Jethro

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Jethro

Jethro

@Jethro1753

It takes money to buy whiskey

Katılım Eylül 2023
3K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
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TheRealBarkingPuppy
TheRealBarkingPuppy@BarkingPuppy8·
Double down 🧩 @RobinhoodApp ©️ Saw II | Lionsgate | Fair Use. ©️ Ocean’s 11 | Warner Bros. | Fair Use.
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RamezJ741
RamezJ741@RJ74120113·
Money been sent For PP coin Tomorrow 30 people will receive them Ramez will announce the names @ThePPseeedsShow
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Spurious🦋Spelunker
Spurious🦋Spelunker@SpuriousSpelunk·
BBB(Y) Estate Hearing 03/17/26 Short status update hearing today. 2 matters (on Employee claims) were already resolved and didn't need a hearing. The remaining Texas Tax Claims were adjourned to late April, and Judge Papalia approved the Plan Administrator's motion to extend the allowed period to object to claims. The two employees (20+ years tenure each) that spoke in the last hearing were brought up by the Judge, Erin Gray (the Estate) related that their claims have been resolved. When probed by Papalia, Gray said that she had worked with them personally, a settlement was reached, their claims were granted. Papalia responded "Good for them!" Judge Papalia asked Erin Gray for any rough estimate of how many higher-class claims remain to be worked through. She responded that "between the Administrative and the Priority claims we have about 900 claims to work through... We still have a ways to go but we're getting there." Remember that multiple times it has been stated from the Estate that the Company would be expected to Emerge before all claims have been resolved. So I don't believe we have to wait on anywhere near all ~900 of them Gray said are remaining.
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🦋🦋CutThroatClassy🦋🦋
🦋🦋CutThroatClassy🦋🦋@MakingtheDoh·
Heavenly Father, Comfort and protect the people of Indiana tonight amid these tornadoes. Shelter those in danger, strengthen first responders, heal the injured, and provide for all who have lost homes and hope. Bring peace, unity, and swift restoration to every community. In Your mercy we pray, Amen.🙏🏻
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Larry Cheng
Larry Cheng@larryvc·
Larry Cheng tweet media
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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Challenged by Krill
Challenged by Krill@DominosJack·
Ryan Cohen was never merely rebuilding a cellar boxed video game retailer to prominence. What’s one healthy tree in a sea of weeds. No, he’s been hard at work filling the empty shell of a bloated corporate culture with the very soul that’s been methodically stripped from the boardroom, replaced by hollow men and the lemmings who follow them off fiscal cliffs where our future goes to die. Ryan Cohen has raised the Jolly Roger and he’s looking for a few good men to join the fight that will decide the kind of world we leave to our children. Game on motherfuckers 🏴‍☠️🏴‍☠️🏴‍☠️
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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Jethro retweetledi
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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Jethro retweetledi
Eyleen
Eyleen@Eileen_927·
I did not want to do this publicly, but the truth needs to come out. Attached are the receipts, texts that I have before he moved to an encrypted app and contract with names removed of course. I was told I would be getting more than what I put in and I was going to receive it at latest end of October 2024. By November, ghosted. This started out as a 3 month investment I was told. I totally understand things happen. About 7 months later I heard he was back online. I asked privately to the person talking to him and he did reach out and say he was going to send me statements. Statements? I thought I was getting my investment back. I never received statements in the only email I’ve ever had. If he wants to reach out and explain, I am all ears.
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Ian Carroll
Ian Carroll@IanCarrollShow·
Extremely graphic and disturbing. This is what Pam Bondi and Kash Patel and Donald Trump are covering up. This happened thousands of times to thousands of innocent children. And it’s still happening. There is no moving on until these people are put away for life. Be that in a cell or a grave.
The Redheaded libertarian@TRHLofficial

Burn it all down. All of it.

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Jethro retweetledi
Sean
Sean@Cowboy202117·
Fellow Patriots, I know the fog of war is thick and disorienting, even for those of us who've been fighting in this information battlefield for nearly two decades. But hear me loud and clear: be damn careful about hitching your wagon to any one individual in the intel you consume. After years of watching closely, those key red flags become impossible to miss. The grifters, the posers, the controlled ops, they all leave trails. Don't beat yourself up if you've been fooled before. This year, the veil lifts. The picture snaps into crystal-clear focus like Old Glory waving in a stiff breeze. Keep your emotions in check, don't let anger, hope, or fear drive the truck. Stay patient when forming ironclad alliances or dropping definitive takes on hot situations. Time is the ultimate truth serum, and it's undefeated. No matter how clever they think they are (and some are slick as hell), they can't outrun the light forever. Be extra vigilant in business dealings and investments right now. Hold off until your discernment is at Olympic, red-pill, America-First levels. Above all, trust the warriors who are actually in the arena, blood, sweat, and truth on the line, not the sideline clowns yelling nonsense for clicks, views, and fiat scraps. We the People are waking up. Stay frosty, stay sharp, and keep fighting for God, Country, and Constitution. America First. Always. 🇺🇸🦅 #MAGA #TruePatriot #InformationWar #GodAndCountry"
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