DontTrustAnyone

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DontTrustAnyone

DontTrustAnyone

@BTC_will_win

Katılım Haziran 2021
207 Takip Edilen49 Takipçiler
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Eva Vlaardingerbroek
Eva Vlaardingerbroek@EvaVlaar·
@vonderleyen @renevanhell You are doing everything in your power to destroy Europe, so of course you are overjoyed that the one person who was standing in your way is now out of office. Don’t get it twisted though, you might have won a battle, but not the war. The patriots of Europe will prevail.
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House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
#NEWS: The European Commission uses its vast power to limit online discourse ahead of major elections in the U.S. and Europe. Its actions could affect U.S. speech—including the global removal and demotion of content protected by the First Amendment. Ahead of tomorrow's Hungarian election, Chairman @Jim_Jordan and Rep. Chris Smith wrote to @HennaVirkkunen urging the Commission to refrain from any interference. Read the full letter here ↓
House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 tweet mediaHouse Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 tweet mediaHouse Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 tweet media
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Wow
House Judiciary GOP 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸@JudiciaryGOP

#NEWS: The European Commission uses its vast power to limit online discourse ahead of major elections in the U.S. and Europe. Its actions could affect U.S. speech—including the global removal and demotion of content protected by the First Amendment. Ahead of tomorrow's Hungarian election, Chairman @Jim_Jordan and Rep. Chris Smith wrote to @HennaVirkkunen urging the Commission to refrain from any interference. Read the full letter here ↓

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Anglo Futurism Capital LP 🇬🇧🐿️
It is much, much worse than you think… The UK added 11.1 million people and built 4.8 million homes (@GreatBritishTT article) Broad money quadrupled from £700bn to £3.2tn while real GDP grew 55%. Four pounds now do the job one used to do. That is the entire mechanism. Your house didn’t get more valuable. Your pound got less valuable. The house just kept score. Prime London down 25% from 2014. BTL yields below gilts. Fertility at 1.44. First-time buyer age up from 29 to 33. Home ownership down from 71% to 63%. Net income ratio between minimum wage and a top 5% salary: 3:1. The USSR never went below 5:1. They sold the energy. They sold the water. They sold the housing stock. They loaded the graduates with debt. They crushed the savers. They printed to cover the deficit. They froze the tax bands. They let the courts collapse. They let a car leasing monopoly sit on £4bn in reserves. They funded Persimmon’s CEO bonus with public money. They taxed family farms at death. They promised 300,000 homes a year and never once delivered. Then they told you it was your fault for not saving harder. Energy is the master input. Britain is an island made of coal surrounded by a sea full of gas and the political class won’t drill it. Norway took the same geology, built a $1.7tn sovereign wealth fund, and is now courting OpenAI. We built consultancy reports. The next industrial revolution will not happen here. Not because we lack the talent. Because thirty years of policy made the cost of powering anything too high for the industries of the future to justify locating in this country. This is not just a housing crisis. It is a monetary crisis expressed through housing, compounded by energy failure, planning paralysis, institutional decay and three decades of fiscal incontinence. Full piece: open.substack.com/pub/anglofutur…
Anglo Futurism Capital LP 🇬🇧🐿️@RollingHedge

For the last ~15 years since I left uni, I’ve been a consistent top 1% (at the start) to top 0.1% taxpayer (last few years). I’m not rich, though. We live modestly. We save. We invest. We are sensible. But I work hard. Really hard. Most weekends I’m writing strategic go to market plan, white papers for new products, attending ExCo calls, or sending data to our major stakeholders. I’m also the only real income in our household for the last few years. My wife runs her own small company and they do quite well for their size - they paid our kids school fees for a few years, sure it’s up and down, as any new endeavour tends to be - but she also gets absolutely hosed by Reeves for any success she can manifest. And I’m sick to the back teeth of the way the economy treats risk-takers and entrepreneurial people, and the general way it is configured. It’s all wrong. I’ve absolutely had enough. The social contract is totally and utterly broken. The state is eating the economy; it rewards indolence and kills ambition. I’ve left the country before for work opportunities and better prospects, so I’m not averse to the idea. Though I don’t really in my heart of hearts want to and I suspect this is what the state is betting on more broadly. This time around, I have remained in Britain so far because: it’s our home, our families are here, our friends are here, we bought a big pile in Surrey to put down roots after a lot of travel, our kids are settled in school, and our parents are in their twilight years. It’s not easy to just up roots like it was in the past. But it is inescapable that the country is structurally fucked. In every conceivable way. You can’t build. You can’t keep what you make. There’s very little to zero return on your taxable income and efforts. Long term, the delta between state spending and borrowing and its productivity and wages/tax receipts is moving in an exponential K-shape. The pension system is geared against people like me who put in, and geared towards a critical mass of indolents - both domestic and imported - plus a big proportion of boomers who have never contributed what I have. And in my pond, I’m not even a big fish. 16,500 of us have already voted with our feet. I’m just absolutely done paying for welfare socialism and Islamist scope creep. I see the Greens waiting. Reform is the main alternative to the traditional parties and they’re a total joke. Despite their membership numbers and THE EXCELLENT @RupertLowe10 - I am unconvinced Restore will ever be given a fair hearing by the mainstream media. Their electoral cut-through is likely to suffer as a result. The SDP led by the brilliant Clouston still have no cut-through. It’s collectively all so disappointing. I will continue to support both parties as they are the only patriots left. My friends - many of them - are out already, and many more are about to be. It’s 90% of what we discuss when we meet. Tonight I made a decision. I’m out. Do what is best for your family now. No one you know in your day-to-day life is remotely aware of what’s coming. It will be swift and it will be unforgiving. No one is coming to save you. Good luck. Godspeed. ✌️ (Red pilled for years, radicalised by @trevgoes4th and @db_fink)

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Mark W.
Mark W.@DurhamWASP·
“He tried to squeeze out some childhood memory that should tell him whether London had always been quite like this…” George Orwell, 1984
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Nick shirley
Nick shirley@nickshirleyy·
You tried to paint me as a pervert for exposing fraud, and as a result radical leftists started trying to dox me and send death threats, wanting to kill me. Now you are taking credit for “leading the charge” on the fraud. Are you serious? You are the fraud.
Governor Gavin Newsom@CAgovernor

California is again leading the charge against large-scale identity theft and hospice fraud. Today, we're taking decisive action against 14 providers who tried using stolen identities to bill Medi-Cal for nonexistent hospice services.

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Daniel Lambert
Daniel Lambert@dlLambo·
Israel is the first state in history to legislate a death sentence that applies only to one ethnic group. There's a reason nobody has ever done this. It's a depth of evil beyond humanity itself.
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nic carter
nic carter@nic_carter·
it hasn't sunk in for most people. we already live in a post-scarcity society. UBI is already here. basic package: disability, medicaid, food stamps etc bonus package: literally getting paid for staying at home and hanging out with your relatives extra bonus: if you are willing to commit fraud, pretend your kids are autistic and get paid for that. get paid for watching your neighbor's kid. pretend you are taking care of your grandma. fake hospice clinic. fake rehab clinic. fake therapy clinic. giga bonus: during a time of crisis take advantage of PPP or CARES and open a fake business and get paid for existing people are shocked when they learn that defense is the FIFTH largest line item in the budget. ahead of defense: social security ($1.6T), interest on debt ($1.1T) medicare ($1T), medicaid + ACA ($1T), AND THEN defense ($0.9T) complain about defense all you like, but healthcare fraud is a way bigger factor. hundreds of billions per year. this is only going to get worse, because the fraud is a structural part of the system – payouts to client groups in exchange for votes (normally D). in the US, only 47% of the population actually works (fully 14% of the population is working age and does not work). retirees are 18% and children 22%. the system I described above subsidizes 50m non-working people absolute minimum, but really it's far more because people that are paid to stay home and take care of their relatives are considered "workers" of that 47% of "actual workers" maybe one third does real work, the rest are shuffling papers around or doing fake email jobs. so you have, rough math, 50 million actual workers supporting 300 million dependents. that's the nature of the economy today. it will only accelerate. eventually you will have 10 million using AI tools to do all the work and 340 million dependents. the reason no one roots out the fraud is because it's the system that keeps our extremely fragile polity intact. the fraud is the UBI. the purpose of the system is what it does. of course, it's a deeply unfair system, because you are allowed to commit fraud if you are a politically protected client group of the democrats. DOGE was killed faster than any government program ever, because it attempted to root out the fraud. if you are honest and unwilling to commit fraud, you are a huge loser in this system. your neighbor will have their mortgage subsidized by some government program. they will get favorable SBA loans due to DEI. they will open a fake hospice or autism clinic. they will get paid for taking care of their neighbor's kid and vice versa. the primary skill in the labor market is learning how to extract money from state and federal government programs, not gaining skills or making yourself employable. if you are just trying to work an ordinary wagie job you are a huge sucker. you are paying 40-50% effective all in taxes to everyone else who is a net taker. the sad part is because AI is such a substantial productivity boost, it will actually keep this system going for a while longer, and maybe in perpetuity. AI boosts the 15% of the population that is actually productive so much that the remaining 85% can coast by. no one in charge will change this because they can't think of anything else. the political costs of a real UBI program are too great and we don't have the money for it anyway. so we will keep this covert fraud-based UBI program running indefinitely. unfortunately, if you are an honest wagie, you lose.
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Jack
Jack@j4ppleby·
What a difference a headline makes.
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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent@SecScottBessent·
By publishing this explicitly false story, the @FT has officially become tabloid trash for market participants. Despite my direct, on-the-record denial of ever having advocated, explored, or espoused the idea that Chancellor-Bank of England statute serving as a prototype for a Treasury-Federal Reserve relationship, FT journalists manufactured a story with the headline, “Scott Bessent praised Bank of England as model for tighter oversight of the Federal Reserve.” These pathetic journalists have clearly fabricated a story to give the impression that both I and the Trump Administration are setting “about restructuring the relationship… at a time when President Donald Trump has launched an unprecedented assault on the world’s most important central bank.” Their mendacious assertion is based on vague statements from unnamed “financial industry executives familiar with the matter.” In short, FT has literally manufactured an entirely fake policy position for me and the Administration. Other than furthering a maliciously false narrative of dysfunction and divisiveness, it baffles the mind as to why they would shred their already diminished journalistic credibility. Over the past 10 years, I have written more than 20,000 words opining on the Federal Reserve decisions, personnel, structure, and modifications. Nowhere have I ever mentioned this ridiculous notion. The Governor’s letters to the Chancellor have proven to be a useless and perfunctory device. There is much to be said about the storied Bank of England, but any recreation of its operating framework on this side of the Atlantic has never been contemplated. The shameful journalists and editors at the FT are shocking in their meretriciousness, lack of standards, and general intellectual libertinism. It is the worst tradition of Fleet Street to manufacture news rather than report on it. They have brought irredeemable shame to their parent organization, Nikkei Inc., with whom I had previously held excellent relations. In 2025, I laid out a comprehensive 6,000+ word review of each and every policy reform that I believe should be adopted by the Federal Reserve. Read my actual, real thoughts on and proposals for Federal Reserve reform at the International Economy: international-economy.com/TIE_Sp25_Besse…
Financial Times@FT

FT exclusive: US treasury secretary Scott Bessent discussed tightening the US Treasury’s oversight of the Federal Reserve by adopting elements of the Bank of England’s model ft.trib.al/6dgGvkh

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Cole Walmsley
Cole Walmsley@Cole_Walmsley·
This is central banking in a nutshell: A group of rich guys go to the king and say: "Hey, you need money for your war. We'll give you all the money you want." The king says: "Great, where's the money?" They say: "We're going to make it up. We'll write numbers in a book and that's your money now." The king says: "What do I owe you?" They say: "You pay us back with interest." The king says: "Where do I get that money?" They say: "You tax your citizens." The king says: "What if I can't pay it all back?" They say: "That's fine. We'll lend you more. Same deal." The king says: "And what do you do with the IOUs I gave you?" They say: "We use them to prove we have money, so we can lend even more money to other people and charge them interest too." The king says: "So you made up money, lent it to me, I tax my people to pay you back, and then you use my debt to make up even more money and lend it to everyone else?" They say: "Yes." The king says: "What did it cost you?" They say: "Nothing." That's literally how the Bank of England started in 1694. The Bank was formed to finance King William's war with France. The king gave the Bank a charter, granting it a monopoly on money. The king could have as much money as he wanted. The bankers could always earn interest. Taxpayers covered the bill. Now replace "king" with "United States Government" and you have the Federal Reserve in 1913. Same story, different country. It doesn't end there. 185 central banks exist in the world today. Across the globe, the governments get as much money as they want, the bankers load their pockets with interest, and the taxpayers pay for it all. Oh, and if you don't pay your taxes, they'll fine you, penalize you, or throw you in jail. The ONLY way out of this is to STOP USING THEIR MONEY. As long as you're using the money that central banks control, the central banks will have control. You have to stop giving them energy. Use a different form of money that they can't control. This is why Satoshi Nakamoto created Bitcoin.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Dr. Helmut Sterz (ex-Pfizer Europe chief toxicologist) testified March 19, 2026, before Germany's official Corona Enquete Commission. He stated essential toxicity studies were skipped for speed, no carcinogenicity tests done, production differed from trials (potential DNA contamination), and Pfizer's early post-marketing flagged 1,233 suspected deaths. Using US-style underreporting factors (~30x), he estimates ~60k German deaths linked to Comirnaty; called approval a mistake that "should never have happened." No arrests: This is expert opinion in a parliamentary inquiry amid ongoing data debates. Causation, regulatory decisions under emergency rules, and criminal thresholds require full legal process—not automatic prosecution. Inquiries continue.
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The Free Speech Union
The Free Speech Union@SpeechUnion·
The moment you finally realise you’re leading the most authoritarian government in our country’s history: 1️⃣ Introducing an official definition of “anti-Muslim hostility” that silences legitimate criticism of religion — 18 years after Parliament abolished such laws. 2️⃣ Removing the right of most defendants to have a jury trial, in the biggest assault on English liberty in over 800 years. 3️⃣ Requiring pub landlords to monitor customers’ private conversations to protect staff from remarks, comments, or jokes they may find “offensive”. 4️⃣ Clamping down on lawful social media posts, arresting an Irish comedian for gender-critical tweets and even threatening to ban access to X in the UK. It’s not a great look, is it, Prime Minister…
The Free Speech Union tweet media
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Michael A. Arouet
Michael A. Arouet@MichaelAArouet·
Something is clearly out of balance when someone earning £10k and someone earning £140k take home the same net amount. No wonder so many hard-working people and entrepreneurs are leaving the UK. Would you want to live in a country that punishes hard work and jobs creation?
Michael A. Arouet tweet media
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SK
SK@SteCK1878·
@mazemoore And the message evolved to…..
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Lee Nallalingham
Lee Nallalingham@LNallalingham·
🚨 HMRC has now FAILED its audit for more than 20 years. The National Audit Office has again qualified HMRC’s accounts because of material levels of fraud and error. They have not been able to pass their audit cleanly since tax credits were introduced in 2003/04 due to material levels of fraud and error. Look at the state of our public sector: ❌ HMRC has failed audit for 20+ years ❌ DWP has failed audit for 37 years ❌ The Cabinet Office can’t provide evidence for £7 BILLION of spending. These are the institutions that take your money, spend your money and tell you there isn’t enough of it. If any normal organisation failed its audit year after year, there would be consequences. In government, it just carries on. And then they tell you taxes need to go up.
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Kwasi Kwarteng
Kwasi Kwarteng@kwasi_stackbtc·
Here is the uncomfortable truth: The British political class is years behind when it comes to Bitcoin and digital assets. We are asleep at the wheel. Too many people in Westminster are happy to dismiss it with throwaway lines about “Ponzi schemes” without having spent even a few hours/days understanding what it actually is. Bitcoin didn’t appear in a vacuum. It is the latest chapter in a very long story, the evolution of money itself. From gold, to paper backed by gold, to purely fiat currencies controlled by central banks. Anyone who has seriously studied that history can see why a decentralised monetary network with a fixed supply was inevitable. That doesn’t mean every crypto project has merit. Far from it. But confusing Bitcoin with the worst excesses of the crypto industry simply reveals a lack of understanding and full transparency, this was once my view also before I took the time to learn. Britain should be leading the conversation about the future of money and financial infrastructure. Instead, far too many of our decision-makers are still trying to understand the last one. Bitcoin is the future.
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DontTrustAnyone
DontTrustAnyone@BTC_will_win·
@BorisJohnson Absolutely clown. I didn’t think my opinion of you you could go down further after your Covid and Ukraine antics - but it has now…..
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Boris Johnson
Boris Johnson@BorisJohnson·
I've long suspected Bitcoin is a giant Ponzi scheme and now I'm hearing tales of woe that make me fear I'm right. mol.im/a/15643681
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Rupert Lowe MP
Rupert Lowe MP@RupertLowe10·
Inflation is the tax that makes all of us poorer. It makes your food shop more expensive, clothes more expensive, fuel more expensive. Everything. It impoverishes the British people. This is not random. This is not accidental. This is not irreversible. It is the direct result of government choices. When the state grows too large, spends too much, borrows too much and taxes too much, the value of our money is steadily eroded. This is not complicated. Prices rise, and savings are punished. Wages fall behind, and the country becomes poorer. Ordinary British men and women feel worse off even if they are working harder than ever. With those on the lowest wages suffering the most. The economy is failing those who work hard and contribute, yet feel less and less reward. I detest it. For decades, politicians have tried to pretend there are complicated solutions to this problem. There aren’t. There are straightforward solutions. That doesn’t mean they’re painless, but they are straightforward. So far, no political party has had the courage to outline the way forward. We will. Restore Britain will. If you want to bring inflation down and keep it down, you must radically shrink the size of the state. This is non-negotiable. Government spending drives inflation, endless borrowing drives inflation, constant intervention in the economy drives inflation. And when the state grows larger and larger, it must fund itself through either taxation, borrowing or money creation. All three ultimately push prices higher. It makes your money worth less. It makes your food shop more expensive. It is that simple. If the state prints billions and billions (Quantitative Easing) , what happens to the existing money? It all becomes worth less. This is so painfully obvious. Yet what does the state do? Cheered on by gopher politicians? Print, print and print some more. A Restore Britain would do the five following things, brutally and rapidly. - Drastically cut Government spending. - Radically reduce tax. - Brutalise the size of the state. - Ensure that the country lives within its means. - Ban money printing (QE), without explicit parliamentary approval. Is this a painless process? No. It is not. I am not going to tell you otherwise. It will be painful, it will be difficult. There will be immense cuts. I am simply being honest with you all. But it is necessary. It is the only way. When you allow businesses to grow, allow people to keep more of their own money and remove the bureaucratic dead weight suffocating the economy, production increases. More goods are produced, more services are delivered, and prices stabilise. A smaller state means a stronger economy, and a stronger economy means stable prices. Inflation is kept under control. For too long Britain has gone in completely the opposite direction. Taxes are at record highs, the state is larger than ever, and inflation has punished every household in the country. Every single one. Nobody has been exempt. But it is the poorest who suffer the most, and that is simply unacceptable. Restore Britain will reverse that. You cannot tax, borrow and spend your way to stable prices. You cannot regulate your way for lower inflation. A small responsible state puts the people, not itself, first. What do we have? A state that now taxes, wastes and then misappropriates. The only real path to low inflation is a smaller state and a freer economy. That leads to a richer people. That leads to a cheaper food shop. A cheaper pint. A cheaper tank of fuel. That is Restore Britain’s aim. If you want the Government out of your lives, and more of your own money in your pocket, with that money worth more? There is a political party willing to take the painful steps to deliver that. Restore Britain.
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