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I just reviewed what’s happening with WLFI, the crypto project of the Trump family, and honestly, it’s quite concerning. It’s not just another token being locked—there’s something much more shady in the mechanisms they’re implementing.
What WLFI crypto is, essentially, is a project that promised to be revolutionary, but the governance proposal they’ve just rolled out is almost Kafkaesque. It affects 62.3 billion tokens and basically says: accept our new rules or your funds will be frozen indefinitely. The first investors who bought between $0.015 and $0.05 per token now see the price hovering around $0.08, but here’s the brutal part: their tokens remain locked, possibly until 2029.
The scheme is simple but effective: two years of a complete lock-up, then gradual release over an additional two or three years. But if you vote against it, game over. Your money stays frozen with no exit date. It’s an ultimatum disguised as a democratic proposal. In the crypto industry, this is virtually unprecedented. Normally, you see lock-up periods of six to twelve months—not this two-year tyranny with penalties for dissent.
Justin Sun, the founder of Tron, has become the villain in this story. He has 4% of the voting power but can’t vote because WLFI froze his wallet with 544 million tokens. Sun accuses that there’s a backdoor in the smart contract that lets insiders freeze any wallet. WLFI denies it, of course, but the tension escalated so much that the project threatened him legally in April. Sun responded by calling it “world tyranny,” and he’s not wrong.
What’s interesting is how governance works here. The voting lasts seven days, requires one billion tokens of quorum, and uses a simple majority. It sounds democratic until you realize that only the WLFI team can submit proposals. Investors can’t bring their own initiatives. In a previous staking vote, 76% of the votes came from just ten wallets with 99% approval. Meanwhile, only 23% of the eligible tokens have ever participated in a vote.
Market capitalization is currently around $1.90 billion, but here comes the real risk: WLFI deposited 5 billion of its own tokens as collateral in Dolomite and borrowed $75 millones in stablecoins. If the price keeps falling, there could be a forced liquidation. The project says it can increase the collateral at any time, but that’s more promise than protection.
What worries me most is the political angle. The Trump family owns 22.5 billion tokens and earned approximately $1 millón from the project up to the end of 2025. Thanks to the two-year lock-up, the full release of the internal tokens can’t happen before January 2029, which conveniently aligns with the end of a possible second presidential term. The government of the United Arab Emirates bought 49% for $500 millones, which raised concerns in Congress regarding the Emoluments Clause.
In summary, WLFI crypto represents a governance model where investors have limited rights and insiders have all the control. It’s a textbook case of how decentralized projects shouldn’t work. If you’re considering putting money into this, think twice.