a system that rewards brashness over honesty, and regulatory capture over public service.
We must ask ourselves: what kind of society allows a man who incited an insurrection to profit from a digital asset that is probably worthless? The answer is a society that has lost its nerve, a society that confuses freedom with licence, and innovation with irresponsibility. The Victorians may have been hypocrites, but at least they knew the value of a stable currency. We have abandoned that for the siren song of the blockchain.
The solution is not to ban crypto, but to regulate it with the same seriousness we apply to traditional finance. That means real enforcement, real penalties, and real political will. Otherwise, we will continue to see these grotesque spectacles of plutocratic excess, while ordinary citizens wonder why their savings are evaporating.
In the end, this is not about Trump. It is about us. Our collective failure to demand accountability from the powerful. The fall of Rome was not caused by barbarians at the gates, but by decay within. And so it is with the decline of Anglo-American financial oversight. We are being plundered from within, and we are too distracted by the circus to notice.








