Sk3tch

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Sk3tch

Sk3tch

@1jay_trader

Artist-Tattoo/Traditional/Illustration/Photography @ThePlagueNFT #CRYPTO #NFT #HODL Knowledge is Power..

The Pond Katılım Kasım 2021
3.6K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
Maga Nadine
Maga Nadine@femalebodybuil6·
For Genius Only!!🤔💭 What is missing? Reply & RT Hint:The answer is not 6.
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Moose
Moose@JoeyMoose·
It’s okay to be proud of yourself for what you’ve built. Pat yourself on the back. Smile at yourself in the mirror. You did it.
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@JoeyMoose Ok kool👍, been a long 50+ getting to where I am. 💪
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Moose
Moose@JoeyMoose·
My #1 rule is always keep your crypto safe. They have some sick promos & deals right now so you can find the perfect one for YOU Be smart 👉 shop.ledger.com
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Moose
Moose@JoeyMoose·
The last few days major “Influencers” are fear mongering everyone by saying crypto is dead. They receive likes and engagement from this. When the markets back, they are the ones that have good engagement and are well positioned because of all their attention seeking tactics. Dont listen to the psyop. They are actively fudding you out, narrowing down their competition. I’ve seen this plenty of times. The weak cave because of these posts. Dont listen to anyone. If you love crypto (just like me) ignore ANY doom posts. It’s meant to make you quit. Crypto is here to stay. It’s never always going to be green or rainbows and sunshine - with any industry. Head down, no distractions. Build in the bear, print in the bull.
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TraderSZ
TraderSZ@trader1sz·
Everything will bounce back up. If you can’t trade both ways then sit on hands…long term we’re bullish Short term is for traders. If you can’t trade both ways don’t touch markets till we confirm bottom and stick to spot
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@Gabbar0099 Painted narratives they want us to believe. Why do people think Tucker Carlson is not with FOX News. All these post on CT (crypto twitter), not WNT… world news Twitter are sickening. Spreading the narrative for them. Not saying it doesn’t happen, absolutely does.
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@Gabbar0099 None of these show what your saying. The CNN video, lips don’t match, also cut and spliced. Last video you can’t even see if their speaking English or… can’t even see there skin tone. Can’t believe ANYTHING they tell us, or show us. Read between all the lines. 👇
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Gabbar
Gabbar@Gabbar0099·
When American soldiers spreading democracy in iraq : A Thread 🧵 This is Ali - a hooded prisoner standing on a box with wires attached to his hands & if he falls off the box he will be electrocuted. 1/n
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@otokyo__ Everything is preventing me… never
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Tokyo
Tokyo@otokyo__·
Men, what’s preventing you from dressing like this?
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@dreamxvp Double check those addresses.
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dream
dream@dreamxvp·
If i sent you $60k by mistake.. would you send it back..
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@Matt_Pinner Take everything from his room but a bed and dresser. Then work him like a workhorse… tie up all his time.
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Amy
Amy@20th_Centurygal·
You've got one ticket...What stage are you headed to?
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@Pons_ETH Is it actual sovereignty if you haven’t stepped, completely, away from gov. and institutional control? Even the blockchain… back to law of land.
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Pons Asinorum
Pons Asinorum@Pons_ETH·
I can't believe I read the phrase.. "I actually like private property more than I did a few years ago" from the guy who built the infrastructure that created DeFi
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin

I actually like private property more than I did a few years ago. One variable that changed for me is "stable era mindset vs chaotic era mindset". When you're in a "stable era", you see how private property is suboptimal, how economics can easily churn out 10+ categories of situations where it's obvious that certain taxes, incentives to make things available at better prices, etc can produce first-order gains with only second-order deadweight losses (which means that at low levels, the gains greatly exceed the losses). "Pure" private property is only "optimal" under spherical-cow economic assumptions like perfect competition. But in a "chaotic era", private property is more about schelling points - it's about creating a bulwark that's easy for people to understand and rally around defending, that says "your attempt to intervene in my life from the outside ends here". In the chaotic era, infringements on personal space are less likely to be well-meaning bureaucrats who overreach because they have not read enough Hayek, and more likely to be coming from a place of outright indifference or even hostility to your well-being. And looking at modern politics, yeah, there's a lot of that now. Since a lot of "Vitalik hates private property" sentiment comes from me liking Harberger taxes, I'll address that topic directly. My biggest update since the original 2016-19 era ideas was that, when designing details of Harberger taxes, the best motivating example to organize thought around is not "your house", rather it's "corporate intellectual property and walled gardens". If we think about the underlying complaints that people have about powerful corporations, the walled gardens and various ways in which centralized power accumulates on itself is top 5 on the list. What would it look like to build a "Harberger tax" that would tax eg. social platforms, Apple, etc more if they acted as walled gardens, and less if they enabled interoperability (and zero if they were fully open-source and interoperable and forkable)? There is a lot of energy right now around wanting to tax very wealthy individuals and corporations more, and I wonder: what if the best way to do that is not to tax *wealth* or *unrealized gains* (which has large downsides), but instead to tax *enclosure*? This way you raise revenue in a way that actually *increases* efficiency (any losses from people working less hard are more-than-compensated by gains from people shifting their work into formats where it's easier for people to build on top of each other and markets becoming more competitive). Any tax is an infringement on private property. But if you think about "tax on social platform that's proportional to some metric of how walled-garden-y they are", in an intuitive human sense, it really doesn't feel like "bureaucrats intervening in my life". It feels like "keeping concentrations of power from getting too out of hand". So I am in favor of doing things like that, and much less than before in favor of anything that forces people (incl entrepreneurs) to outright sell their assets, as eg. "Harberger tax on everything" does. A world where startup entrepreneurs are forced to constantly sell shares, realistically to the same few large VCs, in order to pay unrealized-gains or wealth tax bills strikes me as a world that's likely to be more soulless and homogeneous than today. But a world where the top 50% of large companies ranked by walled-garden-ness are taxed more (and the bottom 25% by that metric taxed less, perhaps some even zero), is a world that feels more dynamic and open and free. But even the above is somewhat of a "stable era" perspective, because it tries to make a more-perfect solution from the perspective of the political layer being friendly. We live in a chaotic era, and the point of crypto should be to solve important problems from the bottom up (whether "individualistic bottom up", enabling people to resist and escape various shackles, or "collective bottom up", communities organizing around shifting entire equilibria to their benefit) This ties into what I mean by wanting Ethereum to protect financial self-sovereignty. I do not think that Ethereum has much to offer to the trillion-dollar companies whose goal it is to offer products and services in a way that maximizes walled gardens and enclosure - in fact, much the opposite, censorship resistance can serve as the baseline for rebel communities that play the adversarial game of routing around those walled gardens. I do think Ethereum offers stronger security to people who want to maintain security of (including ability to use) their own financial resources, including surviving through great economic and political turmoil, for their personal or economic needs. And Ethereum offers a base layer for communities to organize large sudden collective shifts away from harmful equilibria into better ones; DAOs should try to solve that problem more.

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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@VitalikButerin Step away from the Gov. and go back to sovereignty… law of the land. Acquire land, put it under a trust, pay no taxes. Defend it against ANY trespassers.
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vitalik.eth
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin·
I actually like private property more than I did a few years ago. One variable that changed for me is "stable era mindset vs chaotic era mindset". When you're in a "stable era", you see how private property is suboptimal, how economics can easily churn out 10+ categories of situations where it's obvious that certain taxes, incentives to make things available at better prices, etc can produce first-order gains with only second-order deadweight losses (which means that at low levels, the gains greatly exceed the losses). "Pure" private property is only "optimal" under spherical-cow economic assumptions like perfect competition. But in a "chaotic era", private property is more about schelling points - it's about creating a bulwark that's easy for people to understand and rally around defending, that says "your attempt to intervene in my life from the outside ends here". In the chaotic era, infringements on personal space are less likely to be well-meaning bureaucrats who overreach because they have not read enough Hayek, and more likely to be coming from a place of outright indifference or even hostility to your well-being. And looking at modern politics, yeah, there's a lot of that now. Since a lot of "Vitalik hates private property" sentiment comes from me liking Harberger taxes, I'll address that topic directly. My biggest update since the original 2016-19 era ideas was that, when designing details of Harberger taxes, the best motivating example to organize thought around is not "your house", rather it's "corporate intellectual property and walled gardens". If we think about the underlying complaints that people have about powerful corporations, the walled gardens and various ways in which centralized power accumulates on itself is top 5 on the list. What would it look like to build a "Harberger tax" that would tax eg. social platforms, Apple, etc more if they acted as walled gardens, and less if they enabled interoperability (and zero if they were fully open-source and interoperable and forkable)? There is a lot of energy right now around wanting to tax very wealthy individuals and corporations more, and I wonder: what if the best way to do that is not to tax *wealth* or *unrealized gains* (which has large downsides), but instead to tax *enclosure*? This way you raise revenue in a way that actually *increases* efficiency (any losses from people working less hard are more-than-compensated by gains from people shifting their work into formats where it's easier for people to build on top of each other and markets becoming more competitive). Any tax is an infringement on private property. But if you think about "tax on social platform that's proportional to some metric of how walled-garden-y they are", in an intuitive human sense, it really doesn't feel like "bureaucrats intervening in my life". It feels like "keeping concentrations of power from getting too out of hand". So I am in favor of doing things like that, and much less than before in favor of anything that forces people (incl entrepreneurs) to outright sell their assets, as eg. "Harberger tax on everything" does. A world where startup entrepreneurs are forced to constantly sell shares, realistically to the same few large VCs, in order to pay unrealized-gains or wealth tax bills strikes me as a world that's likely to be more soulless and homogeneous than today. But a world where the top 50% of large companies ranked by walled-garden-ness are taxed more (and the bottom 25% by that metric taxed less, perhaps some even zero), is a world that feels more dynamic and open and free. But even the above is somewhat of a "stable era" perspective, because it tries to make a more-perfect solution from the perspective of the political layer being friendly. We live in a chaotic era, and the point of crypto should be to solve important problems from the bottom up (whether "individualistic bottom up", enabling people to resist and escape various shackles, or "collective bottom up", communities organizing around shifting entire equilibria to their benefit) This ties into what I mean by wanting Ethereum to protect financial self-sovereignty. I do not think that Ethereum has much to offer to the trillion-dollar companies whose goal it is to offer products and services in a way that maximizes walled gardens and enclosure - in fact, much the opposite, censorship resistance can serve as the baseline for rebel communities that play the adversarial game of routing around those walled gardens. I do think Ethereum offers stronger security to people who want to maintain security of (including ability to use) their own financial resources, including surviving through great economic and political turmoil, for their personal or economic needs. And Ethereum offers a base layer for communities to organize large sudden collective shifts away from harmful equilibria into better ones; DAOs should try to solve that problem more.
Andrew Steinwold@AndrewSteinwold

The guy who has my net worth in his hands doesn't like: - AI - Capitalism - Private property Am I cooked?

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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@kashyap286 @laura33981 Hell, the U.S. is a big cult… has been forever. We are joined in it with a choice. Get off the grid, it’s the only chance of freedom… for a little while anyway 🤣
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Kashyap Sriram
Kashyap Sriram@kashyap286·
Exactly two years ago today, I sold all my bitcoin at $64.5k. The price is now $64.3k. That's two years of dead money if I hadn't sold. The bitcoin bugs have spent this period praying it goes to $1 million a coin. They dreamt of retiring on their crypto riches. All they achieved was a giant zero for 730 days of HODLing. Worse, some of them have taken credit card debt or borrowed against their holdings. They look fondly to the old days when the pyramid scheme benefited the early adopters, 'cos that's the only hope they have left. This, ladies and gentlemen, is the price you pay when you join a cult. Never get emotional about a trade.
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annie
annie@ohhanxiety·
Can you?
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Zarii
Zarii@Gosleepriya·
How many legs 🤔 0.0001% will be succeed.
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Sk3tch
Sk3tch@1jay_trader·
@crypto_king34 They know something, because they’re are the ones doing it.
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Crypto King
Crypto King@crypto_king34·
🚨 BREAKING: HUGE EXCHANGES, VCS AND TREASURIES LIQUIDATING CRYPTO AHEAD OF THE MARKET OPENING THEY ARE DUMPING MILLIONS OF $BTC NON-STOP EVERY FEW MINUTES THEY 100% KNOW SOMETHING!!
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