TyMoTrilla

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TyMoTrilla

TyMoTrilla

@tbone8ty

twit a twit

USA Se unió Şubat 2009
215 Siguiendo191 Seguidores
Stellar Rippler🚀
Stellar Rippler🚀@Stellar_Rippler·
🚨 Scott Bessent Just Signalled Bretton Woods 2.0 And Warns To Position Yourself For It “The banking system created after WWII unleashed global prosperity. Why not recreate it now?” He openly calls for “Rewiring the banking and financial system.” Sounds familiar? The architects are openly planning a new financial architecture. As The Great Taking shows, these resets reassign ownership. When they redesign the pipes, control of assets, collateral, and custody is on the table. He also adds: “Build your safety zone and secure direct ownership now, don’t wait to discover where you stand in their new system.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​“ Can someone remind me which DLT/Blockchain is creating an end-to-end financial stack - Payments, Treasury, Institutional-grade Custody, Brokerage, Repo Markets, Private Identity and Tokenization? If you know the answer, secure and position yourself.
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More Perfect Union
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS·
NEW: Youth sports is now costing parents as much as $25,000 a year. Private equity and corporations are turning a childhood pastime into something only the wealthy can afford. Youth sports has become a $40 billion industry, and the steep costs are crushing American families.
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Robin Linus
Robin Linus@robin_linus·
Which Bitcoin wallet do you think has the best UX?
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Michelle O
Michelle O@michelleo_21mil·
If I’m looking for the best passive income option, do I go with $STRC or $MSTY?
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TyMoTrilla
TyMoTrilla@tbone8ty·
Frontier and the big four are now circling to buy Spirit Airlines high value Airbus A320 family fleet. With the crunch of getting P&W GTF engines back in the air after overhaul delays this will be a mad dash for the other airlines to grab them in this fire sale. $UAL $AAL $JBLU $ULXC $AER
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TyMoTrilla
TyMoTrilla@tbone8ty·
@itsloganjones These are boring investments, which is fine but Get a new car and some fun stinks! Like some $SATA or $KEEL
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Logan Jones
Logan Jones@itsloganjones·
Crossed the 300 share mark in $SCHD Big milestone and something I’ve been chasing for a while Now have 300 Shares - $SCHD 100+ Shares - $SOFI 375 Shares - $VTSAX 130 Shares - $ET 100+ Shares - $OSCR Starting to add up quick!
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Logan Jones
Logan Jones@itsloganjones·
I have invested over $300,000 I drive a 2008 Toyota Camry I have never had a car payment
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BitcoinAIGuy
BitcoinAIGuy@BitcoinAIGuy·
Possibly making 1-3 new investments this year for the next 5-10x+ across Bitcoin, crypto, and AI—crypto looks more exciting now that nobody cares again. Historically, all of the *fastest* 10x+ stocks I’ve bought were ignored right before a major bull run. Any guesses to what I’m looking at? 👀
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TyMoTrilla
TyMoTrilla@tbone8ty·
@WallStreetApes The experience of having to order ahead of time so your not standing there like an idiot waiting 15 min for a cup of coffee?
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
Starbucks CEO defends a cup of coffee costing $9 He says the customers needs to just not think about it as a $9 cup of coffee, you’re paying for the “experience” of getting a Starbucks coffee “In some cases a $9 experience does feel like you're splurging, and then what that means is we have to make it worthwhile.” He says Starbucks customers “want to have a special experience and regardless of what your income level is, in some cases, a $9 experience does feel like you're splurging — well, this is a really affordable premium experience” How out of touch could a person possibly be…
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TyMoTrilla
TyMoTrilla@tbone8ty·
@Thesecretinves2 What would that conference like islf we never got the dip last October and we were sitting around 175k-200k. I think the message would have been more about the original ethos of btc and self custody
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🇬🇧 The Bitcoin & Crypto Accountant 🇬🇧🚀
I was at the Bitcoin conference the last 2 days… and if I’m honest, it didn’t feel like a Bitcoin event at times. It felt like a crypto / TradFi crossover. That might sound subtle, but it’s a big difference to me There was a lot of talk about: • Public companies • Capital raising • Lending products • Institutional flows All interesting. All relevant. But… is that really Bitcoin? Because Bitcoin, at its core, isn’t about financial engineering. It’s about opting out. Bitcoin was born out of distrust in the existing system. A response to bailouts, debasement, and central control. Not to be repackaged back into the same system it was designed to replace. The message used to be simple: • Buy Bitcoin • Take custody • Hold long term No counterparty risk. No middlemen. No games. Not your keys.... Now it feels like we’re drifting toward: • “Exposure” instead of ownership • Custodians instead of self custody • Yield products instead of sovereignty And that shift matters. Because once you introduce leverage, lending, and layers of abstraction… You reintroduce the very risks Bitcoin was meant to remove. Maybe this is just the natural cycle. As Bitcoin grows, institutions arrive. And with them comes complexity, products, and profit motives. But somewhere along the way, it feels like the signal is getting lost in the noise. Bitcoin isn’t just another asset class. It’s a completely different system. I’m not anti innovation. And I’m not anti business. Of course im not. But I do think it’s worth asking: Are we building on Bitcoin… or rebuilding the old system around it? Because if we’re not careful, we end up with: A decentralised asset… wrapped in centralised risk. Maybe I’m wrong. Maybe this is just part of adoption. But it definitely felt like something had shifted. Curious to hear from others who were there… Did it feel like a Bitcoin conference to you?
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Barbell Financial 💪🏻💰
The latest salary data was released Here is the median salary by age: 20-24: $41k 25-34: $60k 35-44: $72k 45-54: $72k 55-64: $69k Over 65: $62k Making $100k/year is still a flex 😳
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Simon Dixon
Simon Dixon@SimonDixonTwitt·
People clapping like seals at a Bitcoin conference while a Cantor Fitzgerald constructed, Epstein-class Wall Street wrapper loads up Tether-collateralized debt into a Bitcoin treasury company. This is a securitized exit, designed to margin-call you the moment the financial-industrial complex moves Bitcoin against the $2.1 billion in leverage. Once you go public and rely on debt, you don’t run your company, the financial industrial complex do. You don’t leave the mafia. You become a FIC asset. It’s not personal. Its architecture. As I said would happen.
DeathOnTheStairs@Up_The_Bracket1

Looks like @SimonDixonTwitt got it right again… TwentyOne & @Strike are going to merge. We should have a bitcoin faucet in the name of Simon, kinda like the “Alex Jones was right again money jar” youtu.be/dEsSHoHZRH0

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TyMoTrilla
TyMoTrilla@tbone8ty·
The one thing that Saylor will never have is proof of reserves. See you over in the upper right part of the grid $XXI
Zaid 🟧@zaidlikesmstr

$MSTR The difference in communication style between Saylor and Jack Mallers is worth studying. Yesterday was a good example of why. Mallers made some comments about Saylor that sparked a lot of debate. The implication was that @Strategy had run out of cheap capital and had been forced into paying 11% to finance its Bitcoin buys. That was a flawed read. Saylor didn’t move away from convertible bonds because he lost access to them. He moved because $STRC is a fundamentally better instrument for his investors. The capital never comes due. It’s perpetual. Strategy owes the yield, not the principal. The distinction matters. A lot. But the bigger point isn’t the technicality. It’s what followed. After the pushback, Mallers spent time across several threads clarifying that he wasn’t implying what everyone read him as implying. Whatever the intention, it came across as backtracking. And in capital markets, backtracking reads as immaturity. You rarely if ever see Saylor do that. He is precise with his words, deliberate with his timing, and disciplined about what he leaves unsaid. His presence on X is almost strategically sparse. Short responses. No open wounds for skeptics to pick at. Someone who understands that every public appearance is a signal to investors.. Saylor has also evolved. Early on he was openly dismissive of the broader crypto ecosystem. He’s since learned that there is room for competing technologies. Crypto tokens like Ethereum, Solana and others have tokenization layers they can compete for. He’s embraced that. His tone has shifted from skepticism to something far more measured and generous. That evolution also speaks to maturity. Jack is an empowering voice in this space and I have no doubt his conviction is genuine. But how a company’s leader conducts themselves publicly is a signal. Saylor has spent six years setting that standard. It’s a template worth studying. $BTC $MSTR $STRC

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