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@cp_traders

Professional Risk Taker 🏁

Joined Mayıs 2021
719 Following163 Followers
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TM@cp_traders·
$BTC swing setup closed 80% volume here 12.6R ✍️ Bet less often & Bet heavy
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TM@cp_traders·
@Mariusz_Invest Did the same thing and I don’t even remember why I sold because my thesis was solid
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TM@cp_traders·
@anandnagu Safer to go till failure
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Anand Nagu
Anand Nagu@anandnagu·
Why do we all turn to the Smith Machine when the Goal is to Build Muscle.
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TM@cp_traders·
@AskCoachKev Tune can & 3 eggs = 45g of protein
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Coach Kev - Belly Fat Pro
Coach Kev - Belly Fat Pro@AskCoachKev·
What's your go-to high-protein meal that takes under 10 minutes? Drop it below. Stealing the best ones.
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Eddie
Eddie@StocksEddie·
How much more of a discount are we gonna get?
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TM@cp_traders·
Step 1: Manufacture chaos. Step 2: Pretend to panic. Step 3: Print. Refi. Control. [COVID] A perfect global “oops” — freeze the world, inject fear, and open the liquidity floodgates. [OIL WAR] Same trick, different packaging. Just enough pain to justify “rescue” mode.
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TM@cp_traders·
@astekz Se7en
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Astekz
Astekz@astekz·
Feel like I haven't watched a good movie in ages, any recommendations? netflix or something ideally
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TM@cp_traders·
@ick_real Keto diet Intermittent fasting 4x workouts a week Down 32kg in 4 months
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`@ick_real·
What's the fastest way you've ever lost weight?
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TM@cp_traders·
@Waffle_XBT Bet everything you have
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Waffle@Waffle_XBT·
As a trader how do you avoid the boredom?
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Bull Theory
Bull Theory@BullTheoryio·
🚨 Why Bitcoin always dumps at 10 a.m. when the U.S. market opens ? Today, Bitcoin erased 16 hours of gains in just 20 minutes after the US market opened. Since early November, BTC has dumped most of the time after US market opens. The same thing happened in Q2 and Q3. @zerohedge has been calling this out repeatedly, and he thinks Jane Street is the most likely entity doing this. When you look at the chart, the pattern is too consistent to ignore: a clean wipeout within an hour of the market opening followed by slow recovery. That’s classic high-frequency execution. And it fits their profile: • Jane Street is one of the largest high-frequency trading firms in the world. • They have the speed and liquidity to move markets for a few minutes. The behavior looks simple: 1. Dump BTC at the open. 2. Push the price into liquidity pockets. 3. Re-enter lower. 4. Repeat daily. And by doing this, they have accumulated billions in $BTC. As of now, Jane Street holds $2.5B worth of BlackRock’s IBIT ETF, their 5th largest position. This means most of the dump in BTC isn't due to macro weakness but due to manipulation by one major entity. And once these big players are done with buying, BTC will continue its upward momentum.
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TM@cp_traders·
Your entire life would shift if you just locked in a disciplined daily routine. Not a miracle. Not luck. Just consistency, stacked daily. Boring? Yes. Life-changing? Absolutely.
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TM@cp_traders·
@ouma_neko The guy is American but I hear you
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𝙋𝘼𝙐𝙇
𝙋𝘼𝙐𝙇@ouma_neko·
What happened to that Kenyan taxi driver in Qatar is barbaric, unacceptable, and a painful reminder of what our people go through every single day in the Gulf. A man simply trying to earn a living was assaulted so violently that he nearly lost his life. This is not “misconduct,” this is attempted murder and it must be condemned without hesitation. According to the dash-cam footage, the assault began after the Kenyan driver rejected an inappropriate advance from his passenger. Instead of accepting a clear “no,” the attacker grabbed him in a rear-neck chokehold that almost strangled him. The vehicle veered, nearly crashing, and that driver survived only by instinct and grace. No one should face death simply because they refused unwanted behavior. Cases like this often disappear into silence. The systems in those countries have a long history of protecting their own whenever foreigners demand justice. And our own government? It has perfected the art of shifting blame, offering excuses, and pretending they are powerless. Kenyans abroad bleed, scream, and die and Nairobi drafts statements instead of solutions. Our people in the Gulf are surviving conditions that no human being should ever be subjected to. Some are overworked. Some are abused. Some live like prisoners in employer homes. And when they rush to embassies for help, they find officials too busy enjoying diplomatic comfort to lift a finger. The suffering is real, but the offices meant to protect them are deserted when it matters. Let’s not forget the shameful truth: our Head of State negotiated the weakest, most humiliating labor terms for Kenyans in the Gulf. He goes on and on in speeches about Singapore, Japan, Korea, Malaysia yet refuses to explain why a Kenyan doing the same job as a Malaysian or Filipino earns 35,000 while others earn 55,000–60,000. That gap is not an accident; it is a failure of leadership. And that so-called Kazi Majūu project? It was nothing but smoke and slogans. Kenyans have died in Saudi Arabia from depression, abuse, negligence, sexual assault and the same ministry that promised protection cannot even bring bodies home with dignity. Families cry; the government shrugs. What hurts even more is how victims are mocked instead of defended. When Kenyans raise complaints about mistreatment, the same officials responsible for their welfare call them “mannerless,” “problematic,” or “undisciplined.” So people suffer twice first abroad, then again when their own leaders insult them for begging for help. And to those who think this is tribal banter whether the victim is Kalenjin, Kikuyu, Luo, Luhya, Somali, Meru understand this clearly: poverty, desperation, and exploitation do not check tribe before they strike. These are the jobs the president tells our youth to take, and when violence follows, no protection is offered. Only excuses. Only silence. I condemn this attack. I condemn the wider injustice. Kenyans are not disposable. Our people do not deserve violent abuse abroad and indifference at home. Until our government defends its citizens with the same energy it uses to defend its image, this cycle of suffering will continue and every death, every assault, every broken family will sit squarely on the conscience of those in power who chose to look away.
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TM@cp_traders·
I’m not an Indian scammer 😂
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TM@cp_traders·
@FanAkko What side of twitter is this 😂
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TM@cp_traders·
$SOL Prefer longs here if BTC holds above its yearly open
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TM@cp_traders·
$BTC Two simple scenarios going forward: 1) acceptance above Yearly open for a push into 97k 2) failed break above then we push into 88 (new lows)
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