

Pratim D Gupta
41.8K posts







@peedeegee take a bow 😀


UNREAL: 🇺🇸 The Trump insider is already up $1,000,000 on his oil short. 10 trades became 11. 10 wins became 11. 100% win rate. Unchanged. This is not a coincidence anymore. This is a pattern that cannot be explained by skill alone. Someone in a very important room keeps picking up the phone. And nobody is stopping them.









Breaking: Read it carefully 🔥 10:00 AM, Trump 🇺🇸: — We are ending this war. The deal is pretty successful. 10:05 AM, Trump 🇺🇸 — Hormuz will now always remain open to the world. We can roam there freely. 10:10 AM, Trump 🇺🇸 — We will continue to have a blockade, and we’ll have to start dropping bombs again. All these statements within 10 minutes. This guy is playing with the stock market Announce peace Oil drops Buys stock Announces bombings and no deal Oil goes up, sells stock and makes money. Cycle Continues. This guy is a business man, biggest lier and he has no intent of stopping this war.


I spent over 15 years as a print journalist. The written word wasn't just my livelihood, it was the thing I believed in, maybe more than anything else. Before I became a film director, I was a film writer and till this day, I have only made movies from my own writing. And somewhere in the last decade or so, I've watched the written word get quietly, steadily dismantled. Almost eroded. Like a shoreline nobody's paying attention to. It's not just that people read less. It's that we've stopped expecting depth. We've recalibrated. A paragraph feels long now. An argument that takes three minutes to make feels like an imposition. Language itself has shrunk. Flattened into captions, reactions, five-word opinions delivered with the confidence of essays. I find that terrifying, actually. So a few weeks ago, almost out of stubbornness more than strategy, I started writing long posts. On Facebook. On Instagram. On X. Places that were practically designed to punish you for using too many words. I'm not doing it because I think I'm going to save anything. I'm doing it because I can't just sit with the feeling of loss and do nothing about it. Maybe it reaches a few of you. Maybe it doesn't. Maybe you're one of the three people who got to this line and I want to say — thank you, genuinely, for still being here at the end of a long post. Long-form writing isn't dead. But it's lonely. And it needs people who refuse to let it go quietly. I'm not ready to let it go.