CTechnologies
55 posts

CTechnologies
@CTechnologies2
CTechnologies Services provides small business connection services.
Katılım Temmuz 2021
2 Takip Edilen5 Takipçiler

🚨 WARNING: TOMORROW WILL BE THE WORST DAY OF 2026!!
98% of people will lose everything.
The U.S.-Iran peace deal has officially COLLAPSED.
What was supposed to be a bullish signal for markets is now off the table.
And when markets open on Monday, this won’t be “just a dip.”
This is a geopolitical catalyst hitting an already fragile system.
Stocks will dump.
Metals will dump.
Crypto will dump even harder.
Insiders are already selling EVERYTHING except oil.
This is no longer about positioning.
It’s about protection.
The dollar is losing strength in real time.
Liquidity is tightening.
And now the pressure just multiplied.
The U.S. and Iran spent weeks in negotiations.
No agreement.
No ceasefire extension.
No breakthrough.
The Strait of Hormuz is still closed.
And the peace talks are over.
That changes the entire risk landscape.
Because when diplomacy breaks down, markets don’t wait.
They react immediately.
And they don’t price hope.
They price escalation.
From here, there are only three paths forward, and they do NOT carry the same consequences:
1⃣ CONTAINED OUTCOME
Backchannel diplomacy resumes, tensions ease, markets stabilize after the initial shock.
2⃣ ESCALATION CYCLE
Talks remain frozen, pressure builds, and markets start pricing sustained regional instability.
3⃣ FULL BREAKDOWN
The situation deteriorates fast, forcing an immediate repricing of oil, global risk, and capital flows.
That third scenario is where things turn dangerous.
Because none of this is happening in a vacuum.
At the same time:
→ Bonds are being dumped aggressively
→ Yields are surging higher
→ The dollar is weakening
→ Liquidity is drying up
Put the pieces together.
When geopolitical stress collides with financial fragility, markets do not adjust smoothly.
They dump violently.
Oil does not climb slowly.
It goes parabolic 10-15-20% a day.
Capital does not rotate gradually.
It flees risk instantly.
And risk assets?
They do not “correct.”
They DUMP HARD.
This is how systemic reactions start.
Because once markets begin pricing duration instead of temporary shock, the entire framework changes.
Inflation expectations rise.
Policy options shrink.
Central banks get cornered.
And by the time they respond, the damage is already done.
The collapse of U.S.-Iran peace talks is not just another headline.
It is a trigger.
A new layer of uncertainty on top of an already unstable system.
Watch oil.
Watch bonds.
Watch the flows.
Because when this starts accelerating, reaction time disappears.
I’ve spent years studying macro and market stress cycles.
When the next move becomes obvious, I’ll post it here first.
Follow and turn notifications on.
Because once it reaches the mainstream headlines, it’ll already be too late.
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@willysgospel @TheBTCTherapist @grok I think people are missing the point of your post. It’s sold as something safe and anonymous, but your identity is tied to it, and there’s a digital trail that never goes away. So if your assets get frozen, so does your crypto.
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@TheBTCTherapist @grok Bitcoin is freedom from the system! But the system can turn off your Bitcoin at any moment?
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Hey @Grok, be honest and respond with a “Yes” or “No” only — Will Bitcoin break the $126,000 all time high by the end of 2026?

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@elonmusk The same people telling us they can’t afford to subsidize healthcare?
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@cryptorover Do you have anything to back this up? Looks to be fake, they’ve been buying while everyone is scared. Retail traders generally have paper hands, and they get flushed out while the big players scoop it up at the discounted rate.
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@MadcowSyndicate @halstonvalencia True. The dollar isn’t tied to physical gold anymore, so I’m not sure it’s a requirement. The whole world would have to decide BTC was the standard, and other crypto would be based on that. I’m not sure that’s feasible, especially since the US would have to give up dominance.
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@MadcowSyndicate @halstonvalencia Interesting take, and it makes sense. Gold used to be what the physical dollar was tied to (gold standard), BTC could potentially be used for that. The volatility kills it I think. Gold’s value is stable, so it’s easier to base a currency on that.
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@LexsWorld @halstonvalencia Finally! Someone who understands. The value will be what someone else is willing to pay for it. It just can’t keep up as currency due to the low TPS capability and being natively deflationary. It’s a store of value, and that may still be valuable in the future.
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@halstonvalencia Bitcoin lacks the throughput for even 1/1000th of this...the transactions per second are just too low...and using lightning channels doesn't fix it remotely...hence, Bitcoin is a fantastic store of value, but a different blockchain has to act as a payment layer. with >100k tps
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@BitcoinSapiens Elon has continually said BTC is not currency, it is a store of value. He’s continually said Doge will be the preferred for currency. Tesla and SpaceX accept $Doge not $BTC.
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@BitcoinSapiens Think about this. Tesla accepted BTC for a short time, but ultimately stopped because it’s very energy inefficient, and it wasn’t a good look for his efficient EV company. However, Tesla and SpaceX still accept Doge. Doge is faster, more efficient, and scales better.
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@Xfinancebull @BitcoinMagazine Wrapped ETH is already bank grade. The only way for BTC to get real world use will be to build out the L2 network and be the wrapper for DeFi transactions.
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@BitcoinMagazine Bitcoin wallet inside X Money is a no brainer if security is bank grade.
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@BitcoinMagazine Elon has been working for years with Doge to make it more reliable, efficient, and useful. Tesla used to accept BTC, but got pushback because its was counterproductive for his efficient EV company to accept such an inefficient coin. If anything he’ll be accepting Doge.
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@Rajatsoni The only chance BTC has for real world use is if it can jump on the DeFi wagon. BNB and ETH have already beat it there, and corner most of the market. BTC can do 7 transactions per second, where DeFi does 30k+ TPS. ETH, BNB, and XRP just scale better and are more efficient.
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The paradigm shift is that Bitcoin is money, not a cash flowing investment
Bitcoin is the cash, not the investment
My inputs are 1 BTC = ♾️ USD, and there will never be more than 21M BTC
Oculus Research@OculusResearch
@Rajatsoni Please explain how you hold a CFA designation while defending a “valuation” of $66k + for digital fairy dust. What inputs are you using to calculate its value?
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@khepri_thoth @FinanceFreeman You’re going to need a lot of market adoption in order to sustain the network solely on a fee based structure without the transaction costs making it unviable. It’s also very limited in functionality with 7TPS. DeFi is more efficient overall and can do 30,000+ TPS. Clear winner.
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Many problems with the statement.
Simply put: Satoshi Nakamoto designed the difficulty adjustment to address exactly this kind of issue. It prevents the network from grinding to a halt if miners exit due to unprofitability.
BUT... Given your parameters, ~2140 is when the Bitcoin block subsidy is projected to phase out entirely.
If you haven't figured out you're executing in a simulation by then and haven't evolved from it, well, can't say We didn't try to help you.
That's the problem with all these 3D minds, they don't understand Bitcoin. You gotta learn to execute from beyond the shadows that trap you.

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🚨Bitcoin’s Catastrophic Problem NO ONE Is Talking About!
Bitcoin produces 144 blocks per day. Fees are paid per block, every ~10 minutes.
Yesterday, Bitcoin Layer-1 fees totaled ~2.6 BTC for the entire day. (Approx. $180K)
That works out to ~0.018 $BTC per block.
Meanwhile, the real cost to secure a block (electricity + hardware) is often $150k–$200k, depending on hash rate and energy prices.
Today, miners survive because of the 3.125 $BTC block subsidy. Fees do not matter NOW, because the Bitcoin emissions are worth enough to offset costs.
🚨THE PROBLEM? When Bitcoin reaches 21 million supply, that subsidy goes to zero.
At that point, fees must fully pay miners — or hash rate drops, security weakens, and the system degrades.
To break even long-term, Bitcoin needs tens of millions per day in L1 fees. Yesterday was sub $200,000.
I own Bitcoin. I want it to succeed.
But pretending this isn’t a real issue won’t solve it.
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@cryptofergani Cool story, how are you getting a loan for 5%? Please tell me you’re putting your house up as collateral 🤣
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@Viral_Strike @theswansjr Bought a pizza once. A year later that same transaction was valued at 4x the original cost. Felt bad I paid that much for a pizza, never used it again. Too unstable to be usable for me.
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@theswansjr Do you know anyone personally who buys everyday items with bitcoin?
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Bitcoin has no use cases!
Sure.
• El Salvador: legal tender for an entire nation.
• BlackRock: Bitcoin ETF with $35 billion AUM in 12 months.
• Argentina: citizens fleeing 140% inflation into BTC.
• Remittances: $200 sent globally for $0.50 instead of $47 through Western Union.
• Self-custody: zero counterparty risk in a banking system that froze Canadian truckers for donating $50.
• Monetary escape: every fiat collapse from Zimbabwe to Venezuela shows why this matters. Storing value outside state confiscation.
Anyone still saying "no use case" missed the memo when governments, pensions, and sovereign wealth funds started stacking in 2021.
You're not early.
You're blind.
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@theswansjr @tb358de Completely untrue. Law enforcement can and have linked BTC accounts to real-world identities. Thats why you have to provide proof of identity to open the account 🤦♂️
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Wrong target, wrong weapon. Bitcoin's ledger is transparent, not surveillable. Your identity isn't on-chain unless you KYC yourself into a chokepoint. Bitcoin surveillance only works if you volunteer your identity. CBDCs require it by design. Your CBDCs can also be disabled. You just compared a public bulletin board to an ankle monitor and called them the same. They're not.
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@theswansjr You’re dreaming. The transaction cost is dependent on network congestion, and yes, I’ve seen it cost $40+ on a transaction. Also, they can and did freeze the BTC account if they want to. nytimes.com/2022/02/22/wor…
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@AdamBLiv Fixed supply? What happens when all the BTC is mined and miners are no longer receiving BTC as a reward to offset the cost to keep the inefficient coin alive? Either it dilutes the pool with more BTC, the transaction charges go sky high, or it shuts down. Which one is most likely
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@MikeVonG88 @AdamBLiv Because DeFi can move the same amount of money a lot more efficiently. DeFi is what the banks are using to move money, not BTC.
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