Dr. BTC

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Dr. BTC

Dr. BTC

@DRBTCMD

Surgery, bitcoin, baseball, and freedom

Katılım Nisan 2021
1.1K Takip Edilen893 Takipçiler
Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@FoxNews Shockingly dumb and random comparison
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Fox News
Fox News@FoxNews·
NEW: Judge apologizes in court to WHCA Dinner shooting suspect Cole Allen. Magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui said that he was “fascinated and disturbed” by Allen's treatment in jail. Allen was placed on suicide watch when he was first imprisoned. Prosecutors argued that since Allen told investigators he did not expect to survive the alleged attack, he could be a danger to himself. But an incredulous Faruqui wasn't convinced by that argument, drawing comparisons between Allen and defendants arrested for rioting at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “To me, it’s extremely disturbing that he was put in five-point restraints, a person with no criminal history. It’s troubling. I never heard of one Jan. 6 defendant who was put in five-point restraints or in a safe cell. If the only way to keep him safe is the most punitive thing, that’s a problem.” “At a minimum, I should be apologizing to him. We are obligated to make sure he’s taken care of. Mr. Allen, I’m sorry that things have not been the way they are supposed to.”
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LovelyRobyn
LovelyRobyn@JonesJones48712·
@RossKneeDeep Coons. They slammed the door on the rest of us as soon as they “made it.” Never forget!
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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@RossKneeDeep You can’t vote? It’s pretty easy I’m sure even you could figure it out
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New York Post
New York Post@nypost·
Kamala Harris endorses Karen Bass for LA Mayor claiming she's stamped out crime and homelessness trib.al/pBrjgWh
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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@Antoniofilm107 @teixeiramark25 Its not that complicated, tax paying citizens dont want open air drug markets and homeless tents littering where they work and live. I know you’re trying to appear like a data driven intellectual, but you are missing plain observations that five year olds understand intuitively
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Antonio De La Cruz
Antonio De La Cruz@Antoniofilm107·
@teixeiramark25 So let me ask you this: Which states have a higher standard of living? Now, which states have lower life expectancy? Look at the bottom five: Mississippi: ~71–73 years West Virginia: ~71–72 years Alabama: ~72 years Louisiana: ~72 years Kentucky: ~72–74 years
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Mark Teixeira
Mark Teixeira@teixeiramark25·
I had the pleasure traveling this country for fourteen years during my career in Major League Baseball. Early on, I loved visiting Seattle and would spend hours before every game just walking the streets and exploring—it was my favorite road trip. Years of liberal policies ruined this city, by the end of my career (2016), I was saddened to see what it had become. It’s only gotten worse since then—Democratic leadership is destructive, not just in Seattle but cities all over this great nation. VOTE RED in November and stop the socialist takeover of America. foxnews.com/media/seattle-…
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Jennifer Siebel Newsom
Jennifer Siebel Newsom@JenSiebelNewsom·
My family and I watched the 60 Minutes interview with Donald Trump and Norah O’Donnell last night, and we were shocked. Seeing a president speak to a woman journalist with that level of contempt — and a clear allergy to facts — is disturbing, though at this point not unexpected given his pattern of behavior. But that is the problem. Because when that level of disrespect from the highest office in the country repeats itself, it starts to trickle down into our culture and define what power looks like, shaping how boys and plenty of men see women and girls and what they come to accept as normal behavior.
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Chuck Schumer
Chuck Schumer@SenSchumer·
The Trump administration is waging a vindictive campaign against the organizations that safeguard our democracy.   Weaponizing the DOJ to indict long-standing watchdogs is a message: if you defend voting rights, fight white supremacy, or protect civil rights, you’re next.   This is an assault on the institutions that make freedom real for everyone. They will not succeed.
The New York Times@nytimes

Breaking News: The Justice Department charged the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights group, with financial crimes, accusing the organization of fraud. nyti.ms/4trxcSs

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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@BitcoinMagazine This is so funny all the handwringing for 2.7% its gona be fine bro
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Bitcoin Magazine
Bitcoin Magazine@BitcoinMagazine·
JUST IN: $12 trillion Charles Schwab releases educational video on Bitcoin and risk management 👀 They're launching direct BTC trading "in the coming weeks" 🚀
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HYPEconomist | Theo Arc
HYPEconomist | Theo Arc@HYPEconomist·
all i want is 7% APY on my stablecoins without the constant fear of losing everything to a hack is that asking too much?
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Pretty (not) Lieb
Pretty (not) Lieb@prettylieb·
@TheCatholicEngr Why have kids if they are just gonna spend the majority of their time with someone else? Just pay me to have another.
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The Catholic Engineer
The Catholic Engineer@TheCatholicEngr·
Just spoke to a chemical engineer who has a 1 year old baby. His wife is a surgical resident. They send their baby to daycare 7:45am to 5:45pm everyday That's longer than some people's workdays 😭
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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@chonkyy69 @AltcoinDaily Probably not a good buy for you if you’re not bullish on bitcoin over a 10 year time horizon
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Chonky 💹🧲
Chonky 💹🧲@chonkyy69·
Saylor's whole business model is built upon on only one critical factor.... $BTC going up, I mean that's it. $BTC needs to go up that's the only significant revenue generating mechanism. If it doesn't go up, it will collapse. Saylor's been smart he opted selling equity rather than margin loans raise funds. So basically you don't have no obligation to pay anything back when it comes to $MSTR. $STRC is the biggest issue here with 11.5% crazy yield. How he plans to generate revenue? As I said before, $BTC needs to go up. or else he got few billion sin cash reserves for few years of yield but after that, nada.
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Altcoin Daily
Altcoin Daily@AltcoinDaily·
JUST IN: Coffeezilla publishes video taking on Bitcoin believer Michael Saylor & Strategy's $STRC. Coffee says Saylor's STRC preferred-stock pitch is too simple & the risks are not properly explained. "It's been compared to the iPhone. It's been compared to a Ponzi scheme." "You put in your money. They say they're going to yield about 11.5% per year. That's basically double digit returns which is just mind-blowing" "What is the problem with that? Well ultimately... the company has no obligation to pay you back. Why haven't people realized this?" "My entire problem is that they're leading people like a pied piper with this kind of ludicrous idea. Their pitch is of a money market and a bank - When that's just not what this is. This is a snowball of yield."
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Disa Sacks
Disa Sacks@SacksDisa·
When most Doctors owned their own practices ( 1980s-early 1990s ) we were responsible for being in call for our own patients all the time. Doctors in so practices arranged their own coverage if they went out of town. Small groups had their own rotation. If a patient was ill , that person called the “ answering service” who paged the physician who returned the patient’s call ,assessed whether to send the patient to Emergency Room or to direct admit the patient to one’s own service In addition to this “ on call “ for one’s own practice , we rotated hospital “ on call “ coverage for an unassigned ER patient who required admission. There was no pay for being on call . if one had an admission or consultation in the hospital , one could bill for that however one had to take all the admissions regardless of insurance or lack thereof What’s going on now since Hospitalists are the norm bears no resemblance to the practice of medicine of mere decades ago Many ppl had a doctor who knew them and admitted them every time they required admission and to take their phone calls even if they were having a problem that would not be considered emergent by today’s standards We could admit patients for “elective admission” ie to work them up as an inpatient for a serious problem that was not urgent . It was much faster and easier for the sick uncomfortable patient than having the patient schedule multiple tests themselves as an outpatient -as is done as the standard of practice today . We could even meet one of our own patients in the ER on a weekend or in the middle of the night to decide to admit or send home -bypassing the ER doctor -that was our prerogative There were no patient portals -which are truly lousy most of the time when a human being is feeling sick -there is no spontaneity , no ability for the doctor to ask pertinent questions of the patient to try to assess what needs to be done next It kicks the can down the road -while covering the medical -legal angle the Ai chat bots are easier and more responsive than patient portals Today’s practice of the once noble profession of being a physician is really quite sad Patients know it Older Docs who trained before the 80 hour resident work week started -know it Since that time the younger physicians do not know any other way than constantly “ turning over” patients from one shift to the next @DrLizaMD @DutchRojas @DrDiGiorgio @real_doc_speaks
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Kevin Pho, M.D.
Kevin Pho, M.D.@kevinmd·
You can't hold hospital privileges without taking call. Call isn't compensated. That's not a calling. That's coercion. Internal medicine physician Corinne Sundar Rao names something physicians have absorbed for decades without ever being able to articulate it cleanly: call is labor. Not a professional obligation. Not a rite of passage. Labor. And it has been either unpaid or minimally compensated for as long as it has existed. The mechanism is worth understanding. To practice what you trained to do, you need hospital privileges. To keep hospital privileges, you take call. There is no opt-out. The work is tethered, undefined, and endless. One day runs into the next. You carry a full patient load after an overnight on call and you are expected to keep going. No other profession works this way. Pilots have mandatory rest periods because fatigue at high stakes is a patient safety issue. The argument applies equally to surgeons making complex decisions after 30 hours without sleep. The hospitalist model is the clearest proof that the old system stopped working. Nobody decided philosophically that hospitalists were a good idea. The system just broke down until it had to adapt. Defined shifts replaced open-ended obligation. The word hospitalist was first coined in a 1996 New England Journal of Medicine article, and the model has been expanding ever since. The laborist model in obstetrics followed the same logic. High-volume hospitals recognized that asking one physician to manage clinic, elective surgeries, GYN, and overnight deliveries was not a sustainable structure. So they separated the labor floor from the rest of the work. Call hasn't made that transition yet across most of medicine. And the cost is becoming visible. Physicians are quietly leaving. Not dramatically. They are going part-time, shifting to direct care or concierge models, or stepping away from clinical medicine entirely. Physician compensation accounts for only 8 to 8.6% of total U.S. healthcare costs. This is not a compensation problem. It is a structural one. Call is not an infinite resource. It is labor. Labor must be compensated, defined, and protected with rest. Corinne Sundar Rao on The Podcast by KevinMD. Listen link in the first comment.
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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@BigpictureBTC Genuinely hope you’re just engagement baiting bc otherwise this represents one of the lowest IQ attempts at analysis I have seen here to date
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Derin Olenik
Derin Olenik@BigpictureBTC·
@DRBTCMD Read my reply again Doc….youre still not getting it.
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Derin Olenik
Derin Olenik@BigpictureBTC·
Strategy (MSTR) Preferred Dividend Burn Math. The Bottom Line: At its current growth rate, Strategy will exhaust its $2.25B preferred dividend reserve in 9 to 10 months. If ATM issuance continues compounding at this pace, dividend obligations will hit nearly $700 Billion in 2.5 years. Even if the $MSTR share price skyrockets back to its previous all-time high of $543, the company would still have to dilute common shareholders by nearly 400% just to pay the preferred yields. Here is the exact math using official SEC filings and live corporate dashboards. 1/ The Starting Line Feb 5, 2026: Q4 Earnings 8-K announced a $2.25B USD Reserve (effective Feb 1) to fund "2.5 years" of preferred dividends. Today is April 13, 71 days later. 2/ STRC Variable Burn STRC obligations grow dynamically via ATM issuance. •Feb 1: $3.4B Notional at 11.25% yield = $1,047,945/day. •April 13: $6.357B Notional at 11.50% yield = $2,003,142/day. •71-Day Average Cost: $1,525,543/day. Total STRC burned: $108.31M. 3/ Fixed Preferred Burn Based on Form 424B5 and Q4 filings: •STRE: ~$716.8M USD notional at 10% = $196,383/day. •STRD: $292.4M notional at 10% = $80,109/day. •STRF: $202.6M notional at 10% = $55,506/day. •STRK: $50.0M notional at 8% = $10,958/day. Total Fixed Burn ($342,956/day * 71 days): $24.35M. 4/ Remaining Cash Reserve Starting Reserve: $2,250,000,000 Less STRC Burn: -$108,310,000 Less Fixed Burn: -$24,350,000 Current Reserve: $2,117,340,000 ($2.117B). 5/ Exponential Depletion STRC grew from $3.4B to $6.357B in 71 days (86.9% absolute growth). Compound Monthly Growth Rate (CMGR): (6.357 / 3.4) ^ (30 / 71) - 1 = 30.06% monthly compounding. If 30.06% growth continues, starting with today's $71.36M monthly burn and $2.117B reserve: •Month 1: $71.3M burn ($2.04B left) •Month 4: $144.5M burn ($1.69B left) •Month 7: $305.7M burn ($933M left) •Month 9-10: Reserve exhausted. 6/ Cost to Regain 2.5-Year Runway What is the cost to refill a 30-month reserve? •Static (Stop Issuance): 30 months requires $2.14B. With $2.117B left, the deficit is $23.8M. Requires issuing 183k common shares at $130. •Dynamic (30.06% Growth Continues): The sum of 30 months of compounding dividend obligations is $699.7B ($699.4B STRC + $0.3B Fixed). Deficit: $697.6 Billion. 7/ The Price Target Illusion Strategy bulls will argue that the share price will be much higher by then, making the dilution negligible. Let's run the math on raising that $697.6 Billion deficit against a current float of roughly 333 Million outstanding shares. Here is the exact dilution required to pay the 30-month dividend bill at higher price targets: •At $130/share: 5.36 Billion shares issued (1,609% dilution) •At $200/share: 3.48 Billion shares issued (1,045% dilution) •At $300/share: 2.32 Billion shares issued (696% dilution) •At $400/share: 1.74 Billion shares issued (522% dilution) •At $500/share: 1.39 Billion shares issued (417% dilution) •At $543/share (Previous ATH): 1.28 Billion shares issued (386% dilution) Conclusion: Even in a hyper-bull scenario where MSTR reclaims its previous ATH of $543 per share, maintaining this 30% monthly ATM growth rate requires nearly quadrupling the outstanding share count just to pay the preferred dividends. If ATM issuance halts, Bitcoin accumulation stops. If issuance continues, the math dictates hyper-dilution regardless of the stock price. Unless he starts selling their BTC in which case the narrative and model collapses… It seems a vast majority of MSTR shareholders don’t understand what they’re cheering for. From a common shareholders perspective, $STRC should not be viewed as Digital Credit, but rather Digital Kamikaze….
Michael Saylor@saylor

Strategy has acquired 13,927 BTC for ~$1.00 billion at ~$71,902 per bitcoin and has achieved BTC Yield of 5.6% YTD 2026. As of 4/12/2026, we hodl 780,897 $BTC acquired for ~$59.02 billion at ~$75,577 per bitcoin. $MSTR $STRC strategy.com/press/strategy…

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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@BigpictureBTC This is all quite silly. If they have $700B in obligations, that means they put $7T of bitcoin on the balance sheet. They are no longer a 44B company. And that’s without accounting for BTC appreciation that would come with 7T of new capital packing into a 1T asset.
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Derin Olenik
Derin Olenik@BigpictureBTC·
@DRBTCMD Doctor, the whole message of the post is to show you that $700B worth of share issuance for a $44.6B company with 333M shares is not absorbable or sustainable…even half of that wouldn’t be.
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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@acnewsitics Nope the difference is you obsess over identity politics. Only a truly intellectually cucked man would look at this incredible mission and make it somehow about DEI
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Dr. BTC
Dr. BTC@DRBTCMD·
@planert41 Wake up early as possible bank 90+ mins of solo time to work out etc
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PPE
PPE@planert41·
Dads with young kids Is it normal to just feel tired and burnt out all the time? It’s like you don’t even really get the weekend to recover because it’s all just kid stuff the moment you wake up Arguably the only personal time you have is when they nap (and you’re already dead tired by that time) or the hour after they go to bed but before you pass out Just trying to figure out if I’m doing something wrong
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