Cash Register With A Presidential Seal
Trump’s $2 billion disclosure reveals the presidency as a payment platform while diplomacy, shipping lanes, and party politics all become fights over who controls the gate.
Good morning! First, a quick housekeeping note from the little engine room here at Carpe Momentum: I have been working hard on the sustainability series, and I expect to publish the first piece later today. That is why I have been a little quieter than usual in the posting lanes. I have not wandered off into the forest, joined a silent order, or been trapped under a collapsed stack of policy PDFs. I have simply been trying to give this series the attention it deserves, because the climate crisis is not a side issue. It is the room everything else is happening in.
Today’s governing theme is the tollbooth state: the conversion of public power into private leverage, political permission, regulatory favor, and cash flow. Everything is a gate now. Crypto policy. Frozen assets. Shipping lanes. Foreign real estate. Congressional power. If something moves, someone wants to control the gate. If someone controls the gate, someone else is probably getting paid.
We begin, naturally, with the man who looked at the presidency and saw not a constitutional office but a fully integrated payment platform with merch options.
Trump’s newly released 2025 financial disclosure is not so much a filing as a crime scene with accounting columns. According to reporting from The New York Times, the Financial Times, and The Guardian, Trump pulled in more than $2.2 billion in revenue in 2025, with more than $1 billion coming from crypto ventures alone. His crypto businesses, many of which were still shiny little startups when he returned to office, have now eclipsed much of his old property empire in revenue. It turns out the future of presidential corruption is not just people booking rooms at the hotel anymore. That was the quaint artisanal phase. We have moved into blockchain kleptocracy with souvenir coins.
World Liberty Financial, the Trump family crypto company, generated more than $500 million from selling crypto products, including governance tokens. CIC Digital LLC reportedly took in more than $600 million from Trump-faced memecoins launched just days before his inauguration, because nothing says “solemn transfer of democratic power” quite like a novelty casino chip stamped with the incoming president’s face.
The Financial Times added the fine detail, because the devil now keeps receipts in Ethereum. Trump still holds 15.75 billion World Liberty Financial tokens, valued at roughly $900 million despite a steep decline over the past year. The filing also showed that more than $33 million of his World Liberty proceeds came in bitcoin and more than $150 million came via the Ethereum blockchain.
And the conflict of interest is not subtle. Trump returned to office promising to make America the “crypto capital of the world,” then his administration moved to roll back the Biden-era crackdown on the industry, replace regulators, and soften the legal terrain for companies that now operate in the same financial ecosystem enriching him and his family. The White House, naturally, insists there are no conflicts of interest. Which is adorable, assuming you define “conflict” as something smaller than the president personally monetizing the industry he regulates.
But the crypto haul is only the digital wing of the gift shop. Trump also made millions from Trump-branded watches, Bibles, sneakers, fragrances, books, and even a “45” guitar. The watches alone brought in $4.7 million. Lee Greenwood’s Bible brought in more than $200,000. Sneakers and fragrances added another layer of presidential eau de desperation. The office now comes with a merch table between the Situation Room and the nuclear football.
Then there are the settlements. The Guardian reported that Trump received more than $86 million from five legal settlements involving media and social media companies, including ABC, CBS, YouTube, Meta, and X. The Financial Times separately noted corporate payments toward Trump-adjacent projects, including money for his presidential library and the East Wing ballroom. Meta paid $24.5 million to Trump’s presidential library project. Alphabet paid $22 million to the Trust for the National Mall, which is helping fund the new East Wing ballroom. CBS and ABC each paid $16 million to Trump’s library.
So yes, the president is making money from crypto ventures while shaping crypto policy. He is also profiting from foreign real estate, branded Bibles, watches, lawsuits, library payments, ballroom money, and the general conversion of American government into a checkout lane with flags.
The old corruption story was “foreign governments might stay at Trump’s hotel.” The new one is “foreign investors, crypto firms, media companies, tech giants, and brand-licensees all appear to understand that the presidency is where the cash register lives.”
Think cash register with a presidential seal.
And the same logic does not stop at the water’s edge. Once government becomes a checkout lane, foreign policy starts to look less like strategy and more like gatekeeping: who gets access, who gets paid, who gets sanctioned, who gets unfrozen, and who gets to move through the chokepoints.
That brings us to Doha, where the U.S.-Iran “deal” remains alive in the same sense that a Jenga tower remains alive while everyone argues over which block is load-bearing.
Al Jazeera reports that technical talks are under way in Qatar, but senior U.S. and Iranian negotiators are not meeting face to face. The process is being mediated by Qatar and Pakistan, with at least three working groups covering maritime security, nuclear issues, and diplomacy. Iran is focused on implementing the memorandum of understanding before moving on to any final agreement. In plain English: Trump is trying to sell the victory lap, while Tehran is reading the fine print out loud.
The sticking points are enormous. Iran wants restricted assets released, including roughly $6 billion held in Qatar and reportedly more than $150 billion held across seven countries. Tehran is also insisting that the memorandum includes commitments tied to ending the war in Lebanon, restoring Lebanese sovereignty, and allowing displaced people to return. Iran is not treating Lebanon as a side quest. It is treating Lebanon as part of the bargain.
That matters because the Trump administration wants to frame this as a narrow Iran deal, preferably one that can be gift-wrapped as the “denuclearization of Iran” and placed lovingly beneath the president’s ego. But Iran is judging U.S. compliance by whether Washington can actually restrain Israel across the regional battlefield.
Then there is Hormuz.
Iran’s top negotiator called the Strait of Hormuz Tehran’s “greatest instrument of power,” which is not exactly the phrase global markets enjoy hearing before breakfast. Iranian authorities are insisting that vessels use shipping routes designated by Tehran. A foreign container ship reportedly ran aground after sailing outside Iran’s approved route. Shipping unions and companies are still designating the Strait as a warzone after recent attacks on vessels. Traffic remains well below prewar norms, and the recovery has stalled.
So, yes, the world’s oil chokepoint is now being discussed like a toll road with missiles.
Qatar, Oman, Iran, Pakistan, the United States, Israel, shipping firms, oil markets, and the global economy are all now entangled in the question of who gets to decide what moves through Hormuz and under what conditions. This is the tollbooth state with a tanker fleet.
Meanwhile, Trump is doing what Trump does: declaring that everything is going beautifully, perhaps importantly, perhaps not, but definitely winning. He says the United States is doing very well. He says it is almost won militarily. He says Iran has agreed not to have a nuclear weapon. He says the meeting in Doha may be important, or may not be. Diplomacy by shrug emoji and victory claim.
And here is the problem with selling a war as the triumphant end of a nuclear threat: some of the people best positioned to know say the threat was invented. According to the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth, as reported by Al Jazeera, Israel’s former army chief Gadi Eisenkot told a conference that Benjamin Netanyahu fabricated claims about Iran’s nuclear weapons to frighten the public. “Netanyahu said repugnant things. Iran had no nuclear bombs whatsoever. He is fabricating reality to frighten the Israeli public,” Eisenkot said.
It is worth being precise about who is talking. Eisenkot now heads the opposition Yashar party, so he is not a neutral voice. But he is also a former chief of staff of the Israeli military, and he is describing a specific claim. Netanyahu told Israel’s Channel 14 this week that he “entered Iran twice to save us from annihilation by atomic bombs that were already in their hands.” Eisenkot’s rebuttal is not the abstract Iranian line that the program was peaceful. It is narrower and sharper: that the bombs Netanyahu described holding in Iranian hands were never there.
So the war was sold as the destruction of atomic bombs “already in their hands,” and one of the men who used to run Israel’s army says the hands were empty.
Then, as if to confirm that none of this was ever really about a finished nuclear weapon, Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said Israel could strike Iran a third time “if necessary,” despite ongoing U.S. diplomacy. He also said Israeli forces would remain indefinitely in “security zones” in Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza. You do not announce an indefinite third-strike posture over a threat you have just triumphantly eliminated. You announce it over a region you intend to keep managing by force.
Israel’s energy minister, Eli Cohen, separately said Israel’s control over Gaza “will only continue to grow” until it reaches “100 percent.”
That is not ceasefire language. That is annexation language wearing a hard hat.
This is why Lebanon is not a detail. If Israeli officials are saying they intend to remain indefinitely in Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza, while Iran says the memorandum requires an end to the war on all fronts, then the so-called deal is not really about one nuclear file. It is about the entire regional architecture. It is about whether the United States can or will restrain Israel. It is about whether Iran will use Hormuz, assets, and maritime access as leverage. It is about whether Gulf states can mediate without becoming pressure points themselves.
Al Jazeera also reported that an analyst described Iran as trying to “globalise the conflict” beyond the U.S. and Israel, including by pressuring Gulf mediators. That is the terrifying part: the deal may be written like a ceasefire, but everyone is treating it like a regional bargaining table with live ammunition stacked underneath.
While all of this is unfolding, Gaza remains the moral abyss at the center of the room. Al Jazeera reports that Gaza’s agricultural sector has been devastated, with cultivated land collapsing from 9,300 hectares to just 400 hectares, and 85 percent of greenhouses destroyed. Children in Gaza are growing up learning the vocabulary of war before the vocabulary of childhood. Rubble, displacement, quadcopter. This is what “security zones” and “100 percent control” mean when translated out of ministerial language and into human life.
So Trump can say the process is going well. Israel can say it may strike again. Iran can say Hormuz is its greatest instrument of power. Shipping firms can price the risk. Diplomats can form working groups. But underneath the choreography is the same brutal question: who pays, who moves, who controls, and who gets buried under the language of security.
Which brings us, unexpectedly but necessarily, to Colorado, where voters offered a little reminder that the public may not be as dead inside as the consultant class keeps hoping.
Melat Kiros, a 29-year-old democratic socialist, defeated nearly-three-decade incumbent Diana DeGette in the Democratic primary for Colorado’s deep-blue first congressional district, centered on Denver. Kiros was born in Ethiopia in 1997, the same year DeGette entered Congress. That is not just a biographical detail. That is a campaign ad written by the calendar.
This was not voters replacing some conservative Blue Dog fossil with a progressive. DeGette is a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. She supported Medicare for All and abolishing ICE. On paper, she had progressive credentials. But this result suggests that for many Democratic voters, paper is no longer enough. They want urgency, confrontation, and someone who understands that fascism, corporate power, climate collapse, war, and economic precarity are emergencies.
Kiros was backed by Bernie Sanders, the Democratic Socialists of America, and Justice Democrats. Her campaign made U.S. support for Israel a central issue. She accused Israel of genocide in Gaza and called for a U.S. arms embargo. She also drew controversy for comments about a Boulder firebombing attack on pro-Israel demonstrators and for saying the September 11 attacks were “inevitable” given U.S. destabilization in the Middle East. Republicans will, of course, package those remarks into attack ads with all the tenderness of a meat grinder.
But the broader signal is hard to miss. Kiros’s win follows progressive victories in New York and comes alongside other anti-establishment results in Colorado. Progressive Manny Rutinel won his primary in Colorado’s competitive eighth district and will face Republican Gabe Evans in November. Attorney General Phil Weiser defeated U.S. Senator Michael Bennet in the Democratic primary for governor after arguing Bennet had not taken a hard enough line against Trump’s cabinet nominees. John Hickenlooper, meanwhile, survived a challenge from the left, so this was not a clean sweep. It was not a revolution in one Tuesday. It was something more useful: a warning flare.
Democratic voters are not simply asking for better policy PDFs. They are asking for a party that fights like the building is on fire, because for many of them, that is what daily life now feels like.
The establishment response will be predictable. There will be solemn panels about “the brand.” There will be donors whispering about electability. There will be consultants explaining that voters in deep-blue Denver have endangered moderate messaging in swing districts by refusing to clap politely for managed decline. There will be op-eds written in the sacred dialect of institutional panic.
The more honest reading is this: voters are tired of incumbency without urgency. They are tired of politicians who technically hold the right positions but move through a crisis like they are waiting for a committee markup in 2007. They are tired of being told that the alternative to open authoritarian corruption is a better-run decline machine with friendlier fonts.
That does not mean every democratic socialist candidate is automatically the answer. It does not mean every district is the same. It does not mean rhetoric does not matter, or that Republicans will not weaponize every sentence they can clip into a thirty-second panic ad. Of course they will. That is what they do. They are currently defending a president who turned the White House into a crypto kiosk, so perhaps their lectures on extremism should be handled with tongs.
But it does mean the Democratic establishment has a problem it cannot solve with donor retreats and message testing. The base is not merely asking, “Who agrees with me?” It is asking, “Who will fight?”
And that is where today’s stories meet.
On one side, Trump and his allies have converted state power into a tollbooth. Crypto wealth flows through the policy gates. Foreign governments and investors orbit the president’s business interests. Shipping lanes become bargaining chips. Frozen assets become leverage. Media settlements, ballroom donations, branded Bibles, watches, and memecoins all pile up in the same grotesque display case.
On the other side, Democratic voters are beginning to ask whether the opposition party understands the scale of the emergency. Not as a fundraising email. Not as a values statement. Not as a carefully triangulated panel discussion moderated by someone from a think tank called the Center for Responsible Something. As reality.
The Republican Party has accepted open monetization of state power. The Democratic establishment is discovering that “not that” is no longer enough.
Trump’s side has turned government into a checkout lane. The Democratic establishment keeps trying to answer with better signage, calmer messaging, and another six months of listening sessions. But voters are starting to notice that survival politics requires more than incumbency, more than brand management, and considerably more than asking politely while the building burns.
So that is where we are this morning: the president is counting crypto proceeds, diplomats are arguing over Hormuz, Israel is talking about “100 percent” control of Gaza, and Democratic voters in Colorado just kicked the furniture hard enough for Washington to hear it.
Coffee up. The tollbooths are open.




It would be very satisfying to see this week’s SCOTUS decision on campaign finance buried under landslide wins for new progressive candidates in November. Big donors don’t have to control election outcomes—if people turn off television and social media all that spending means nothing. But, it also requires people to research, talk to candidates, and think.