Biden Is Not Just Corrupt, He is a Traitor

Biden and his associates have literally fucked over the United States while helping China’s military and global hegemonic ambitions.

They profited off of selling prime real estate in US cities from the West to the East coast.

Just as it was in the news that Joe Biden and associates were engaged in negotiations with China (and with other countries – the same pattern occurred) his son was also present and, behind the scenes, netting enormous deals for his private equity companies.

Hunter Biden and his associates got extremely lucrative, privileged deals with the most powerful Chinese companies, some of which have strong ties to the Chinese military.

There is another type of corruption that has been taking place across the United States on multiple levels called “smash and grab”. Industries are smashed by legislation, putatively in the name of “justice” or some other SJW-type cause that elicits a knee-jerk response of agreement on the part of the public – so that it is not questioned.

Then associates of the legislator come in and make huge profits from the decimated remains of the industry.

We are living in a time when the corruption is so bad in the United States, so profound and so rampant, that it not only amounts to a coup d’etat of the United States of America, it represents treason of the United States of America and her people and interests to malevolent foreign governments and the betrayal of our allies and interests.

For example, when the Obama administration caved in to China’s militaristic maneuvers it not only harmed the interests of the United States, it also harmed our allies Japan, Korea, the Philippines, etc. But while that happened, the Biden crime family and associates landed multi-billion dollar deals with Chinese companies.

I apologize in advance for any text kerning issues in the quotes below.

The excerpts are from the must read book Secret Empires: How the American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends


We are used to the typical “revolving door” corruption where government officials will carry out policies and then, after leaving office, take a job from those who benefited. But with most of the deals covered in this book, these politicians do not wait until they leave office. The accumulation begins while they are still serving. Rather than personal accumulation, the wealth flows to someone who is important in their life — a child, another family member, or a close friend.

Those relatives are not required to disclose publicly how much money they are making or from whom. It is a pernicious form of what I call corruption by proxy.

Politicians are like the rest of us in that they avoid overtly criminal or publicly embarrassing behavior. Today, only the most arrogant, desperate, or stupid politician would take a direct payment from someone in exchange for a favor. Even without a clear exchange, savvy politicians are likely to avoid transactions that lead to a dramatic increase in their own net worth, lest they draw negative attention from an already skeptical public.

So a new corruption has taken hold. It involves larger sums of money than ever before. Instead of stuffing tens of thousands of dollars into a freezer, they stuff multibillion-dollar equity deals done in the dark corners of the world into family members’ bank accounts.

As some political leaders are making influential decisions that affect everything from national security to our standard of living, large sums of money are funneled to their families and closest friends. Only the most naive would believe that these deals are a coincidence. This money often flows from foreign governments or oligarchs. The timing of these transactions and the amounts involved raise serious questions about the leaders’ integrity and decision making. The high-level policy choices make the news, but the transactions quietly taking place below the surface do not.

How do I define corruption? By corruption, I mean when officials “abuse their positions for private gain . . . Corruption is the dishonest or fraudulent use of power for personal gain.” It is often illegal—but not always. Some forms of what most of us would
regard as corruption are still technically “legal.” These cases, where abuse of power is most certainly occurring, and where the public appears to have no legal recourse short of voting the abuser out of office, are especially demoralizing to Americans.


The American political class is “offshoring” its corruption. Sometimes, politicians will literally offshore corruption by moving the location of the deal, the entities, and the players involved, abroad. Other times, they offshore corruption metaphorically by shifting the cronyism out of their own hands and into those of their children or a close friend to
leverage from afar and avoid detection. Either way, the results are the same: like the financier who puts his assets in a bank in Belize, it becomes very hard to track the flow of money and exchange of services. Politicians and their families are increasingly able to avoid public scrutiny and accountability for the selling of influence. And the sums involved are enormous.


Besides being off the disclosure grid, offshore transactions provide plausible deniability when facing scrutiny. If money lands in a politician’s bank account, there is evidence of a direct benefit. Even if it shows up in the bank account of their spouse, questions would be raised. But what if the money, the job, or the business opportunity falls to a politician’s adult
child or best friend? Even if that transaction were to become public, therewould be an added layer of legal protection.
In short, this is corruption by proxy. It is essentially a form of “political arbitrage,” where friends and family members of powerful political figures have positioned themselves to serve as conduits or middle men between those seeking influence and those who possess political power. This creates previously unimaginable pathways to wealth for the political class.

Better still for them, because of limited disclosure rules, much of it can go on undetected. Foreign governments and oligarchs like this form of corruption because it gives them private and unfettered gateways to the corridors of Washington power. There are a myriad of things they may want: approval to take over an American company; the transfer of sensitive technology;
trade deals; or favorable policies concerning military or national security matters. Foreign entities cannot legally make campaign contributions, so using this approach creates an alternative way to curry favor and influence America’s political leaders. Simply camouflaging these transactions as business agreements provides another shield of plausible deniability. Such corruption is especially bad because it makes American politicians vulnerable to overseas financial pressure.