Follow the money - Trump, corruption and theft.
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Where did the money Trump stole from the sale of Venezuelan oil go? Qatar. Same place that illegally bribed Trump with a $400 Million flying palace.
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Pay attention to what is happening right now.
The United States is overseeing the sale of Venezuelan oil. The first confirmed round totaled roughly five hundred million dollars. That money is not sitting in Venezuela. It is not sitting in the United States Treasury. Reputable reporting confirms the proceeds are being held in Qatar.
As of January 17, 2026, Congress does not know the specific bank holding the funds, the precise type of account used, who has authority to approve transfers, what audit rights exist, or how transparency and oversight are enforced. It does not have a complete itemized accounting of what portion of the money sits in Qatar versus any U.S. Treasury designated accounts or under what legal authority each pool is held.
That lack of clarity is not a technical issue. It is a constitutional one.
Members of Congress are reporting they were not fully briefed on this structure. That is unacceptable. When the executive branch controls foreign assets, directs international revenue flows, and shields funds from judicial review, Congress has a legal obligation to exercise oversight. Oversight is not optional. It is the law.
Representative Becca Balint on the floor of Congress:
Now we need to talk about Qatar.
Qatar is a wealthy autocracy ruled by an unelected emir who inherited power. It’s not a democracy, not a constitutional system, and not a place where basic rights are protected by law.
Beneath the polished image it markets to the West is a country defined by repression, discrimination, and abuse. Women remain subject to a male guardianship system that limits their ability to make independent decisions about marriage, travel, and their children, and while officials point to recent reforms, reports continue to show women still need male permission for many aspects of daily life. LGBTQ people live under constant threat because same sex relationships are criminalized, gender identity is policed, and simply existing openly can result in arrest or imprisonment.
Qatar’s treatment of migrant workers is its most damning stain. Millions of laborers from poorer countries were imported to build its towers and stadiums, often having their passports confiscated, working in extreme heat, living in overcrowded camps, and going months without pay. Independent investigations estimate thousands of workers died over the years leading up to the World Cup, a human toll brushed aside to protect Qatar’s global image. This is the truth behind the branding: an absolute monarchy with a documented record of human rights violations, labor exploitation, criminalization of identity, and a willingness to sacrifice human lives for prestige and profit.
It’s also worth considering Trump’s whiplash on Qatar, because it tells you everything you need to know. Early in the first term of his presidency, he loudly attacked Qatar, echoing Saudi and Emirati accusations that it was funding terrorism, and in 2017 he openly applauded the Saudi led blockade that accused Qatar of aiding extremists. Then the tone abruptly shifted. Within a year, Trump was calling Qatar a “great friend” and warmly welcoming its emir to the White House.
What changed was not evidence or policy but money. Qatari interests began spending heavily at the Trump International Hotel in Washington, and more importantly, Jared Kushner’s (Trump’s son-in-law) family sought roughly $500 million from a Qatari billionaire to refinance the deeply troubled 666 Fifth Avenue skyscraper after buying it for $1.8 billion. Although that direct deal collapsed under scrutiny while Kushner was a White House adviser (conflict of interest?), the building was ultimately rescued in 2018 through a $1.2 billion, 99 year lease with Brookfield, whose property fund counted the Qatar Investment Authority as a major investor. All of this raises ethical and conflict of interest concerns. After that, Trump’s public criticism of Qatar disappeared.
Fast forward to 2025 and the relationship has escalated into an open embrace, with the Qatari government offering Trump a four hundred million dollar private jet as a so called gift, a move Trump himself defended by saying only a fool would refuse it. That is not a gift in any meaningful sense. It is a bribe in everything but name, and accepting it raises serious constitutional and ethical red flags that should alarm anyone who still believes public office is not for sale.
Parking almost half a billion dollars tied to a sanctioned authoritarian regime in that environment is a terrible example for the rest of the world to see. It raises serious red flags.
So here is my bottom line.
If the United States is going to manage Venezuelan oil proceeds, those funds should be held in the United States of America. They should sit under clear U.S. law, subject to congressional oversight, transparent auditing, and judicial review where appropriate. If protective structuring is needed, it can be done here. We do not need foreign secrecy jurisdictions to manage foreign money in our name.
Sunlight builds trust. Secrecy destroys it.
Congress must be briefed and then perform its oversight duties. The public must be informed. And these funds should be brought home where accountability actually exists.


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