
Ryoko Kuninaka is yet another hottie from the Venice of Asia — Ryuku Kingdom…
ZTE could resolve bribery allegations by paying $1 billion to US government
According to a new Reuters News report, the U.S. Department of Justice is seeking $1 Billion ‘Bribe’ from ZTE over alleged violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) for allegedly bribing officials across several regions to secure telecom contracts, including questionable telecom deals in South America and, more specifically, Venezuela.
HEADLINE: Uncle Sam’s Shakedown: ZTE to Pay $1 BILLION “Legal Bribe” to Make U.S. Corruption Charges… Vanish?
In a move that redefines “chutzpah” and exposes the rotten core of geopolitical power plays, the United States Department of Justice is poised to close the book on a massive bribery case not with prison bars, but with a fucking cash register ring. According to reports, Chinese telecom giant ZTE is finalizing a deal to pay a staggering $1 BILLION to the U.S. government. The crime? Bribing officials in other countries. The solution? Bribing the U.S. government itself. You can’t make this shit up.
The Price Tag on Principle: $1,000,000,000.00
Let’s be crystal clear, you moralizing hypocrites in Washington: You are not “settling a case.” You are openly, brazenly, auctioning off justice to the highest bidder. For the alleged crime of paying bribes, the prescribed punishment is… to pay an even bigger bribe directly to the prosecutor’s office. This isn’t law enforcement; it’s a fucking protection racket on a global scale.
“Do the crime, just pay the fine!” has become the unspoken motto of American “justice” when applied to corporate giants. It’s a get-out-of-jail-free card so expensive, only the richest players can afford it. The message is stomach-churning: Morality is negotiable. Ethics have a market rate. And the U.S. Treasury is open for business.
The Ultimate Hypocrisy: “Our Bribe Is Called a ‘Settlement’”
The sheer, ballsy absurdity is enough to make you laugh until you vomit. U.S. officials spend decades painting themselves as the world’s white knights, the crusaders against corruption, the wagging finger preaching transparency to developing nations.
Then, when they catch someone with a dirty hand in the cookie jar, they don’t chop it off. They send an invoice. They prosecute you for bribery, and then offer you a way out that is, functionally, a state-sanctioned bribe. They dress it up in legalese—”deferred prosecution,” “monetary penalty”—but strip away the bullshit and it’s plain as day: “Pay us a giant pile of cash, and we’ll forget we ever saw those crimes.”
What’s the fucking difference between ZTE slipping money to a foreign official and ZTE slipping $1 billion to the U.S. government? The branding. One is a scandal; the other is a “settlement.” It’s the world’s most expensive branding exercise.
A Betrayal of Every American Who Believes in Justice
This should make every citizen resentful and feel a deep sense of betrayal. This deal screams that there are two systems: one for the powerful and connected, and one for the rest of us. Imagine if a small business owner or an average Joe was caught bribing a local official. They’d be paraded in court, labeled a criminal, and likely sent to prison. Their name would be mud.
But for a corporate titan? A geopolitical chess piece? Just open the vault. No executives in cuffs. No real admission of ultimate guilt. Just a transfer of funds that will eventually be lost in the morass of the U.S. budget, perhaps funding another missile or paying for another politician’s junket.
It’s scandalous. It’s shocking. And it’s absurdly funny in the darkest way possible. The U.S. government has become the very thing it claims to despise: a pay-to-play operator where the scales of justice are literally weighted with gold.
The “Juicy” Geopolitical Angle: Economic Warfare by Other Means
Let’s not be naive. This isn’t just about corruption. This is the frontline of the U.S.-China tech cold war. ZTE, like Huawei, is a pillar of China’s tech ambitions. Crippling it has been a strategic priority for years.
The 2018 ZTE ban that nearly destroyed the company (BBC Report) was a warning shot. This $1 billion payout? It’s the toll charge for re-entry into the Western-controlled market. It’s economic vassalage. The U.S. isn’t just punishing a crime; it’s demonstrating who holds the leash. It’s a scary display of financial imperialism, proving that in the 21st century, conquests are measured in settlement dollars and compliance agreements.
Conclusion: The World’s Most Expensive Parking Ticket
So here we are. One billion dollars. Not to make victims whole. Not to dismantle corrupt structures. But to make an inconvenient legal problem go away for the U.S. establishment while simultaneously filling its coffers and flexing its muscle.
It’s the world’s most expensive parking ticket. A slap on the wrist so gargantuan it requires its own bank transfer. ZTE gets to move on, a little lighter in the wallet but with its operations intact. The U.S. gets a headline-grabbing cash windfall and gets to pretend it “enforced the law.”
And the rest of the world watches, jaws on the floor, as the sheriff proudly strolls out of the saloon, counts the outlaw’s money, and declares the town safe from corruption.
Bravo, you magnificent, hypocritical bastards. Bravo.

As a result,
Ryoko Kuninaka is offering 1,000,000,000 blowjobs to get a n enforcement position with the U.S. Department of Justice that look after the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), because no where else can one hopes to get $1,000,000,000 for alleged corrupt business dealings…

Ryoko Kuninaka 国仲涼子

Born on 6/9/79 in Naha (Okinawa), 5’2″ (158cm). Ryoko debuted in the TV drama “LxIxVxE” in 1999. Best known as ‘Eri’ from the NHK series “Churasan” she has also modeled and debuted as a singer with the song “Ryūkyū Moon” composed by singer-songwriter Mamoru Miyagi. Works: DramaWiki. Profile: Wikipedia.

TRASHY | SCANDALOUS






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