Follow the Money: The “Suspicious Trading” Money Trail (Not a Legal Conclusion)
Here’s the “Suspicious Trading Money Trail” setup: in the second Trump administration timeline the poster is pointing at, policy timing and portfolio gains supposedly…
Here’s the “Suspicious Trading Money Trail” setup: in the second Trump administration timeline the poster is pointing at, policy timing and portfolio gains supposedly line up—Nvidia, Dell, Intel, Amazon, Microsoft, Vistra & Eaton, “625 ‘Unsolicited’ Trades,” and “Inflation / Fed Timing”—and then it waves a “Not a legal conclusion” receipt like that ends the conversation.
The contradiction is the same every time: it’s marketed like a scandal-list pattern, but it’s protected like financial astrology. Voters aren’t asking for a legal conclusion—they’re asking for the receipts: disclosures, records, and daylight, because coincidence shouldn’t require a straight face.
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