The fastest path to generating immense wealth is shifting from pure innovation to achieving regulatory capture via proximity to the president. This strategy is designed to influence policy, secure government contracts, or even acquire state-seized assets like TikTok at a steep discount, representing a new form of crony capitalism.

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In heavily regulated or legally ambiguous industries, a founder's most valuable asset can be political connections. One startup literally used a pitch deck slide showing its co-founder with prominent politicians to signal their ability to influence future legislation in their favor. This represents a stark, real-world "crony capitalism" business strategy.

The dynamic between tech and government is not a simple decline but a cycle of alignment (post-WWII), hostility (2000s-2010s), and a recent return to collaboration. This "back to the future" trend is driven by geopolitical needs and cultural shifts, suggesting the current alignment is a return to a historical norm.

AI provides a structural advantage to those in power by automating government systems. This allows leaders to bypass the traditional unwieldiness of human bureaucracy, making it trivial for an executive to change AI parameters and instantly exert their will across all levels of government, thereby concentrating power.

As traditional economic-based antitrust enforcement weakens, a new gatekeeper for M&A has emerged: political cronyism. A deal's approval may now hinge less on market concentration analysis and more on a political leader’s personal sentiment towards the acquiring CEO, fundamentally changing the risk calculus for corporate strategists.

Unlike post-presidency ventures, lucrative commercial deals offered to a sitting first family function as a form of bribery. A studio's multi-million dollar offer is not a bet on creative talent but an investment in gaining favorable regulatory outcomes, such as merger approvals, from the administration.

Meta's victory over the FTC's antitrust challenge is not just a legal footnote; it signals the end of a highly restrictive regulatory era. This will likely trigger a massive wave of M&A, as large tech companies are now emboldened to acquire stagnant, late-stage private "unicorns" that have been stuck without an exit path.

The race to manage 40 million government-seeded 'Trump baby accounts' shows how a single policy decision can create a massive, winner-take-all market. This allows the government to act as a 'kingmaker,' anointing one or a few companies with a generational customer acquisition opportunity, similar to how the 401k launch benefited Fidelity and Vanguard.

The current market boom, largely driven by AI enthusiasm, provides critical political cover for the Trump administration. An AI market downturn would severely weaken his political standing. This creates an incentive for the administration to take extraordinary measures, like using government funds to backstop private AI companies, to prevent a collapse.

Large corporations can afford lobbyists and consultants to navigate geopolitical shifts, but their size makes strategic pivots notoriously difficult. This creates opportunities for agile startups and SMEs, which can adapt their strategies and organizations much faster to the changing landscape.

In its hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros., Paramount's key pitch for regulatory approval stems from its financing. The deal is funded by Trump-allied figures like Larry Ellison, Jared Kushner, and Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds, creating a belief that a potential Trump administration would favor their acquisition over Netflix's.