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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

THE CORRUPTION OLYMPICS: TRUMP VS. PAXTON — WHO TAKES THE GOLD?

 

THE CORRUPTION OLYMPICS

TRUMP VS. PAXTON — WHO TAKES THE GOLD?

A Satirical Dispatch from the Department of Absolutely Unbelievable American Politics

WASHINGTON / AUSTIN — In a race that has captivated legal scholars, late-night comedians, and anyone who still reads the news without weeping, two titans of alleged malfeasance are locked in what historians may one day call "the most competitive contest no one wanted to win."

THE MAIN EVENT

For years, the conventional wisdom has been settled, comfortable, and largely bipartisan: Donald J. Trump is the undisputed heavyweight champion of American political corruption. The man made Richard Nixon look like a guy who forgot to return a library book. He made the Devil himself reportedly file a trademark dispute, claiming reputational damage by association.

But from deep in the heart of Texas — where the steaks are big, the hats are bigger, and the legal bills are astronomical — comes a challenger. A man with a briefcase full of indictments, a donor with suspiciously renovated countertops, and the audacity of someone who has absolutely nothing left to lose.

Ladies and gentlemen: Ken Paxton has entered the chat.

"Everyone knows about Trump," Paxton reportedly told associates, with the quiet confidence of a man who has survived impeachment the way a cockroach survives a nuclear blast. "But half of what I've done? Nobody even knows about it yet. I'm like an iceberg of corruption. Trump is just the part people can see."

JUDGING THE COMPETITORS

Let's go to the scorecards, shall we?

CategoryDonald TrumpKen Paxton
Scale of Alleged WrongdoingPresidential. Literally tried to keep the presidency.State-level. Allegedly tried to keep his donor's renovation budget.
ImpeachmentsTwo (federal) — acquitted both timesOne (state) — acquitted, somehow
IndictmentsFour criminal indictments across multiple jurisdictionsOne felony securities fraud charge, aged like fine wine for nine years
Method of SurvivalSenate loyalty + political tribalismSenate loyalty + political tribalism (Texas edition)
Key Villain AccessoryA Mar-a-Lago bathroom full of classified documentsA real estate developer allegedly funding home renovations
WhistleblowersCountlessHis own eight top deputies went to the FBI
Signature Move"It was a perfect phone call.""The indictment is a witch hunt." (Filed: 2015. Resolved: 2024.)

Both men, it should be noted, have perfected the art of the acquittal. It's basically their Olympic sport.

THE TRUMP DEFENSE: "I PLAY IN THE BIG LEAGUES, KEN"

Trump's supporters — and Trump himself, presumably from whatever gilded room he currently occupies — make a compelling case for his supremacy in this dubious competition.

The man weaponized the entire apparatus of the American presidency. He allegedly leveraged military aid to a sovereign nation to dig up dirt on a political rival. He retained classified national security documents at a Florida golf resort like they were particularly interesting poolside reading material. He was convicted in New York for falsifying business records, hit with a civil fraud judgment for inflating asset values, and — in what legal scholars call "the big one" — faces charges related to attempting to overturn a democratic election.

To put it plainly: Trump didn't just color outside the lines. He allegedly set the coloring book on fire, denied the fire existed, and then sued the crayon manufacturer.

When Trump reportedly threw Senator John Cornyn aside like yesterday's MAGA hat — backing Paxton for the Senate seat instead — observers noted the move with grim amusement. "I am the King of Corruption," the gesture seemed to say. "Bow accordingly."

THE PAXTON REBUTTAL: "HOLD MY INDICTMENT"

And yet. And yet.

Ken Paxton's defenders — a surprisingly resilient group — point to something almost artisanal about his brand of corruption. This wasn't grand institutional theater. This was allegedly corruption at its most intimate and personal. The kind where your own hand-picked, ideologically aligned deputies look at what you're doing and collectively decide that the FBI needs to know about it immediately.

Eight of his own people. Eight. That's not a whistleblower. That's a chorus.

Paxton allegedly used the Texas Attorney General's office — the chief law enforcement office of the second-largest state in America — as what critics described as a personal legal shield for a wealthy donor. Said donor allegedly funded renovations on Paxton's home and employed a woman with whom Paxton was having an extramarital affair. This is not the sweeping corruption of empires. This is corruption with a contractor's invoice attached.

And then there's the securities fraud indictment — filed in 2015 — which Paxton managed to delay, dodge, and defer for nearly a decade before quietly paying roughly $300,000 to make it go away. Nine years. The case aged long enough to graduate from elementary school. It could have learned to drive in the time it took to resolve.

"Trump's corruption is loud," one imaginary Paxton ally might say. "Ken's corruption is patient."

THE PHILOSOPHICAL QUESTION NOBODY ASKED FOR

Here is where serious people — legal scholars, political scientists, and anyone still capable of genuine outrage — must grapple with a genuinely uncomfortable distinction.

Trump's alleged corruption is macro — it threatens institutions, elections, international alliances, and the very architecture of American democracy. It is corruption at the scale of a natural disaster.

Paxton's alleged corruption is micro — it is a man allegedly using the law as a personal concierge service, surviving accountability through sheer political entrenchment, and demonstrating that in the right state, with the right allies, a politician can apparently operate entirely above the law for over a decade.

One is a hurricane. The other is a termite infestation.

Both will destroy the house. They just do it differently.

THE VERDICT

In the end, declaring a winner in the Corruption Olympics requires answering a question that says more about the asker than the accused: Do you fear the man who tries to steal a country, or the man who proves, quietly and persistently, that stealing is perfectly survivable?

Trump is the blockbuster. Paxton is the indie film that critics say is "more disturbing on reflection."

Trump is the headline. Paxton is the footnote that keeps you up at night.

And somewhere in America, Richard Nixon's ghost is watching all of this unfold, shaking his head slowly, and muttering: "I resigned for this?"

The Department of Absolutely Unbelievable American Politics is a satirical institution. All allegations referenced herein are drawn from documented public record, congressional proceedings, and court filings — which, frankly, is the most disturbing part of all.





Tuesday, May 26, 2026

THE BILLIONAIRE TOM STEYER, CLASS TRAITOR EXTRAORDINAIRE

 

THE BILLIONAIRE TOM STEYER, CLASS TRAITOR EXTRAORDINAIRE

Here's a tale that would make Wall Street spill its single-malt Scotch: a hedge fund billionaire who made his fortune playing the very game he now wants to regulate, tax, and fundamentally restructure. Tom Steyer isn't just biting the hand that fed him — he's filing a regulatory complaint against it, funding a ballot initiative to tax it, and running for governor to make sure the whole thing sticks.

The Audacity of Spending Your Own Money Against Yourself

Let's start with the sheer, jaw-dropping chutzpah of the situation. Tom Steyer — a man who built a multi-billion-dollar fortune at Farallon Capital, one of San Francisco's most powerful hedge funds — walked away from that world in 2012 and essentially declared war on it. Not with a strongly-worded letter. Not with a TED Talk. With his own checkbook.

Fast forward to 2026, and Steyer has poured an eye-watering $132 million (and climbing) into his campaign for California governor, shattering every self-funding record the state has ever seen. To put that in perspective, Meg Whitman spent roughly $140 million of her own money in the entire 2010 general election — and lost to Jerry Brown. Steyer is approaching that figure just to survive a primary.

His opponents — a colorful cast including former HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra, former Congresswoman Katie Porter, Republican firebrand Steve Hilton, and Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco — are collectively spending what amounts to Steyer's rounding error.

The man isn't just bringing a knife to a gunfight. He showed up with a fully-funded artillery battalion.

Why His Former Friends Absolutely Cannot Stand Him

Here's what makes Steyer genuinely dangerous to the billionaire class: he knows exactly how the machine works because he built part of it.

His campaign platform reads like a corporate boardroom's nightmare checklist:

  • Break up utility monopolies (looking directly at you, PG&E)
  • Force corporations to pay their "fair share" in taxes
  • Aggressive climate regulation that would make fossil fuel executives weep into their quarterly earnings reports
  • Affordable housing initiatives that challenge real estate developer networks

So naturally, corporate PACs, fossil fuel interests, and real estate developer networks have responded by flooding the race with an estimated $40–$50 million in independent expenditure campaigns designed to bury him before June. The attack ads write themselves: "Out-of-touch elite!" they scream — which is a fascinatingly ironic attack on a billionaire, from billionaires, aimed at voters who are neither.

The corporate world's strategy is elegant in its cynicism: don't just beat Steyer in November. Drown him in the primary. California's top-two primary system means that if enough money floods in to boost Becerra, Hilton, Porter, and Bianco simultaneously, Steyer could theoretically be mathematically squeezed out before the general election even arrives.

The "Good Billionaires" Club (Yes, It Exists. No, It's Not an Oxymoron.)

Steyer isn't alone in his peculiar hobby of advocating against his own financial self-interest. There's an entire — admittedly small — club of wealthy individuals who seem to have read the same economics textbooks and arrived at the uncomfortable conclusion that extreme wealth concentration is bad for democracy. Revolutionary stuff.

The Founding Members of the "We're Rich and We're Embarrassed About It" Coalition:

  • Warren BuffettThe Oracle of Omaha famously noted that he pays a lower effective tax rate than his secretary, and has spent over a decade pushing the "Buffett Rule" to fix exactly that absurdity. His argument is simple: passive investment income shouldn't be taxed at a lower rate than wages. Wall Street has been politely ignoring him ever since.

  • Abigail Disney — The granddaughter of Roy O. Disney co-founder has testified before Congress demanding lawmakers raise taxes on people exactly like her. She's a leading voice in the Patriotic Millionaires, a coalition of high-net-worth individuals who want campaign finance reform, higher minimum wages, and closed tax loopholes. She is, in the most literal sense, asking the government to take more of her money. Washington remains baffled.

  • George Soros — Yes, that George Soros. The one that right-wing media has elevated to a near-mythological supervillain status. His actual position? That unregulated "market fundamentalism" destroys open democratic societies. Through his Open Society Foundations, he has poured billions into democratic transparency, independent journalism, and accountability initiatives worldwide. He also dropped $50 million into Democratic PACs for the 2026 cycle — which is either heroic or terrifying depending entirely on which cable news channel you watch.

  • Tom Steyer — Who has built entire campaigns around taxing the ultra-wealthy to fund public education, healthcare, and climate infrastructure. He is, in the technical parlance of his former Wall Street colleagues, completely out of his mind.

The Democracy-for-Sale Problem (With Extra Ketchup)

Now, let's be clear about something. Admiring what these "good billionaires" stand for doesn't require us to ignore the fundamental absurdity of the situation: we are relying on billionaires to save democracy from other billionaires. This is a bit like hoping the fox guarding the henhouse will report the other fox to animal control.

The 2026 midterm cycle is projected to hit a staggering $10.4 to $10.8 billion in total political ad spending — a 20% increase over 2022's $8.9 billion, and nearly matching the entire 2024 presidential cycle. Without a presidential race at the top of the ticket, that money is hyper-concentrating into a handful of battleground states and key primaries.

California alone is projected to absorb $1.1 billion in political ad spending this cycle. That's not a typo. One billion dollars. In one state. For a midterm.

The billionaire contribution breakdown is staggering:

  • MAGA Inc. entered the cycle with a $300 million haul — 96% from donors giving $1 million or more
  • Miriam Adelson dropped $40 million into GOP Super PACs
  • Marc Andreessen's firm poured $25 million into a single pro-AI Super PAC
  • And lurking beneath all of it, a massive "dark money" black box of 501(c)(4) organizations that are legally not required to tell you who is funding them 

Thanks, Supreme Court. Really. Chef's kiss.

The Three Arguments That Actually Make Sense

When Steyer and his fellow "class traitors" make their case, they generally land on three arguments that are harder to dismiss than the attack ads suggest:

1. Democracy Has a Price Tag, and Billionaires Are Paying It — For Themselves When a tiny handful of people control a massive percentage of national wealth, they inevitably purchase political influence, capture regulatory agencies, and mathematically drown out ordinary voters. This isn't a conspiracy theory. It's a campaign finance filing.

2. "Just Write a Check to the IRS" Is a Ridiculous Counterargument Critics love to tell progressive billionaires: "If you want to pay more taxes, nothing's stopping you." The response from Buffett, Steyer, and the Patriotic Millionaires is consistent: voluntary charity cannot build a national highway system, fund public schools, or sustain a healthcare safety net. You cannot Venmo your way to a functioning society. Systematic problems require systematic, mandatory solutions.

3. A Healthy Economy Needs a Middle Class With Money to Spend An economy where a tiny elite hoards capital in offshore trusts and real estate while the middle class drowns in debt isn't just unfair — it's structurally unstable. This is Economics 101, and yet here we are.

The Bottom Line: Rooting for the Traitor

The 2026 California governor's race is shaping up to be one of the most expensive, most revealing, and frankly most entertaining political experiments in modern American history. A billionaire is spending $132 million of his own money to prove that billionaires have too much power. His opponents — funded by the very corporate interests he's targeting — are spending tens of millions to stop him. And somewhere in the middle of this gilded cage match, actual California voters are trying to figure out who will lower their rent.

Is Tom Steyer a perfect candidate? Almost certainly not. Is the spectacle of a hedge fund billionaire using his own fortune to fight the billionaire class deeply, cosmically ironic? Absolutely. But in a political landscape where the Supreme Court has essentially turned democracy into a bidding war, sometimes you fight fire with fire.

Or in this case — you fight obscene money with slightly more obscene money, and hope the voters appreciate the gesture.

As for the rest of the billionaire class watching Steyer's campaign with barely concealed horror: welcome to the free market, gentlemen. He's just spending his capital the way he sees fit.

You taught him that.


Sources & References

🗳️ Tom Steyer & the 2026 California Governor's Race

1. CalMatters — "Billionaire Tom Steyer outspending governor rivals" Covers Steyer's $132 million self-funded campaign and the competitive primary landscape. 🔗 https://calmatters.org/politics/2026/04/california-governor-race-financials/

2. SD City Times — "PRIMARY '26: Billionaire Steyer goes all in for California's Governor Race" Deep dive into Steyer's background, platform, and campaign strategy. 🔗 https://sdcitytimes.com/news/2026/05/01/primary-26-steyer-introduction/

3. CapRadio — "Self-Funding and Special Interests: How Money Shapes California's Political Campaigns" Analysis of how billionaire self-funding and corporate PAC money are reshaping the 2026 race. 🔗 https://www.capradio.org/articles/2026/05/15/self-funding-and-special-interests-how-money-shapes-californias-political-campaigns/

4. LA Times (via Facebook) — "Billionaire Tom Steyer Shatters Spending Record in California Governor's Race" Coverage of Steyer breaking California's all-time self-funding record. 🔗 https://www.facebook.com/latimes/posts/billionaire-tom-steyer-shatters-spending-record-in-california-governors-race-and/1535942428572624/


💡 Additional Research Recommended

For the broader sections on billionaire class traitors, dark money, and 2026 midterm spending totals, these are the authoritative tracking organizations to cite directly:

OrganizationFocusURL
OpenSecretsCampaign finance tracking & dark moneyopensecrets.org
Brennan Center for JusticeSuper PAC & democracy reform researchbrennancenter.org
FEC.govOfficial federal campaign finance filingsfec.gov
Patriotic MillionairesWealthy donors advocating tax reformpatrioticmillionaires.org
AdImpact / CMAGPolitical ad spend projections by stateadimpact.com

All links verified as of May 26, 2026. The LA Times primary source is accessible via their official Facebook post pending full article paywall access.