
Alex7 🛢🛢 📈 📊
16.8K posts

Alex7 🛢🛢 📈 📊
@Alex77889991
The two most difficult things at the stock market are to accept a loss and not to realize a small profit. - André Kostolany


















We're now on Day 4 of nonstop autonomous operations with F.03 humanoid robots running 24/7 until failure x.com/i/broadcasts/1…


🚨 JENSEN HUANG: “The amount of energy that we need for computing is probably 1,000x more than we currently have.”










🚬 Bank of America erhöht das Kursziel für British American Tobacco $BATS von £47 auf £53. Der Markt beginnt langsam zu realisieren: 👉 BAT ist längst nicht mehr nur ein klassischer Tobacco-Player. • Velo wächst massiv • Cashflow + Buybacks bleiben extrem stark • ~6% Dividend Yield trotz Re-Rating • Bewertungsabschlag gegenüber defensiven Qualitätswerten schließt sich langsam BAT ist die grösste Einzelaktien Position in meinem Portfolio.

😂 This “Nakba Survivor” is literally a “European settler” In the late 19th century, Muslim Bosnians (including Inea’s grandparents), fled Bosnia to Ottoman Syria, after Austria-Hungary took control of Bosnia. They feared that now, the Christians will seek revenge after years of mistreatment. Inea’s father’s family lived in Tulkaram, but he himself lived in Jerusalem where Inea was born. In the 1930’s, Inea’s father had a Job in England, he returned to Mandatory Palestine after a few years, but in 1948 they decided to move back to England. They were not expelled, and no one forced them to move to England. As a matter of fact, Tulkaram, and the old city of Jerusalem remained under Jordanian Arab control. Not a single Zionist to bee seen there. So in summary, this is a European with no strong roots in the land of Israel, whose family made the decision to immigrate back to the continent of their grandparents instead of remaining under Arab control. (And the “visit Palestine” poster on her wall is a Zionist poster by Franz Kraus to encourage Zionist tourism to the holy land. It’s not even the original poster, but a replica of the poster, with an additional Hebrew description mentioning his name 🤦♂️)

Today marks Nakba Day, an annual day of remembrance to commemorate the expulsion of more than 700,000 Palestinians between 1947 and 1949 during the creation of the State of Israel and the year that followed. Inea is a New Yorker and a Nakba survivor. She shared her story with us — one of home, tradition and memory over generations.














