Smart mouth ™

1.4K posts

Smart mouth ™

Smart mouth ™

@Cyde_98_

Speak my mind , haha !

参加日 Eylül 2012
83 フォロー中26 フォロワー
The Inner Circle Trader
The Inner Circle Trader@I_Am_The_ICT·
As a Trader, you will eventually mature into the mindset that all of your actions, planning, lifestyle changes are moving you towards a life without Trading. Eventually, you will get the epiphany that your task is to get to a net worth that removes the need to trade. Your money works for you, on autopilot. No real estate, no businesses, no employees, no sales, no concern for competition, no energy wasting pursuits for significance. Fixed income on a well-earned knot... most never get this. Be the exception, work towards it.
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Alyssa White
Alyssa White@Alyssawhitee18·
I didn’t love the way ally was moving but Hashim didn’t need to air her out in front of everybody like that #perfectmatch
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Smart mouth ™
Smart mouth ™@Cyde_98_·
@Blue_Footy this doesn't erase 4 years of nonsense , we know PR now because of how often they do it
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Vince™
Vince™@Blue_Footy·
This is an example of what I said yesterday. When an agenda has eaten deep into you, nothing else will make sense, not even the obvious. And you will start making up stories. 1. Eghbali didn't talk about Brighton. 2. Chelsea said it's going to be a tweak, not a pivot. 3. Who says the owners can't pivot if they want to? He just wants to keep talking about Chelsea negatively; his head keeps rejecting the possibility of change. 😂
Vince™@Blue_Footy

🗣 Troy Deeney: "Personally, I think it's PR nonsense from Chelsea. I don't think they are gonna suddenly 100% pivot to this new 'let's go and get ready-made players right now'. We have to just look at what the owners say, forget the PR side of it. Eghbali, not too long ago, just did a whole meeting about how Brighton and what he wants to be, that sustainable model buy players young, get them to a certain level, sell them on now. All of a sudden, what we're going to pivot, and that's not the model. You've got really young players. So, what is the age parameter of an old player? 24, 28, because you got rid of Thiago Silva, and the like." ~ @CBSSportsGolazo

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floppy ◡̈
floppy ◡̈@maplsyrupcoffee·
Marissa and her weird possessiveness over Demari is so uncomfy to watch #perfectmatch
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Vince™
Vince™@Blue_Footy·
If Xabi Alonso joins Chelsea, I don't think Enzo Fernandez will leave, and we will have a stronger pull in the market.
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Vince™
Vince™@Blue_Footy·
Just heard MASSIVE NEWS that Chelsea’s new head coach will have greater say in recruitment, and everything football-related. And the new head coach is expected to be hired before going after the player targets he and the club agree on. Big things will happen this summer. So, for now, Chelsea haven't approached any player until the coach is appointed.
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MMthonga
MMthonga@mthonga_m·
@daddyhope There fact that the two presidents had meetings with prominent businessmen in zimbabwe in ed farm not state house, hows that everything was just about increasing their wealth, nothing more!!
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
Hopes of a military coup against President Emmerson Mnangagwa, led by his vice president, General Constantino Chiwenga and his associates, have reportedly been quashed after sources say that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa assured his Zimbabwean counterpart that South Africa will not countenance any unconstitutional removal of a president in Zimbabwe. Today, President Emmerson Mnangagwa met with Ramaphosa in Harare, where he was received by Mnangagwa alongside businessmen Wicknell Chivayo and Kudakwashe Tagwirei, before the two leaders and the two businessmen flew on a one hour helicopter trip together to Mnangagwa’s farm, Precabe, in Kwekwe. They toured the farm, where the South African president was shown Mnangagwa’s Ankoli cattle and fish breeding pools. When they reached the ostriches, Ramaphosa is said to have remarked, in a pointed and politically loaded statement, that “nothing and nobody will remove my elder brother from power unconstitutionally.” The remark was made in the presence of members of the delegation accompanying the two leaders. “The owner of these ostriches will be president until 2030 if Parliament says so,” Ramaphosa is further reported to have said, reinforcing his assurance to Mnangagwa and those present. The two leaders then went into a four-hour closed-door meeting, where they were joined by Tagwirei and Chivayo. The meeting was described as highly personal and private, with even the president’s spokesperson, George Charamba, excluded from the delegation for today’s visit. Sources familiar with the discussions say Ramaphosa made it clear that South Africa would neither support nor recognise a military coup against Mnangagwa. Those within Mnangagwa’s inner circle were reportedly buoyant after the engagement, interpreting Ramaphosa’s position as a significant reinforcement of regional backing. They believe that, with South Africa’s stance now aligned with that of countries such as Tanzania, Mozambique, Zambia, and, more recently, Botswana, where Chivayo travelled in recent days, Mnangagwa has effectively strengthened his position and insulated his presidency within the region against any potential coup attempt. What was significant today is that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa’s trip to Zimbabwe, which I broke last night, was not an official bilateral state engagement conducted at the level of heads of state. It was a private trip, and sources in Pretoria say that many people in the president’s office, and indeed within DIRCO, the foreign affairs department of South Africa, were not aware of it. President Cyril Ramaphosa is now back in South Africa after the short visit to Zimbabwe.
Hopewell Chin’ono tweet mediaHopewell Chin’ono tweet mediaHopewell Chin’ono tweet mediaHopewell Chin’ono tweet media
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The Inner Circle Trader
The Inner Circle Trader@I_Am_The_ICT·
I may do a lecture on Price Delivery and short term setups, sub 1 minute. If that finds interest in some of you? Let me know below...
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Adewole Segs
Adewole Segs@SegAdeVikJon·
@BalkanEmpire08 Don't pin this on them, the all the cases affect us now where not created by them stop lying on this owners, abramovich committed all the crimes. Imagine if this guess didn't buy the club we could have faced a relegation penalty like Juventus
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Chelsea Empire
Chelsea Empire@BalkanEmpire08·
Chelsea didn't just get unlucky, we got the absolute worst of the worst of private equity vultures on the planet. They've stripped the club of identity, ambition, and direction, turning a European giant into a financial experiment. Worst ownership in the sports history and it's not even close. Chelsea now moves like a club that has to sell its future just to afford its present.
Bobby F. 🍁@bobbyfairview

1/ The reason Chelsea is now a sell-to-buy club has nothing to do with UEFA sanctions. I’ve finally worked out how the purchase from Roman was actually funded 🪡🧵

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Thulani Dlamini
Thulani Dlamini@ThulaniCdlamini·
@Nokukhanyaaaaaa What I’m realising is black men and women need need to heal and reconcile with each other, this clip has triggered lots of different hurtful emotions and it’s not about what she’s saying but ppl past experiences!
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Wicked woman.🇿🇦🐆🍒
Wicked woman.🇿🇦🐆🍒@Nokukhanyaaaaaa·
This is actually pissing me off hey , the system is against who? They have gone through so much? Oh please hey 😒there is only so much they can do? Maybe angimuzwa kahle. Feeling sorry for that gender is diabolical cause if apartheid or whatever only happened to women they wouldn’t even bother to help nor feel sorry for us. But that’s a story for another day.
Village Guluva@VillageGuluva

Someone please tell grootman Zakes Bantwini to marry her again even if he can pay triple lobola money this time. 😍😊

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ChrisExcel
ChrisExcel@ChrisExcel102·
South Africa has problem of Gambling addiction and government is okay with it Gambling companies are profiting off poor black people Families are getting destroyed… They’re using celebrities and lure our people in this dark hole and no one is talking about it 🤧🤧
ChrisExcel tweet media
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IG:Joy-Zelda
IG:Joy-Zelda@joy_zelda·
99% South Africans Don't believe Patrice Motsepe will lead the country to greener pastures #PM27
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The Inner Circle Trader
The Inner Circle Trader@I_Am_The_ICT·
Lots of technical glitches this morning... disadvantanges aside: Music Credit: Hollywood - Mary Jane
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Justin Case
Justin Case@Just_In_Case_27·
The man has ALWAYS looked sharp(you encourage your followers to do the same) and he was voted in for his eloquence. Batswana can’t complain about the very same things they saw before they voted for him. What arrears of policy and delivery is he failing so we can judge him fairly? On the contrary, I’d say, he’s doing well on jobs and growth in a diamond downturn economy. He is even reviewing Botswana’s relationship with De Beers something that many Presidents have failed to dare talk about in decades. So the real question is, which specific policy commitments has he missed, what targets slipped, and what measurable outcomes worsened under his administration? Bring that, and we can assess performance without turning politics into a fashion review.
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𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑺𝒂𝒍𝒕 𝑶𝒇 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑬𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒉
It never rains but pours for Africans. Remember when this man came in power, Botswana's president Duma Gideon Boko All those promises of delivering to the citizens, about how different he will be from the old leaders who have been associated with self aggrandizement at the expense of citizens Now he has changed his tune, in one of his speeches he even said "an election promise isn't a contract". Power is sweet, it reveals a man's true colors Botswana's citizens are now complaining that he channels most of his energy towards looking handsome and youthful. He is always rocking expensive shades, sneakers, slim suits, with hip hop hair cuts And he now has an American accent. It seems the man is now living the life he used to fantasize before he had power Lesson: Politicians, they're all the same
𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑺𝒂𝒍𝒕 𝑶𝒇 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑬𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒉 tweet media𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑺𝒂𝒍𝒕 𝑶𝒇 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑬𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒉 tweet media𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑺𝒂𝒍𝒕 𝑶𝒇 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑬𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒉 tweet media𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑺𝒂𝒍𝒕 𝑶𝒇 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑬𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒉 tweet media
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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
This case is a textbook example of why property rights in Zimbabwe are meaningless in practice and why no serious investor, local or foreign, can ever feel safe. This is why real investors are not coming to Zimbabwe, the courts are ridiculously captured and there is no fairness or rule of law. I can bet my bottom dollar that someone in ZANUPF wants this property, and once they get it, they will run it down as they always do. An investor invests huge amounts of money, builds a business from the ground up, creates jobs, and then they just come and take it. What a joke. This is daylight robbery dressed up as law, and it is exactly why serious capital will not touch this country.
𝐂𝐫𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐖𝐚𝐭𝐜𝐡 𝐙𝐖@CrimeWatchZW

Terry William Kelly (73), who invested millions of US dollars into Chewore Lodge, has lost the property after Zimbabwe’s Supreme Court cancelled a 25-year lease agreement. Chewore Lodge is a well-known safari destination with visitors from around the world. Kelly operated the lodge for 15 years through his company, Suscaden Investments, under two leases and a settlement agreement issued by ZimParks, which accepted rent and treated the lease as valid for many years. The courts later ruled that the lease was invalid because it did not have clear approval from the responsible minister. Although the lease document carried the former Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri’s signature and a former ZimParks official confirmed it was received through official channels, Minister Muchinguri denied signing it. Because no one could prove she personally signed the document, the courts ruled against Kelly. This decision ignored the fact that the government allowed Kelly to operate for years and benefited from his investment and rental payments. Kelly now faces eviction without compensation due to a failure within government processes that was beyond his control. The state’s acceptance of the lease for years was dismissed, leaving Kelly to bear the full loss. As a result of the Supreme Court ruling, Kelly is expected to lose all the millions of dollars he invested in Chewore Lodge, a high-end tourism project in the Zambezi Valley.

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Hopewell Chin’ono
Hopewell Chin’ono@daddyhope·
I often quote Dr Solomon Guramatunhu when he speaks about the mindset of a nation and argues that in a country like Zimbabwe, ZANUPF is not really the primary problem. The deeper problem is the mindset that reproduces the kind of leadership we end up with, because leaders in ZANUPF come from our own communities. They are not imported from Mars. That is why many of the same behaviours found in ZANUPF are also reproduced in the opposition. One of the simplest ways to see this is through everyday behaviour. Look at how people drive in China, then reflect on what happens on Zimbabwean roads. It says a great deal about how a nation develops, or fails to develop, the mindset of its people. In Zimbabwe, you can reach an intersection where traffic lights are not working and people will block each other for an hour, not because there is no solution, but because no one is willing to give way. They would rather waste time ensuring the other side does not move. The same mentality appears on the open road. If you try to overtake someone who is driving slowly, the moment they realise you are overtaking, they suddenly accelerate. This behaviour is deliberate. It is rooted in mindset. It helps explain why we are stuck where we are and why, as a people, we struggle to progress. If you cannot drive in an orderly, cooperative way, you will struggle to build orderly, cooperative systems in politics, the economy, or society. There is a clear methodology behind the rise of China, and it is grounded in how people think, how they relate to rules, and how they understand the collective good. In the same way, there is a methodology behind Zimbabwe’s tragic failures, and it is also rooted in thinking and behaviour. This mindset shows itself in social interactions as well. When a picture is posted of a man standing next to a woman, many people immediately sexualise the woman. What makes it even more tragic is that some women themselves join in. This is not harmless banter at all. It reflects a deeper problem in how people think, what they prioritise, and how they view others. The same mindset affects even the so called educated elite. People with master’s degrees and PhDs often try to destroy each other in the institutions where they work, whether local or international, constantly badmouthing one another despite their education. You will often find a Zimbabwean in a senior position in a large organisation actively undermining other Zimbabweans in the same space or profession. I have been asked many times, especially by Nigerians, what is wrong with Zimbabweans, why they pull each other down and sabotage one another. The answer is simple. It is a mindset problem. You see the contrast clearly in South Africa. When traffic lights are not working there, traffic still flows. That order is not imposed by the police. It exists because of the mindset of South Africans themselves, the understanding that giving way allows everyone to move. In Zimbabwe, we also have a police force, yet order often collapses. Policing alone cannot create civilisation. For the police to succeed, citizens must be willing participants in order and discipline. That willingness requires civic consciousness and respect for others. As a nation, we need to confront this honestly. We need to examine how we behave and how that behaviour correlates with our collective failures. That is why some families are very strict about how their children grow up and who they interact with. They are trying to protect their children’s minds from a tragic and retrogressive mindset that quietly but consistently holds people back. Many do not realise this. They think they are doing well, without seeing that a change in thinking could allow them to do far better than they are doing now, not just materially, but as human beings. What we are seeing in this video from China, drivers being courteous to each other, actually speaks to a much bigger picture about that society. It reflects respect for order, for rules, and for one another. I used a Chinese example here, but I could just as easily have used a South African one, because the same thing happens there. As a driver in South Africa, there are moments when I arrive at traffic lights that are not working and I instinctively stop. I get confused, because I am conditioned by the chaos of Harare. Suddenly, I am in a space where there is order and mutual respect, and it forces you to pause, to think, and to ask deeper questions. That contrast makes you realise that what we see on Harare’s roads is not just about driving. It is a reflection of many layers of our lives as a society, how we relate to rules, how we respect others, how we handle shared spaces, and ultimately how we organise ourselves. The disorder on the roads is simply the most visible expression of much deeper problems in our thinking and behaviour.
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Nyika Yemadzibaba
Nyika Yemadzibaba@Czeditor·
@daddyhope I think this is total bullshit Everything in Zimbabwe is blameable on Zanu PF That bad behaviour by drivers That lack of manners by young people That prostitution you see on Harare streets That lack of vision and ambition you see All blamable on a hopeless imposed government
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Smart mouth ™
Smart mouth ™@Cyde_98_·
@PaulAnleitner Because there was another objective to the movies people don't know about..if you know you know
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Paul Anleitner
Paul Anleitner@PaulAnleitner·
Despite having the biggest box office numbers of all time, the Avatar franchise has had almost no cultural impact compared to Marvel, Star Wars, etc. It’s very strange. Why is that? Give me your best explanations.
Paul Anleitner tweet media
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