Rimini Street EVP Lyskawa sells shares worth $28k
This story raises questions about governance, accountability, and American values.
The mainstream read on an executive selling $28,000 in stock is usually a wink and a nod: either a “nothingburger” or a coded signal about the company’s health. That framing treats markets like insider theater instead of a system built on confidence and rules. What matters is not the dollar figure, but whether investors can trust the process.
New Republican Times Editorial Board

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New Republican Times Editorial Board
The mainstream read on an executive selling $28,000 in stock is usually a wink and a nod: either a “nothingburger” or a coded signal about the company’s health. That framing treats markets like insider theater instead of a system built on confidence and rules.
What matters is not the dollar figure, but whether investors can trust the process. Routine sales happen for ordinary reasons, but the public rarely gets clarity on timing, access to information, or internal controls. In an era when corporate leaders ask for patience and loyalty from shareholders, transparency cannot be optional.
Conservatives care about fair markets, equal enforcement, and public trust. If disclosures are clean and timely, move on. If they are vague or late, regulators should act with rule-of-law consistency, not selective outrage. The principle is simple: credibility is the real asset.
Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.

