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J4
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@bubblemaps Appears to be $13m more in each of these:
solscan.io/account/3nHwgM…
solscan.io/account/BzzMNv…
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Since many have been asking, the SOL/USDC funds removed from LPs have been moved here:
42.79M USDC
solscan.io/account/61yKS9…
148,343.02 SOL ($29,621,134.43)
solscan.io/account/B9KTwx…
69,275.9 SOL ($13,833,011.91)
solscan.io/account/FTjLYk…
891.53K USDC
solscan.io/account/DtkvLX…
907.68K USDC
solscan.io/account/8DgzQs…
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$LIBRA TEAM IS CASHING OUT
They already made $87M by removing USDC and SOL from liquidity pools

Bubblemaps@bubblemaps
another presidential meme 82% of $LIBRA is held in one cluster no tokenomics shared—trade with caution
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Keeping It Simple: Bet Sizing in Crypto Trading
Bet sizing doesn’t have to be complicated. At its core, it’s about managing risk and staying in the game long enough to catch real opportunities. Go too big, and you’re one bad trade away from blowing up. Go too small, and you’re leaving money on the table when the odds are in your favor.
It’s not about being perfect - it’s about being consistent, knowing when to scale up, and when to pull back. Here’s how to keep it simple:
1. Know What You’re Risking
You don’t go all-in on every trade. Crypto’s too volatile for that. Before you hit the button, figure out how much you’re actually okay with losing - not just financially, but emotionally.
If a single trade has you checking the chart every five minutes or losing sleep, your position size is probably too big. A manageable size lets you think clearly and stick to your plan without panic.
No trade is worth blowing up your account. When in doubt, stay smaller.
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2. Use Guidelines, Not Rules
The Kelly Criterion is great for calculating risk mathematically, but crypto doesn’t play by strict rules. Markets move on news, narratives, and emotions, often in ways that defy logic.
- In choppy markets: Keep trades small and focus on preserving capital. The priority here is survival, not chasing gains.
- When the setup looks strong: You can size up, but always within reason. No single trade should have the power to take you out of the game.
Crypto markets are far from predictable. Size smaller when uncertainty is high, and only increase when the market provides clear, actionable signals. Treat every trade as part of a bigger picture, not an isolated gamble.
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3. Don’t Average Down Blindly
Throwing more money at a losing trade because “it has to bounce eventually” is one of the fastest ways to ruin.
If your thesis is wrong, doubling down won’t make it right. Instead:
- Reassess your trade: Has anything changed fundamentally? If not, it’s probably time to cut and move on.
- Avoid emotional decisions: If you’re averaging down out of frustration or pride, step back.
Averaging down isn’t a recovery strategy - it’s a calculated risk that only works if the trade still makes sense.
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4. Double Down Only When It Makes Sense
Sometimes, adding to a trade is the right call - but only if the setup improves.
- Look for confirmation: Are the fundamentals strengthening? Is sentiment shifting in your favor? Is the technical picture cleaner?
- Have a clear exit plan: Every time you increase your position, update your stop-loss or take-profit levels. Protect your gains, and don’t let greed take over.
Failing to size up on clear winners can hurt too, often leaving you chasing riskier setups later to make up for it. Missing the execution on a trade you knew was right can put you on tilt. When this happens, take a step back - don’t let frustration lead you into poorly thought-out trades. Regain focus, stick to your process, and wait for the next quality setup.
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5. Adjust to the Market
Markets don’t care about your plans. Sudden announcements, macro prints, or major liquidations can flip the script in minutes.
- When volatility spikes: Cut your position sizes. Smaller bets protect you from getting caught in the chaos.
- When things calm down: That’s when you can be more aggressive, focusing on high-probability setups.
Don’t fight the market. If conditions aren’t favorable, sit on the sidelines. No trade is still a position.
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Bet sizing is about staying in the game. It’s not just math - it’s managing your emotions, adapting to the market, and knowing when to push or pull back.
Keep it simple: survive the bad stretches, lean in when the opportunity is there, and don’t let ego dictate your size.
Everything else is noise.
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when you’re young and well intentioned and you just found out about governments you think that they can make laws that make things more affordable and create the things that would solve the problems we face as society
when you get older you realise that people do that, and then governments react to what people have done, and the laws that pretend to are the things that entrench class and prevent people from being able to make the changes that solve the problems
most people stop thinking somewhere in their 20’s and never develop to the point of realising how things come to happen, or never involve themselves in formative work - they work for others, and earn to be part of structures for things to happen that were created by others
they want things, change, but they think that end-of-formation government decides it because that’s the only way they’ve been able to feel like they have an impact on the world. voting for someone that says things they agree with. the only way they understand change is at face value - literally - that the faces look like they do, or look different to before
but its people and human entropy that is formative, and governance is reactive to life and human systems playing out
people, human entropy, make the engine, the car, the phone, the iphone, and then governments make laws about the things that people have done. we make the cure, the machines, we drive the world and then a government votes on control over the things that have been created or done
you vote with your decisions, time, dollars, and actions. and they’re all interwoven
if you want to change the world but you don’t know how or aren’t capable, don’t understand, then you go into politics, and try to control the changes that are happening because of the human entropy playing out. if you can change the world then you go and do it
baby leftists usually end up being the strongest capitalists or libertarians over time because they realise that if the choice in government is
- well intentioned people who want change, but don’t know how to change the world, and so will exert huge amounts of control
- not so well intentioned people who want to remove legislation or actively do nothing/ the least
then the second choice is the thing that least gets in the way of the change they actually wanted in the first place
human entropy is an equation of abundance. governing what we have is a system of scarcity. the problems of 200 years ago don’t exist, because humans changed the world
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this kid is sitting next to Barron following $BWT account and you think its not real
Bo Loudon@BoLoudon
🚨BREAKING: President Trump just showed off his impressive dance moves at the Commander-In-Chief ball in Washington, D.C.
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