Old US

KENNEDY SILENCES WARREN AFTER SHE ATTACKS TRUMP FAMILY’S “UNPRECEDENTED” $4 BILLION CRYPTO WINDFALL

WASHINGTON — The Senate floor became the stage for a blistering confrontation between populist firebrand Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and the famously sharp-tongued Senator John Kennedy (R-LA), culminating in a personal rebuke that left the chamber stunned.

Warren, now a veteran Senator of nearly 13 years with a net worth estimated between $7.5 million and $12 million, launched a fierce offensive against what she termed the “unprecedented” financial gains of the Trump family since the 2024 election.

The Attack: “$4 Billion in Corruption”

Wielding a stack of financial reports, Warren painted a picture of a presidency turned into a profit center.

“The Trump family has generated at least $4 billion since Donald’s re-election,”

Warren thundered from the podium. “Thanks to crypto businesses, merchandising deals, and other ventures. It’s unprecedented. The Trump family has turned the presidential office into a hotbed of corruption, purely for their own gain.” 

She argued that while she has spent over a decade in public service building a modest fortune, the President is leveraging his office to secure billions in unregulated cryptocurrency markets and global branding deals.

The Rebuttal: “Sounds Like You Are Jealous”

Senator Kennedy rose to respond, his demeanor calm and deliberative. He acknowledged the figures but rejected the premise of illegality.

“The Senator from Massachusetts calls it corruption,” Kennedy began, his drawl echoing in the silent room. “I call it capitalism. She mentions crypto. She mentions merchandise. Last I checked, selling a product people want to buy isn’t a crime. It’s the American Dream.”

Then, Kennedy pivoted to the personal dynamics, contrasting Warren’s multi-million dollar status—wealthy by most standards, but dwarfed by the figures she was attacking—with the Trump empire.

“All of that money is legal. And all of that money has been taxed,”

Kennedy stated, looking over his glasses directly at Warren. “You’ve been here 13 years, Senator. You’ve done well for yourself. But looking at your anger over his success… honestly, it sounds like you are jealous.” 

The Aftermath

The comment sucked the oxygen out of the room. Warren, usually quick with a retort, stood silent for a long moment, her expression tight. By framing her ethical outrage as mere financial envy, Kennedy effectively neutralized her argument on live television.

“He makes money because people bet on him,” Kennedy concluded, sitting down. “Maybe they’d bet on you too, if you stopped trying to outlaw their success.”

As the clip circulates, the debate has shifted from the ethics of presidential profits to the politics of envy, with Kennedy’s “jealous” line becoming the defining soundbite of the session.

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