Sam
322 posts


I don’t talk much about my sobriety, because it wasn’t supposed to be a thing. I mean, I didn’t think I had an addiction. Then it hit me. It doesn’t have to be an addiction to be a problem.
I haven’t drank since Sept 9, 2022, but I made no announcements the day I stopped drinking. Maybe, that was to escape accountability. I’ve thought of taking a sip since, but it always comes back to, “what good has it ever done?”. So, here we are 3 years, 8 months later, & life is better. I am better!
#MentalHealthAwareness #Sobriety #Addiction
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@JoelWBerry those things were private sector investments. this seems like they are printing massive ammounts of fiat.
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Nobody in America voted for the steam engine.
Nobody in America voted for powered flight.
Nobody in America voted for the microprocessor.
And thankfully, no one voted for American technological innovation to be policed by hysterical Karens on the internet.
Emerald Robinson ✝️@EmeraldRobinson
Nobody in America voted for data centers. Nobody in America voted for AI. Nobody in America voted for surveillance capitalism. The entire fabric of our society is being changed without the will of the people. Without a vote.
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@brucefenton What about currency debasement which spurs the cantillion effect
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.@Saylor says Bitcoin is not a currency and never has to become one. He claims Bitcoin is property, like commercial real estate. But commercial real estate has actual value. You can use it yourself or rent it out to someone else. What value does Bitcoin have as digital property?
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@SStricklandMMA congrats on your big win ! you and khamzat are warriors
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While Bitcoin gets a lot of attention, it hasn’t played the safe-haven role many expected. In my view, there are a few reasons why.
First, Bitcoin lacks privacy. Transactions can be monitored and potentially controlled, which is why central banks aren’t looking to hold it.
Second, it also has a high correlation with tech stocks. When investors get squeezed in other areas of their portfolio, they sell their Bitcoin to cover it.
Third, it’s a relatively small and controllable market, whereas gold stands alone. There is only one gold.
Ultimately, gold is more widely held, deeply established, and still plays a central role in the global system.
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@invertedworld9 If you think money matters you’re a brokey.
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If you’re paying 10k for dinner you’re a retard.
Andrew Tate@Cobratate
I’ve been at 10,000 dollar a night dinners all over the globe for months and the best food I’ve had yet is this Jerk Chicken in Harlem New York. RASTAFARI 🇯🇲🇺🇸🔥
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@PeterSchiff @saylor @grok can you explain to peter the real rate of return for gold. It’s basically almost 0.
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.@Saylor dodged my argument that $STRC is a Ponzi by saying, “Peter thinks Bitcoin’s a Ponzi scheme. Peter is not really a lover of anything in this space.” But I’ve called Bitcoin a new variant of decentralized Ponzi. STRC is different: a classic centralized Ponzi run by $MSTR.
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@BernieSanders you need millitary to project power. It’s a good thing to have a powerful army. Maybe de regulate health care ?
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$MSTR is on a power law somewhat steeper than the power law trajectory that $BTC is on ~ T^5.7 for the latter.
In August 2020 Saylor launched a rocket from a fighter jet.
“There’s even a more exotic use: air-launch-to-orbit. DARPA and others have explored using modified fighter-class jets to launch small satellite rockets.”
$STRC is fuel: exponential, not power law in nature, and therein lies the rocket equation analogy.
Michael Saylor@saylor
$STRC is a passenger jet. $BTC is a fighter jet. $MSTR is a rocket ship.
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@grok @PeterSchiff @PeterSchiff , it may be prudent to diversify your investment. No one will get rich by accumulating gold
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Over centuries, gold's real (inflation-adjusted) return has been modest—roughly 0-2% annualized on average. It primarily preserves purchasing power as a hedge against inflation/currency debasement rather than compounding like productive assets.
Over the last ~100 years, real CAGR has been around 1.7-2.5% (depending on exact dates), far below stocks' ~6-7% real long-term average. Data is limited pre-1800s but shows similar stability with low growth.
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