Chrysanthemum

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Chrysanthemum

Chrysanthemum

@ChrysanthTea

Katılım Mayıs 2024
800 Takip Edilen166 Takipçiler
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Salvatore Linteum
Salvatore Linteum@PhantomBlack699·
@heyitspixel69 Ryan Cohen has - Taken zero salary - Buys shares with his own capital - Never sold a share No CEO does this. The compensation package still requires him to buy his own shares, if he delivers shareholder value. Nothing is free.
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X Market News🚨
X Market News🚨@xMarketNews·
BREAKING🚨 GAMESTOP REPORTS FISCAL YEAR 2025 RESULTS: Net sales: $3.6 billion Net income: $418 million Net income surges +219% from $131 million → $418 million $GME
X Market News🚨 tweet mediaX Market News🚨 tweet media
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creampuff 💭
creampuff 💭@creampuffL2·
Larry Cheng is bullish on GameStop and for that reason, I’m in 🖤❤️
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Pokémon
Pokémon@Pokemon·
We're taking it back to 2004! Pokémon Colosseum released on this day for the Nintendo GameCube system 🎉
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Corey
Corey@Corey_V24·
I like the way you meme Pssst....pick up a meme and post it! $GME #GameStop
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Corey
Corey@Corey_V24·
MEME ON $GME
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Corey
Corey@Corey_V24·
Gamestop
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Corey
Corey@Corey_V24·
The bomb is ticking away . . . $GME
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William Shatner
William Shatner@WilliamShatner·
🤔 Let’s just say you are in the early stages of X Money Pregnancy. You aren’t showing yet. 😉😑
Ezmenni24@Ezmenni24

@DrSouthern @WilliamShatner Im planning on paying my speeding ticket with X-money. Its was due 2 days ago. Am I still in process?

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just4grokking
just4grokking@Wondering1·
Remember the part about not becoming what you are about to replace? Yeah…
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Corey
Corey@Corey_V24·
Memers wanted! Care to join the initiative? $GME
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GameStop
GameStop@gamestop·
We brought back MW2 Rust 1v1s to find out if anyone could beat our expert. Full video out now: youtu.be/1K37tYAqINA
YouTube video
YouTube
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Mags
Mags@magsonthemoon·
@WilliamShatner Captain, would you ever buy GameStop shares and join the revolution? 🫡
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SmallCapKing - aka “Bob”
SmallCapKing - aka “Bob”@SmallCapBob2·
Just added another 10,000 shares of $GME In Cohen I Trust
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Ryan Cohen
Ryan Cohen@ryancohen·
The Hollow Men American capitalism is rotting from the head down. We have replaced the "Owner-Operator"—the risk-taker-with a new, parasitic class of corporate bureaucrat: The Risk-Free Insider. By "Insider," I am not referring to a specific title. I am referring to the entire administrative state that has captured the modern corporation. This includes the Directors who exist solely to collect fees, the Executives who exist solely to collect bonuses, and the Managers who exist solely to hire consultants. These are the hollow men of the boardroom. They are masters of PowerPoint. They wear the right suits. They say the right buzzwords about "governance" and "ESG." But they are mercenaries fighting a war with someone else’s ammunition. In a functioning economy, authority is tied to liability. If you make a bad decision, you lose your own money. That fear of loss is the only thing that keeps a business honest. It forces you to cut waste, obsess over the customer, and stay late to fix what is broken. Today, we have severed that link. We have rigged the game so that heads, the Insider wins; tails, the shareholder loses. If the stock goes up, the Insider collects a massive performance bonus. If the stock crashes due to their own incompetence, they are fired with a "Golden Parachute" worth tens of millions. They are gambling with the house’s money, and they never leave the table poorer than they arrived. This looting starts in the boardroom. We have normalized a "Country Club" culture where directors are selected based on social profiling rather than their ability to build a business. The modern board member is often a professional tourist—paid an average of $350,000 a year. Let’s be brutally honest about what that number represents. The average director is paid nearly five times the GDP per capita of the United States. They earn more for attending four quarterly lunches than the vast majority of Americans earn in five years of hard labor. And for what? Most of these directors are "over-boarded," sitting on three or four boards simultaneously. They treat directorships as a gig economy for the elite. They fly in, rubber-stamp a compensation package they didn't read, and fly out. They collect checks from companies they do not understand, do not use, and certainly do not love. They are not there to ask hard questions. They are there to be collegial. They are there to protect the other Insiders. And what happens when these boards hire executives who also have no personal capital at risk? We get the Delegation Economy. When a Risk-Free Insider faces a crisis—bloated expenses, a broken supply chain, or a stale product—they do not roll up their sleeves. They hire a consultant. They pay a strategy firm millions of shareholder dollars to produce a 100-page deck telling them what they already know. This is not management. It is intellectual money laundering. They use shareholder capital to buy an insurance policy for their own careers. If the plan fails, they can blame the consultants. They delegate the work because they are terrified of the responsibility. They would rather preside over a slow, comfortable decline than risk a bold mistake. While American Insiders are busy optimizing their severance packages, our global competitors are optimizing their products. They are not slowed down by bureaucracy. They are not waiting for a slide deck. They are outworking us. If we continue to fill our C-suites with administrators instead of operators, we will lose our edge. We will see iconic American franchises hollowed out by fees, managed for the benefit of the Insiders, while the true owners—the shareholders—are left holding the bag. The time for polite governance is over. If we want to save the American economy from mediocrity, we must demand a return to the "Owner’s Mentality." We need leaders who treat shareholder capital with the same reverence they treat their own savings. The era of the Risk-Free Insider must end.
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