Javier Milei's Crypto Scandal
After promoting a crypto token that collapsed in hours, Argentina’s president claims he was deceived.

On February 14, Argentine President Javier Milei shared a link on X promoting a cryptocurrency called $LIBRA. The project, he claimed, will help "foster the growth of the Argentine economy by funding small companies and ventures." Almost immediately, his followers raised the alarm: 84 percent of the crypto's stock was owned by just three wallets, leading many to suspect a "rug pull" scheme—a scam in which a token's value is inflated through celebrity endorsement, only for the original developers to then withdraw all liquidity, leaving the investors with a worthless asset.
Just two hours after Milei's post, $LIBRA acquired around 40,000 investors and its price rose by 1,300 percent. Then, as many predicted, the developers sold all the tokens they retained, crushing its value, and walking away with roughly $113 million. Three out of four investors lost money, with some losing up to $5 million.
Not long after, Milei deleted his original posts, claiming he "wasn't acquainted with the details of the project" and "obviously has no connection" to it. He clarified that his accounts hadn't been hacked, as some had speculated. Milei was left with two options: admit he had been deceived or acknowledge that he had willfully participated in a scam. He chose the former, framing the endorsement as an honest mistake.
Sensing an opportunity, the Peronist Left called for impeachment proceedings, while others filed criminal charges against the president. But the Peronists are fragmented and leaderless: Their key figures are widely unpopular, and none are willing to pick a fight with Milei and capitalize on the scandal. Meanwhile, the centrist parties that occasionally collaborate with Milei introduced a Senate bill to create a special investigative committee. But the bill was struck down by the same senators who proposed it, many of whom remain uncertain whether to align with or oppose a president who shares their voter base and who is leading a painful but necessary economic recovery.
The opposition has remained disoriented since Milei assumed office a little over a year ago. Their lack of a viable alternative, combined with Argentina's economic performance under Milei's liberalizing reforms, has allowed the president to maintain unprecedented popular support. Since his inauguration, Milei has held a net positive approval rating of between 52 and 60 percent, as inflation reaches new monthly lows, the exchange rate remains stable, and the country exits recession. Despite the $LIBRA scandal, Argentina's stock market and international credit ratings remained steady. Milei's party, La Libertad Avanza, is even expecting legislative gains in October, which would allow it to fast-track its reform agenda.
Still, the crypto scandal suggests that Milei's administration may have grown too comfortable. For the first time, his team was on the defensive, facing substantial criticism—even from within his own administration. Hayden Davis, one of $LIBRA's developers, insisted that Milei himself hadn't profited from the token. But that only raised deeper questions: How did this happen, and who was behind it?
In a February 17 interview, Milei admitted he's "still not used to the idea of being president," that it's too easy to approach him, and that he'll need to "erect walls" to filter out fraudsters and prevent future blunders. Former President Mauricio Macri, who chairs the Republican Proposition party, one of Milei's key parliamentary allies, claimed that "President [Milei] is badly advised and not taken care of." Macri has long accused the president's advisers of being unserious and immature.
In the end, the scandal barely dented Milei's popularity—his approval rating dropped just four points. The limited fallout can be attributed to two factors: most of those affected by the scam were outside Argentina, and the incident pales in comparison to the corruption scandals surrounding Milei's rivals. The charge against Milei is being led by two former Peronist presidents: Cristina Kirchner, who faces two corruption sentences, and Alberto Fernández, who was recently indicted for physically assaulting his wife.
Yet the public remains divided. While 39.5 percent of Milei's supporters believe he made an earnest mistake, 49 percent think he acted deliberately. Meanwhile, 77 percent—including 60 percent of his own supporters—believe the incident warrants an investigation. This suggests that Argentines are willing to forgive Milei, but only if he demonstrates accountability and listens when supporters warn him of potential dangers—as they did when he first met with Hayden Davis back in January.
In response to the scandal, the president launched an internal investigation led by the presidency's Anti-Corruption Office. Many believe Milei should reevaluate who's in his inner circle, although he's reticent to do this. It will depend on what information emerges as to who persuaded him to endorse the cryptocurrency. Rumors already point to his tech advisor, Mauricio Novelli, and to others close to the president, including his sister and personal secretary, Karina Milei.
In weathering his first major political storm, Milei faces a critical test of leadership. He now has an opportunity to prove that his opponents have underestimated him, that he can regain control of the narrative, show accountability, and set himself apart from the corrupt practices of Argentina's political establishment. If not, he will have to lay low for a while to protect his people, and salvage his reputation by leaning more on his economic technocrats and moderate allies.
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In completely unrelated (trust me bro) news, North Korea feared to be behind $2 billion Bybit hack, the biggest crypto heist in history.
But, like, you know, crypto is, like, anti-control and anti-authoritarianism and will, like, totally facilitate global trade and topple fiats and stuff and anybody trying to capture or control it or shield themselves from it is, like, a secret authoritarian nationalist themselves who doesn't understand currency, free trade, and markets.
But there's a ledger that lets us know what's in it.
"I believe people should have he opportunity to use different types of currencies and not only state currency!"
"Look! That guy over there got his crypto stolen, clearly crypto doesn't work!"
How this is meaningfully different from North Korea engaging in state-sponsored counterfeiting of 'real' cash nobody knows.
Agreed. Almost government intervention comes on the heals of some victim complaining that they were wronged. People trade security for freedom all the time, and it is a damn shame because that put us in this current mess.
Just 40 years ago, it was understood that you needed to be careful with personal information. If your CC was stolen or checks used without your authorization, the cost was to YOU. The CC company wouldn't eat the fraud costs. The bank wasn't responsible for your misfortune. Bad shit happens and it is up to you to mitigate that risk.
Flash forward to today, and a simple call to your CC company gets fraudulent charges wiped away in moments. Checks are a thing of the past, and you don't even carry around a lot of cash to be stolen. Many of the people I see criticizing the wild-west of crypto currency are also people that lament the control our government now has over our financial system.
If Operation Chokepoint, de-platforming, money confiscation of the Freedom Convoy in Canada, and other examples of monetary cancelation going through Europe worry you, then you need to understand this is the result of getting the government to protect us from ourselves.
Everyone in this $LIBRA scandal was warned within hours of this release. Rug pulls are common in crypto, and let's be honest: the people losing money most of the time know this, and just think they are smart enough to time the market.
If we want libertopia, then we must embrace Caveat Emptor.
TL,DR: Perfect anonymity! Caveat Emptor!
Many of the people I see criticizing the wild-west of crypto currency are also people that lament the control our government now has over our financial system.
If you were a North Korean, or even just a globalist NGO, asset convincing people to abandon their respective currencies and adopt a crypto currency, what would you say or do differently than what you're doing right now? If you were just perpetrating a rug pull scam, what would you do differently than what you're doing right now?
Without voiding all secrecy/anonymity more systemically, prove that you aren't either of the above.
Anonymity is a bitch isn't it?
You would think that you retards would understand how a zero knowledge protocol works but, instead, crypto continues to be stolen by the most technologically dirt-poor and backwards of countries, hemmed in and captured by the most economically bankrupt countries, underwritten by the WEF and the centralized banking systems you claim to be destroying and, yet, you pretend like "Oh, this currency is the most securest and liberating thing ever."
If Operation Chokepoint, de-platforming, money confiscation of the Freedom Convoy in Canada, and other examples of monetary cancelation going through Europe worry you, then you need to understand this is the result of getting the government to protect us from ourselves.
If my assertion of "That guy over there got his crypto stolen, clearly crypto doesn't work!" is detached, then your statement above is equally detached by the exact same logic. If Trudeau locked up all the truckers, exactly how many BTC would buy their freedom? If Obama/Biden can simply will Operation Chokepoint into existence to lean on banks can they not also will it into existence to lean on crypto miners, coinholders, and exchanges? Isn't the solution the opposition to the leaders themselves rather than trying and failing to play whack-a-mole and make everyone equally anonymous?
This kinda seems a bit... derivative to the Reason inferiority complex issue, where over 15 yrs. ago crypto started trying to topple fiats and, despite billions in transactions and market cap has failed to achieve what Trump (or Clinton or Reagan) has done in 8 (and Elon in less), even in places like Venezuela and North Korea.
Libertopia - Achieved by ensuring that any honest person advocating libertopia becomes caught in fraud and scams.
Hella philosophy
For the record, JFear doesn't even understand how currency or bitcoin works. But that won't stop him from bloviating confidently about it. Talking about shit he doesn't know anything about is his MO.
https://reason.com/video/2022/08/08/gold-vs-bitcoin-a-soho-forum-debate/?comments=true#comment-9638491
Well you certainly know pump and dump and scams. Makes you an expert on crypto I guess
For the record, I'm inclined to agree that there are legitimate points for and against bitcoin and whether we agree or not about bitcoin or crypto is irrelevant to whatever JFree said behind the gray box.
How this is meaningfully different from North Korea engaging in state-sponsored counterfeiting of 'real' cash nobody knows.
Wait, you mean crypto currency can be counterfeited as easily as real cash?
That still doesn't explain why the Norks and other State Sponsored organizations have been able to steal *far* more in crypto than any body has ever stolen or counterfeited in hard currency ever... but you know, like, it's encrypted and stuff, so it's like secure and thwarts fiats and stuff!
You guys are fucking retarded.
And, just to be clear for the utter retards, North Korea is responsible for the largest crypto-heist after being responsible for the previous year's largest crypto heist and the year before that's largest crypto-heist (and this is all in addition to the other hacks that weren't as large).
If private citizens losing $113M because of a rug pull scheme in Argentina while North Korea steals $2B is your idea of crypto-libertopia, you morons can keep it.
a crypto token that collapsed
Also known as a crypto token.
A crypto scam - also known as crypto
>After promoting a crypto token that collapsed in hours, Argentina’s president claims he was deceived.
one man's deception is another's minimal diligence.
Presidents usually don't have a free week or two to do all the research and have people to advise them as to the veracity of such things.
I smell something CIA'ish about all this, because they hate Milei, and want to do him harm.
Why does pulling the buttplug out of your ass affect your views on national security? Do you become more aggressive when you orgasm?
?
Cause the CIA has never interfered in South American politics before…
Hadn't thought of that but now that you mention it seems like a possibility. Maybe it will make sense someday.
I smell something CIA'ish about all this
"Just crack the encryption that only State-level and/or quantum computing power could crack. You know, caveat emptor." - Overt
Which is why Presidents hould not be endorsing specific ventures if they cannot be well informed about them.
Ah, connecting dots that don't exist.
True and Honest Libertarians only support the gold standard.
If I can't drink or kill my prey or enemies with my currency, I can't really put any faith in it.
Anyone remember thr rise and fall of the Hawk coin?
I remember the rise and fall of the $2 bill. I still have one in my ragtag collection of indian heads, buffalo nickels, copperless and silver coins along with a silver certificate or two.
The farther away from *real* 'value' currency gets the MORE things like this will happen.
"Not long after, Milei deleted his original posts, claiming he "wasn't acquainted with the details of the project" and "obviously has no connection" to it."
That is what Trump said about Project 2025.