As an active federal contractor, Coinbase is prohibited from making political contributions, including to super PACs. This makes $50 million that they have contributed in violation of pay-to-play laws for contractors.
As an active federal contractor, Coinbase is prohibited from making political contributions, including to super PACs. This makes $50 million that they have contributed in violation of pay-to-play laws for contractors.
See my reporting on their previous violation, which is being reviewed by the FEC: https://www.citationneeded.news/coinbase-campaign-finance-violation/
Actively involved in contract negotiations with a federal government agency, Coinbase was likely prohibited from making its $25 million contribution to the Fairshake cryptocurrency-focused super PAC in May 2024.
@mls14 @molly0xfff Don't worry, the Feds are not enforcing these lax laws in the election period (funny how it's almost always some election period in the USA), so they don't interfere with the election (well the criminals breaking the law are allowed to interfere with the election, fancy logic?), only after the election ⇾ so the winner decides if something is even worthy an investigation.
If that's not a pro-corruption environment, how would you design it to be more pro-corruption?
The pervasive and obvious corruption is as bad — maybe worse? — than any mafia.
This last 10 years (ie Trumpification of the GOP) have really exposed how brittle, broken, and downright incompetent the American govt and institutions really are.
How ill-equipped and ill-designed those institutions — and people — are to deal with the power of wealth (eg musk, Murdoch, etc), casual lawlessness, and willful malfeasance (eg Fox News, Jan 6, Supreme Court, etc).