Densin
377 posts


Retard Coin: Buying sentiment (it’s going to 1B)
4 months of posting Retard Coin, I’ve received handful of different questions regarding, why? Why am I so hellbent on Retard Coin
1) It’s never been done correctly. Retardio tried, retardio failed. They centered the brand around a weird cult of dolls that acted out more so schizophrenic/internet goth/edgy. It was simply too hard to tap into for the normies. For it to be done right, it needs to be branded generically retarded.
Gordon Gecko tried it by bundling 90% of the token for it to crash a week later. Zero, also was not a community token
2) No ceiling - I’ve said it many times, these are the best tokens to buy. They have timer, everyday is a new opportunity at creating something funny, the internet is retarded and we play off it.
3) Retard/Retards/Retarded and the correlation with crypto. We are called retarded, we call each other retarded, and the word Retard has become a universal slang/label put onto each and every one of us, whether you believe it or not.
There is a world where a Retard Coin is evaluated above 1B. I am ready to build the ships.
Retards are in control

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@SmartNotHard1 Most people don't have a time problem, they have a priority problem
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Warren Buffett said the difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything. I ignored this for 2 years and it nearly destroyed what I was building.
I thought more was better. More projects. More platforms. More ideas running at the same time. I was doing 10 things at 60% instead of 2 things at 100%.
Every week someone pitched me an opportunity. A new venture. A collaboration. A side project. I said yes to all of it because saying no felt like leaving money on the table.
My revenue was spread across 6 income streams. None of them were growing. All of them demanded attention. I was busy every hour of the day and building nothing.
Then I found the Buffett quote. And next to it, his partner Charlie Munger saying something even sharper: "The big money is not in the buying or selling, but in the waiting."
Waiting means sitting with one thing long enough for compounding to work. You can't compound something you keep abandoning for the next shiny opportunity.
I cut 4 of the 6 income streams in one week. Terrifying. Felt like throwing money away. Focused everything on the 2 that had the most potential.
Within 3 months those 2 streams generated more than all 6 combined ever did.
Every yes is a no to something else. Every new project is attention stolen from the one that was about to break through. The most productive word in business isn't hustle. It's no.
Buffett has said no to thousands of deals worth billions. He's worth $130 billion because of the deals he didn't do, not the ones he did.
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@multiplanet1 you don’t see the years of uncertainty, only the result at the end
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Elon Musk was so broke starting his first company that he showered at a public gym and slept in the office. Read that again. The richest man on earth couldn't afford rent.
In 1995 he and his brother started a company called Zip2. They had almost no money. So they made a decision most people would be too proud to make.
They rented a cheap office and lived in it. One mattress on the floor. They slept there, worked there, and washed themselves at a YMCA a few blocks away because the office had no shower.
They had one computer. The website ran on it during the day. He coded on it at night.
They ate at a cheap fast food place because it was the only thing they could afford and it was close.
Four years later Zip2 sold for around 300 million dollars. His cut was 22 million.
The man who would later launch cars into space once couldn't afford a bedroom.
Everyone sees the empire. Almost no one sees the mattress on the office floor and the showers at the YMCA. That part is always hidden. But that part is where it actually starts.
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@themuskmind1 I remember watching it and thinking ‘we’re living in the future
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In 2018 two rockets fell out of the sky and landed at the exact same moment, side by side, like a synchronized dance. The world had never seen anything like it.
The Falcon Heavy was the most powerful operational rocket on earth at the time. It used three boosters strapped together. The question was whether the two side boosters could return and land simultaneously.
On February 6, 2018, Falcon Heavy launched on its first ever flight. The riskiest moment in rocketry is always the maiden launch. Musk publicly said it might just explode and he'd be happy if it cleared the pad.
It didn't explode.
The two side boosters separated, turned around, flew back through the atmosphere together, and touched down within seconds of each other at Cape Canaveral. Standing upright. In perfect symmetry.
The sonic booms hit the crowd like cannon fire. People wept watching two skyscrapers land in unison.
And on top of that same rocket sat his personal Tesla, headed for deep space.
It was engineering as theater. Precision as art. The most watched moment in modern spaceflight.
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@TheRationalOG People are a lot less comfortable with scrutiny when it points both directions
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Hunter Biden spent ten years carrying the word Burisma like a brand burned into his name, and then he held it up as a mirror.
For a decade it was the accusation meant to bury him. The Ukraine energy company. The board seat. The questions about what a president's son was really being paid for. It followed him through every news cycle, every hearing, every headline.
He never beat it by denying it. So he stopped trying.
When the old charge came up again, he didn't shrink. He widened the frame. He turned the lens onto the Trump family's own sprawl of business through the current White House and asked the obvious question back.
One move. The whole conversation flipped on its axis.
The thing he'd carried as shame for years became a question his accusers suddenly had to answer themselves. The corner they built around him became a corner they were standing in too.
The fastest way out of a trap is to make everyone look at who built it. Hunter learned that the accusations that follow you longest are the ones you can eventually turn around and point.
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This guy is a top holder of retard coin btw
New York Post@nypost
Baton Rouge influencer goes viral after he was arrested for break-in trib.al/NQmcVYA
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@pumamethod Understanding your habits is always better than running on autopilot.
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Your brain was never designed to handle porn. Not even close. And that mismatch is destroying a generation of men.
For 200,000 years a man might see a handful of potential partners in his entire life. His reward system was calibrated for that scarcity. Real intimacy was rare and meaningful.
Then in about 15 years, the smartphone handed every man unlimited access to thousands of novel partners on demand. Free. Instant. Endless.
Scientists call this a supernormal stimulus. An artificial trigger so much stronger than anything in nature that it hijacks a system built for a different world.
It's the same reason junk food engineered with perfect sugar and fat ratios makes a natural apple feel boring. Your wiring can't compete with something built in a lab to exploit it.
Porn is junk food for the most powerful drive you have.
The problem isn't that you're weak. The problem is you're running ancient software against a weapon engineered specifically to break it. Awareness of that is the first step to taking your wiring back.
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Hunter Biden corrected a stranger's drug paraphernalia knowledge in public, and somehow came out looking like the smartest man in the conversation.
Someone posted an AI generated image meant to bury him. A crack pipe. Proof, they thought, of the man they'd already decided he was.
He could have ignored it. Blocked them. Pretended not to see it.
Instead he examined it like a man reviewing his own résumé and found an error. "A crack pipe doesn't have that little bowl at the end," he wrote. Then he kept going. He mocked the AI for getting it wrong and demanded it make the appropriate edit.
Then he signed off by stealing Donald Trump's own catchphrase. "Thank you for your attention to this matter."
The post meant to expose him became a stage for him. The expertise he earned in the darkest years of his life became the thing that won the exchange.
Knowledge is knowledge, even the kind nobody wanted to learn. Hunter proved that the things that almost destroy you can become the things that make you untouchable, if you're willing to say them out loud first.
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@capocapuccino The shift from expendable to reusable rockets was a massive engineering leap.”
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In 2015 Elon Musk did something every expert said was physically impossible. He landed a rocket standing straight up.
For 60 years rockets were disposable. You launched them once. They fell into the ocean. You built a new one. Imagine throwing away a 747 after a single flight. That was spaceflight.
Musk said rockets should land and fly again like planes. The entire industry laughed. NASA veterans said the physics didn't allow it. A rocket coming back from space is a falling skyscraper traveling faster than sound.
On December 21, 2015, after multiple crashes, a Falcon 9 delivered its payload to orbit. Then the first stage turned around, fired its engines, and descended back through the atmosphere.
It touched down upright on a landing pad. Standing perfectly still. Intact.
The control room erupted. Grown engineers screamed and cried.
They had just made the disposable rocket obsolete.
The thing everyone called impossible became routine within a few years. That's the pattern with every breakthrough. Impossible, impossible, impossible, then normal.
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@pumamethod Whether you agree with the framing or not, discipline and focus do matter
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Nikola Tesla practiced semen retention his entire life and openly said it was the source of his genius.
He never married. Never had a known romantic relationship. And he was clear about why.
He believed the energy most men spent chasing and pursuing women could be redirected into the mind. He channeled all of it into his work.
The results are hard to argue with. He could visualize a complete machine in his head, run it for weeks mentally, spot the flaws, and only then build it. Once. Working perfectly.
He held around 300 patents. He laid the foundation for the electricity that runs the modern world.
He said great ideas came to him in floods of clarity, and that he protected that clarity by refusing to dissipate his energy.
You don't have to copy his entire life to take the lesson. The energy is real. Where you point it decides what you build.
Most men leak it daily and wonder why their mind feels foggy. He aimed all of it at one target for decades.
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@amagicmantv Steam pc
💔never won these kind of giveaways... but theres no harm in trying
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Densin retweetledi

Elon Musk said the shower is where he gets his best ideas. Not the office. Not meetings. Not whiteboards. A shower.
When asked what daily habit had the biggest impact on his thinking he didn't say meditation or journaling. He said "I do a lot of my best thinking in the shower."
It sounds trivial but the neuroscience explains why.
The shower is one of the few places in modern life where you have no screen. No input. No notifications. Just warm water and nothing to do. Your brain switches from focused mode to diffuse mode. The Default Mode Network activates. The mind starts wandering.
Mind wandering is where creative connections happen. Ideas that your focused brain would never link suddenly collide during the mental drift. The solution to a rocket engine problem connects to something you read about fluid dynamics three weeks ago. The design for a new interface connects to a shape you noticed in architecture.
Einstein played violin. Jobs took walks. Beethoven took long baths. Newton sat under trees. Musk stands in the shower.
Different settings. Same mechanism. Remove external input. Let the brain idle. Catch what surfaces.
The most important thinking doesn't happen when you're trying to think. It happens when you stop trying and give your brain the space to make connections on its own.
Most people fill every silent moment with a podcast or music or scrolling. The shower is the last remaining space where they accidentally give their brain freedom. And even that is disappearing now that people bring waterproof phones into the bathroom.
Protect your empty spaces. That's where the work actually happens.
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@hedgedguy The purchase definitely changed the trajectory of the company.
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Elon Musk spent forty four billion dollars to buy Twitter, then tried to back out of the deal, then was forced by a court to go through with it anyway.
He said he was saving free speech. What he actually did was overpay at the top, load the company with debt, and watch the value fall by an estimated two thirds in under two years. Advertisers left. Engineers left. The product got worse.
He fired most of the staff and called it efficiency. Then he spent months personally posting the exact kind of content that drove the advertisers away in the first place, and acted surprised when the revenue followed them out the door.
This is the operator founders study. The lesson everyone takes is bold conviction. The actual lesson is a man so certain he is the smartest person in every room that he torched tens of billions of dollars to prove a point.
He did not save the town square. He bought it at the peak and ran it into the ground.
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@multiplanet1 work intensity like that will always spill into personal life
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Elon Musk married the same woman twice. Divorced her twice. Then she wrote a novel about him.
Six weeks after filing for divorce from Justine, he was engaged to Talulah Riley. A 22 year old British actress from Pride and Prejudice. Justine found out by text message.
Riley later said their first meeting was awkward. "I remember thinking this guy probably didn't get to talk to young actresses a lot. He seemed quite nervous."
They married in 2010. Divorced in 2012. He filed. Then they remarried in 2013. Then divorced again in 2016. She filed the second time.
Two weddings. Two divorces. Same two people.
Between the marriages, Musk was running SpaceX and Tesla simultaneously. Sleeping on factory floors. Working 120 hour weeks. Riley said she spent much of their marriage alone while technically married to one of the most famous men on earth.
After the second divorce she wrote a novel. A story about a tech billionaire. She said it wasn't about Elon. Nobody believed her.
She also said something people overlook. Despite everything, she described him as "a good person." Not easy to live with. Not present enough. But fundamentally good.
Sometimes the people closest to difficult men see something the public doesn't. And sometimes loving someone twice and leaving twice is the most honest thing two people can do.
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Elon Musk schedules his entire day in 5 minute blocks. Every single minute is assigned a task before the day starts.
His assistant controls the calendar. Every meeting, every meal, every phone call, every bathroom break is plotted into 5 minute slots. If a meeting is scheduled for 15 minutes, it ends at 15 minutes. No exceptions.
He eats almost every meal during meetings. Not because he enjoys it. Because allocating 30 separate minutes to eating feels like waste when those minutes could serve two purposes at once.
He splits his week between companies. Monday and Thursday at SpaceX. Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday at Tesla. Weekends split between SpaceX and whatever crisis is loudest.
He doesn't choose what to work on each morning. The calendar already decided. He just moves from block to block like a machine executing code.
This sounds inhuman. It is. He's said repeatedly that his schedule is not something he'd recommend to anyone. He's described his work life as painful. He nearly broke down crying in an interview because he couldn't take a week off in 12 years.
But the system works for output. He runs 6 companies simultaneously. Tesla. SpaceX. Neuralink. The Boring Company. xAI. X. Each one would be a full time job for a normal CEO.
The lesson isn't to copy his schedule. It's to understand that the people producing 10x more output than you aren't working 10x harder. They've eliminated every minute of decision fatigue about what to do next. The calendar decides. They execute.
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