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We Control $Trump Now

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From paragraph xyz by RM

Few stories are as captivating right now as the soon-to-be U.S. President launching a memecoin that’s skyrocketing. I’m not holding any, and honestly, I can’t fully grasp the first, second, or even third-order effects. We're navigating an ocean of unknowns, yet this moment feels unprecedented, and I have a hard time understanding how he or his team has fully grasped what just happened.

Trust is Everything

Crypto fascinates me because of its decentralized network effects. This interest led me to explore social graphs, new market structures, capital and community formation, and reputation systems.

Reputation in crypto is especially intriguing. In a trustless system, reimagining the concepts around trust is crucial. I've had the luck to work on merit-based capital projects, built permissionless app stores that convey trust, and experimented with how reputation can enhance social experiences. The takeaway? In a decentralized, permissionless, censorship-resistant world, how we measure and signal trust is everything.

$TRUMP === Trump

Enter $Trump. SocialFi, where creators tokenize themselves, resurfaces with every crypto cycle through social tokens. But this time is different: the coin has been launched, the price is soaring, and it’s tied to a figure who is most likely, by the time you read this, the world’s most powerful political leader again.

Their site may claim “no official ties” to politics or Trump’s personality, but in the meme world, that’s laughable. Ideology, identity, and brand are now directly linked to price. Trust is governed by market makers, speculators, and hype cycles.

$Trump’s meteoric rise opens wild possibilities. Could we witness the first trillion-dollar individual, with a token’s market value tied to a single individual? How does one’s self-worth and public image shift when pegged to a real-time price chart?

Moreover, with 80% of tokens controlled by one entity, does this create the largest potential rug pull? Does selling mean losing faith in oneself—a twisted philosophical riddle for the influencer age. Have fun.

20% The World / 80 % Me

Traditionally, personal tokens have allocated a much larger portion to the community, letting them define your value and preventing a single point of failure. This also meant, though, that the concept of you could be larger than yourself. The idea of you could outlive you more easily. $Trump flips this with an 80% allocation, making it really hard for him to have a graceful exit. Dumping means rugging your community, which typically destroys a yourself as a brand. (But caveat here Trump operates seemingly by different rules).

I expect others to replicate this. If $Trump soars, what stops $YE, $MRBEAST, or any celebrity from diving into the same meme-fueled waters? This will likely ignite a wave of personality-driven memecoins. Historically, “creator economics” often flops because attention is predatory—feeds on extremes, leading creators to burn out chasing dopamine and viewers. With 80% locked, you must continually deliver or risk your community—and token price—turning against you. It’s a high-stakes dance: keep them engaged or face enormous fallout.

Personally, seeing your “value” as a volatile ticker must be truly psychologically draining. Imagine scaling that to a presidency. One day, your market cap soars; the next, an unpopular move collapses the coin. It’s like living in a Black Mirror episode where “market cap” equals self-worth and “24h volume” measures relevance.

This dynamic extends to the broader creator economy. If fans hold 20% and you hold 80%, you’re tethered to them. You can’t quit or pivot without alienating supporters and tanking your net worth and, therefore, most likely even your self-esteem. It forces you to either maintain the status quo or escalate your efforts, risking burnout.

Reputation comes at / with a Price now

Is this the world’s most ingenious social experiment, rewriting power, brand, and money dynamics? Or an accidental time bomb threatening presidential credibility? Unlike stocks reacting to politics, this directly monetizes an individual’s persona, allowing real-time buying and selling of reputation.

I have always believed reputation can get you money, but money can't get you reputation. We are going to see that script battle-tested in complex new ways.

Ironically, the 80% strategy might empower the community by trapping the token issuer. You can’t dump without everyone watching, and every action affects the price. Stopping the hype train hurts investors, though the creator holds the biggest bag.

$Trump’s large allocation enforces a new kind of accountability. Unlocking tokens and selling would signal lost faith in the meme—and oneself—inviting political or reputational backlash. Insiders must exit carefully to avoid a meltdown; selling triggers a chain reaction.

For SocialFi, this is entirely new territory, at least at this scale. Did Trump by accident create the one and only way he will be held accountable by his believers? Memecoins now serve as reputation mechanisms. Holding 80% of your token means immense responsibility and liability. Attempting to unload quietly over the counter gives a new whale leverage over your image. Dumping it all is giving up. Not becoming more extreme will not increase its price. It's a trap.

So?

I’m fascinated by this development but question how imitators will cope. Are you ready to have your worth fluctuate with every public move? Will you betray your community for a payout or keep inflating the balloon, hoping it never pops? Are you sacrificing personal freedom to appease believers, forced to cash out incrementally without tanking your value? This is the new face of autonomy—living as a price feed. Fun Fact you might now have unrealized gains taxes on your own self-worth, so you need to sell yourself into community servitude.

The $Trump coin has thrust us into an era where political identity, personal reputation, and memecoin speculation merge in real time.

Personally, I think you should not tokenize yourself yet. We were here for autonomy and not servitude. An 80% allocation feels good until you realize that it comes with the same old saying that Uncle Ben ever said: "With great allocation comes great responsibility, or you risk pitchforks."

Edited with ChatGPT-01mini

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