The Bitcoin Shaykh

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The Bitcoin Shaykh

The Bitcoin Shaykh

@BitcoinShaykh

Radical Generalist / Interests in #Bitcoin, markets, sports, epistemology, root causes

United States Katılım Mayıs 2015
5.5K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
The Bitcoin Shaykh retweetledi
Tim Cook
Tim Cook@tim_cook·
To everyone around the world marking the end of Ramadan, wishing you a blessed Eid al-Fitr with friends and family. Eid Mubarak!
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The Calvin Coolidge Project
The Calvin Coolidge Project@TheCalvinCooli1·
🚨New: Ruth's Chris Steak House has a new dress code “business casual” for customers to wear proper attire with diners who don't comply being relegated to the bar. “Kindly remove all hats when entering the restaurant. Guests wearing ball caps are asked to dine in the bar/lounge." “The following attire is not permitted in our dining rooms: Gym wear, pool attire, tank tops, clothing with offensive graphics or language, revealing clothing, or exposed undergarments.” How do you feel about this?
The Calvin Coolidge Project tweet media
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VIKTOR
VIKTOR@thedefivillain·
This Iran war might be one of the clearest examples of Rashomon effect I've seen in a long time People see broadly the same events and information, yet draw radically different conclusions depending on their initial biases With each passing day, anti-war/anti-Zionist/TDS people grow more convinced it’s a disaster, while MAGA/pro-war/Zionist people grow more convinced it’s a success
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Noa Dalzell 🏀
Noa Dalzell 🏀@NoaDalzell·
Jaylen Brown explained how he’s memorized all of his teammate’s astrology and numerology in order to better learn how to communicate with them: “I learned communication styles that work best for each individual, and started utilizing that when I speak to each and every guy.”
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Seeking 🐸🍄
Seeking 🐸🍄@seekingaround17·
Genghis Kahn is dead. Jesus Christ is Lord
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Governor Gavin Newsom
Governor Gavin Newsom@CAgovernor·
Assalamualaikum, California! As Ramadan draws to a close, we extend our warmest wishes to Muslims in California and across America. May this blessed day of Eid bring joy, prosperity, unity, and peace to you and your loved ones. Eid Mubarak!
Governor Gavin Newsom tweet media
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The Bitcoin Shaykh retweetledi
Maitreya Bhakal
Maitreya Bhakal@MaitreyaBhakal·
Israel is so small that Iran can destroy all of its desalination plants and its entire power grid within just a few hours. Just imagine what will happen to the settler population then, without water and electricity. Ask yourself why Iran is not doing that.
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Reverend Jordan Wells
Reverend Jordan Wells@WellsJorda89710·
Listen up, clowns: Calling someone a “Zionist” like it’s the new N-word? Pathetic. Zionism = Israel deserves to exist. That’s the ENTIRE definition. Not genocide. Not supremacy. Just a homeland for Jews after 2,000 years of exile and slaughter. I’m a Zionist. Black man right here. And I’m not hiding it. So when you scream “Zionists hate Black people,” you’re just yelling at ME. How’s that working out for you? 🔥🇮🇱 Drop your dumb takes below. I’ll wait. #ZionismIsNotHate #BlackZionist #IsraelForever #ExposeTheLies
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The Bitcoin Shaykh retweetledi
Persian Girl
Persian Girl@Persianserene1·
Jalali, Iran's ambassador to Russia, shared a video of Martyr Larijani performing prayer just minutes before meeting Putin at the Kremlin He wrote: At that moment, I instinctively felt it needed to be captured. I never imagined that one day it would be shared as a memory of a great soul
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Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸
Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸@jacksonhinklle·
💔🇮🇷 Ali Larijani's mother bids her final farewell...
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The Bitcoin Shaykh
The Bitcoin Shaykh@BitcoinShaykh·
@TXMCtrades When did Anas say something to that effect? He’s been warning about the war being underestimated
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𝐓𝐗𝐌𝐂
𝐓𝐗𝐌𝐂@TXMCtrades·
On one hand we have the Anas Alhajji and Michael Every's of the world presenting very clear, organized arguments for why this is a grand macro strategy with multitudes of interlocking parts that, once finished, will position the US favorably for many years to come. Yes it may be ugly but trust us this is brilliant economic statecraft guys you just don't see the whole picture yet. On the other hand you have the actual faces of this conflict, Trump and Hegseth primarily, who seem to have the grace of a foot fungus and the skin thickness of a soap bubble, constantly contradicting themselves, outright lying about confirmable facts, or delivering psychotic prose from a podium about death and destruction. It SEEMS evident that they underestimated the Iranians by the way this is dragging on for many weeks despite being called an "excursion", by the way the Strait remains impassable despite claims that we've destroyed IRGC capabilities, and the way none of our allies seem ready to help.
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The Bitcoin Shaykh
The Bitcoin Shaykh@BitcoinShaykh·
@johnkonrad Stop funding the genocide and promoting Israeli propaganda in the guise of maritime analysis
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The Bitcoin Shaykh
The Bitcoin Shaykh@BitcoinShaykh·
@signulll 💯 the truest friends have are willing to go out for me (and vice versa). The worst friends I’ve had treated the friendship as business transaction and left when they the ROI stopped justifying the friendhsip
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signüll
signüll@signulll·
being a great friend is all about being open to being inconvenienced.
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Joe Lonsdale
Joe Lonsdale@JTLonsdale·
Balaji is a bright guy but he fled the USA and has set his mind totally against our future success. He lives in a world where US is losing and China is winning. This is his fixation. It’s dangerous, and it’s wrong. And this war has embarrassed China, destroyed their 100 cargo planes of war materials and their military ally, and frustrates them. It’s fair to disagree about the attack. But saying that its architects are guilty of any downside is childlike nonsense. They should be proud of their work and their courage to take on this evil. If you’re against the war, do you get credit for the last two decades of literal mass torture and mass rape and repression by this regime, and its terror funding and death around the region? Do you get credit for “supporting” the billions it spends on social media bots and information operations to polarize the US against ourselves, and weaken the west? Do you also get credit for what would have been the next twenty years of that? Are you, Balaji, responsible for that side of it? No? But if you are for it, you get zero credit for fixing any of that, but blamed for ALL the possible downsides? Total BS. The mullahs holding the region hostage shouldn’t get your help to blame others for the damage they do. Geopolitics and war is complex and there are risks on all sides. There is risk in acting, and in not acting. I’m really glad we are taking advantage of the massive innovation and competence gap that exists at this moment, and finally eliminating so much evil. I hope for freedom for the Iranian people and know that the situation is hard and complex, but either way it is good to stop the bad guys and eliminate so many of the worst groups, who have done so much damage, from history. Nobody should get away with what those bastards did for so long; this was long overdue.
Balaji@balajis

I'm going to make some obvious points. (1) Blowing up all the oil infrastructure in the Middle East is an insane idea, and may well result in a global economic crash and humanitarian crisis unrivaled in the lives of those now living. We're talking about the price of everything everywhere rising, from food to gas, at a moment when inflation was already high. All of that will be laid at the feet of the authors of this war. (2) The antebellum status quo of Feb 27, 2026 was just not that bad, but we're unlikely to return to it. Expect indefinite, long-term, ongoing disruptions to everything out of the Middle East. (3) Also assume tech financing crashes for the indefinite future. The genius plan to get the Gulf states caught in the crossfire has incinerated much of the funding for LPs, for datacenters, and for IPOs. Anyone in tech who supported this war may soon learn the meaning of "force majeure" as funding gets yanked. (4) Many capital allocators will instead be allocating much further down Maslow's hierarchy of needs, towards useful basic things like food and energy. (5) It's fortunate that all those progressives yelled about the "climate crisis." Yes, their reasoning about timelines was wrong, and much of the money was wasted in graft, but the result was right: we all need energy independence from the Middle East, pronto. It's also fortunate that Elon and China autistically took climate seriously. Now they're going to need to ship a billion solar panels, electric vehicles, batteries, nuclear power plants, and the like to get everyone off oil, immediately. (6) It's not just an oil and gas problem, of course. It's also a fertilizer problem, and a chemical precursor problem. Maybe some new sources will come online at the new prices, but it takes time to dial stuff up, particularly at this scale, so shortages are almost a certainty. That said, China has actually scaled up coal-to-chemicals[a,c] (C2C), and there's also something more sci-fi called Power-to-X[b] which turns arbitrary power + water + air into hydrocarbons. But all of that will need to get accelerated. I have a background in chemical engineering so may start funding things in this area. (7) Ultimately, this war is going to result in tremendous blame for anyone associated with it. It's a no-win scenario to blow up this much infrastructure for so many people. Simply not worth it for whatever objective they thought they were going to attain. But unless you're actually in a position to stop the madness, the pragmatic thing to do is: scramble to mitigate the fallout to yourself, your business, and your people. [a]: reuters.com/business/energ… [b]: alfalaval.com/industries/ene… [c]: reuters.com/sustainability…

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The Bitcoin Shaykh
The Bitcoin Shaykh@BitcoinShaykh·
well said
plur daddy@plur_daddy

Equity bears are at the brink of insanity given resilience in the indices, but odds of a breakdown are increasing now. Equities top slowly as passive flows and rotational dynamics can hold up indices for a long time. There are many structural forces rigged to push them higher, and thus it takes a lot to make them go down. Over the course of an equity bull market, buy-the-dip behavior continually gets reinforced, and the majority of capital will be controlled by adherents to this mantra. In theory, the longer prices remain coiled, the larger the move once they exit the range. This nuke in gold suggests there are liquidity issues brewing under the surface. It feels like a preview of what is going to happen to crowded trades. My theory is the Middle East is selling gold to shore up capital, as they have lost their revenue, and have many expenses around defence. They will also need to rebuild lost energy infra, and eventually, new pipelines to reroute around Hormuz. The buyback window is starting to close, and the sugar rush of higher-than-usual tax refunds is starting to fade. Retail has been a key marginal buyer of equities in these past weeks, and the fading of the tax refund tailwind is critical. The market is gradually coming to terms with the fact that this conflict may last for a long time. On a conventional level, the US and Israel have completely dominated Iran, but Iran has an asymmetric edge when it comes to controlling world oil prices through Hormuz. Trump can still end it, but the issue is that the US cannot simply leave, a ceasefire with Iran must be struck in order to guarantee that Hormuz is reopened. In order to strike a ceasefire, Iran wants to see a guarantee that the US and Israel won't attack them again (at a bare minimum), and it will be difficult for the US to get Israel to agree to that. Trump is used to being able to quickly maneuver according to his whims, as he did with tariffs, but the complex interlocking physical realities of war are different. Oil shocks often contribute to the end of bull markets, since they constrain consumer spending, hit manufacturing, and lower the ability of central banks to offer support. Indeed, the Fed came out slightly hawkish yesterday, and Powell also hinted that he may stay in his Governor seat post his role as Chair ending, which would constrain Trump's plans to unleash liquidity. We have a stronger dollar and long duration bond yields are going up over the world, which tightens liquidity. The Middle East is tight on money now and they were the marginal bidder in many assets. In particular, they were a key funder for AI capex through their investments in the frontier labs. They've been 40-50% of recent big rounds. Remember other deep pockets like Softbank are close to being tapped out. Any dollar that goes into these rounds will have to come out of something else, like liquid stocks (look at my pinned post for this broader thesis). And if we have any signs of risk to AI capex expectations, this will be a major shift that the market needs to contemplate. I've said this before, but puts are a difficult way to express bearish equity views because timing is so uncertain. Equities can hold on for a long time, because they are structurally rigged to go higher. Easier expressions are simply being in cash, or gradually shorting cash stocks over time, which helps avoid getting chopped. This is a very difficult market, stay safe out there.

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plur daddy
plur daddy@plur_daddy·
Equity bears are at the brink of insanity given resilience in the indices, but odds of a breakdown are increasing now. Equities top slowly as passive flows and rotational dynamics can hold up indices for a long time. There are many structural forces rigged to push them higher, and thus it takes a lot to make them go down. Over the course of an equity bull market, buy-the-dip behavior continually gets reinforced, and the majority of capital will be controlled by adherents to this mantra. In theory, the longer prices remain coiled, the larger the move once they exit the range. This nuke in gold suggests there are liquidity issues brewing under the surface. It feels like a preview of what is going to happen to crowded trades. My theory is the Middle East is selling gold to shore up capital, as they have lost their revenue, and have many expenses around defence. They will also need to rebuild lost energy infra, and eventually, new pipelines to reroute around Hormuz. The buyback window is starting to close, and the sugar rush of higher-than-usual tax refunds is starting to fade. Retail has been a key marginal buyer of equities in these past weeks, and the fading of the tax refund tailwind is critical. The market is gradually coming to terms with the fact that this conflict may last for a long time. On a conventional level, the US and Israel have completely dominated Iran, but Iran has an asymmetric edge when it comes to controlling world oil prices through Hormuz. Trump can still end it, but the issue is that the US cannot simply leave, a ceasefire with Iran must be struck in order to guarantee that Hormuz is reopened. In order to strike a ceasefire, Iran wants to see a guarantee that the US and Israel won't attack them again (at a bare minimum), and it will be difficult for the US to get Israel to agree to that. Trump is used to being able to quickly maneuver according to his whims, as he did with tariffs, but the complex interlocking physical realities of war are different. Oil shocks often contribute to the end of bull markets, since they constrain consumer spending, hit manufacturing, and lower the ability of central banks to offer support. Indeed, the Fed came out slightly hawkish yesterday, and Powell also hinted that he may stay in his Governor seat post his role as Chair ending, which would constrain Trump's plans to unleash liquidity. We have a stronger dollar and long duration bond yields are going up over the world, which tightens liquidity. The Middle East is tight on money now and they were the marginal bidder in many assets. In particular, they were a key funder for AI capex through their investments in the frontier labs. They've been 40-50% of recent big rounds. Remember other deep pockets like Softbank are close to being tapped out. Any dollar that goes into these rounds will have to come out of something else, like liquid stocks (look at my pinned post for this broader thesis). And if we have any signs of risk to AI capex expectations, this will be a major shift that the market needs to contemplate. I've said this before, but puts are a difficult way to express bearish equity views because timing is so uncertain. Equities can hold on for a long time, because they are structurally rigged to go higher. Easier expressions are simply being in cash, or gradually shorting cash stocks over time, which helps avoid getting chopped. This is a very difficult market, stay safe out there.
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The Bitcoin Shaykh retweetledi
CAIR National
CAIR National@CAIRNational·
Pete Hegseth has called for Israel to destroy Islam's holiest site in Jerusalem to accelerate the return of Jesus (may peace be upon him). He has tattooed a Crusader cross and the Arabic word for disbeliever on his own body. He has defended ex-soldiers who were duly convicted of murdering Muslim civilians by U.S. military courts. He has been accused of harassing Guantanamo Bay inmates with anti-Muslim rhetoric. He has allowed military leaders tell troops this U.S. war on Iran for Israel is a holy war meant to bring about Armageddon. He has overseen the murder over 180 Muslim schoolgirls and refused to express any regret for it. In other words, once again, Secretary Hegseth's accusation is a confession.
Aaron Rupar@atrupar

Hegseth accuses Iran of exporting "a violent, messianic Islamist ideology chasing some sort of apocalyptic endgame"

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Max Blumenthal
Max Blumenthal@MaxBlumenthal·
Israel just attempted to assassinate the great Steve Sweeney while he was reporting from Southern Lebanon Relieved to hear Steve is recovering The terrorist regime that has murdered hundreds of journalists over 2-3 years will never recover from this
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