
Liquidationist
1.8K posts


@Tpars_boii @MicahhParsons11's response totally professional! So what if he laughed for 10 seconds he acknowledge nothing but talent out of Philly!
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WHOLE CLIP yall soft as shit Micah was addressing the HOST not Lemmon he wasn’t even looking at Lemmon… lemmon didn’t call it the greatest organization… yall goofy asf and then he gave him great advice… it’s always been fuck Philly
Micah Parsons@MicahhParsons11
You took a 10 second reel and tried to make a moment!! This is lame shi# respectfully!!
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It's possible they're using the same play book they did with gold. Higher prices, increased exports=Lower deficit. Lower Deficit=lower yields+improved liquidity conditions absent QE.
They should cap domestic US oil at 90ish and put a floor under it at around the same price internationally. Russia and the USA hold most of the cards here. This is effectively a massive LBO hostile takeover if played right.
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Here's potentially what they are hoping to achieve with the #IranWar and the fires, sabotage and destruction of over 45+ oil refineries around the world in the past few months.
Quick takeaway:
Refining capacity destruction → Supply destruction → Money printing → Excess liquidity → Massive inflation → Debt debasement (that USA/EU + others desperately need)
Longer explanation:
1. Destroy refineries/petrochemical plants
Crude oil is useless without refining into petrol/gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, LPG, petrochemical feedstock, etc. These plants take years to rebuild.
2. Fuel shortages hit transport first
Within days/weeks, trucking slows, shipping delays increase, airlines cut routes, public transport reduces service, fuel rationing and initial WFH (e.g. civil service) is imposed
3. Supply chains start failing
Fuel shortages spread to food distribution disruptions, medical supply delays, factory shutdowns, supermarket shortages, farming disruptions (tractors, fertilizers, transport). Government may start to impose emergency controls to safeguard food supply, medical and emergency services.
4. Government imposes rationing
Lockdown lite - fuel rationing for households, limits on private/non-essential driving, reduced public transport services, curfews to reduce movement.
5. Full mobility restrictions become likely
Full lockdown - If shortages persist, governments may impose WFH mandates, closure or non-essential businesses, restrictions on travel between regions, limits on operating hours, shutdown of energy intensive industries.
6. Industrial output contracts sharply
Factories, construction sites, mining, chemicals and manufacturing slow or stop due to lack of fuel and raw materials. Global production of goods drops significantly.
7. Global supply of goods shrinks
With transport restricted and factories offline, fewer goods are produced and delivered — from food and fuel to electronics, building materials and consumer products.
8. Governments roll out massive stimulus
To prevent unemployment and social instability, governments inject stimulus — wage subsidies, cash transfers, business bailouts, subsidies for food and energy.
9. Central banks print aggressively
To fund deficits and stabilize financial markets, central banks expand money supply, buy government bonds, and inject liquidity into the banking system.
10. More money enters the system while supply of goods shrink
Supply has fallen due to shutdowns and fuel shortages, but money supply increases due to stimulus and printing.
11. Too much money chasing too few goods
Demand is artificially supported by stimulus, while production remains constrained — pushing prices upward across essentials.
12. Broad-based inflation accelerates
Fuel, food, transport, housing, and manufactured goods rise in price due to persistent shortages and excess liquidity.
13. Nominal GDP rises due to inflation
Even if real production is weak, prices rise — increasing nominal wages, revenues and tax collections.
14. Government debt becomes easier to carry
Most government debt is fixed in nominal terms. Inflation reduces its real value over time.
15. Government Debt-to-GDP ratios improve through currency debasement
Rising nominal GDP and eroded real debt values reduce debt burdens — not through productivity, but through inflation.
16. Wealth destruction
Anyone holding large amounts of cash, savings accounts, fixed deposits, pension funds, or low-yield government bonds risks silent wealth destruction, as inflation steadily erodes the real value of their savings.
17. Wealth protection in inflationary cycles has traditionally started with #gold as the primary store of value, followed by #silver, resource assets, energy, and property that rise with scarcity - real assets that cannot be printed.
$TLT $SPX $SILJ $GDX $GDXJ $URA #USOIL $XLE $XME $GLD
Financelot@FinanceLancelot
Russia's Tuapse Oil Refinery has been completely destroyed by Ukraine (American) drones Probably nothing...
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All things remaining on their current trajectory, Europe has three "choices", which really aren't choices. Get their oil and LNG from Russia, get it from the USA, or get ready for a humanitarian disaster. After waging a not so proxy, proxy war on Russia they are not getting any from their norther neighbor, who's much more inclined to give it to an ally like China.
This requires no further exposition. The Europeans have a new unelected president.
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@EdKrassen If she were president we would 100% still be at war with Iran. The primary difference would be our Defense Sec. would be a 275lb transgender former psych ward patient.
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"Source of cash" (or liquidity) is just a euphemism for food, energy, and possibly armaments.
Aksel Kibar, CMT@TechCharts
Gold weakness at a time of War is surprising many. Many who do not know the dynamics of liquidity. With its high price and liquidity is now a source of cash.
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@amlivemon Not going too funny when it hits 4k.
This may not be your typical credit even/risk-off type sell-off.
Things seem to have largely inverted:
Gold down=societal instability
Gold up=new normal/stability
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@michaeljmcnair @BuBarrelBull To the extent that it matters the primary beneficiary of everything occurring is Russia.
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Energy and food are more important than gold hence the absence of the previously existing bid. It’s not necessary to over complicate things. Generally at the onset of credit events gold gets sold. The magnitude of the decline here may very well be more severe than usual due to its recent price appreciation. The absolute last thing anyone should want to see is a correction deeper than 4k because that will almost certainly mean net-importers of the aforementioned are facing shortages that will stimulate mass societal instability akin to the Arab Springs.
The longer this war drags out, which seems probable, the upside case for gold becomes more definitive for reasons that should be obvious.
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I would bet you that your "average" 160IQ guy couldn't frame a simple A-frame ranch house. If trained, they wouldn't last.
They could tell you conceptually how to do it but it stops there. Most (certainly not all!) abnormally high IQ people exist in the purely hypothetical, abstract, world of academia. In the event they are given some opportunity to exert influence over tangible things they often wreck it; such is the case in finance, economics, "public policy", medicine, etc.
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@rationalaussie No matter how smart someone is they’re not going to be able to replace centuries of specialist experience, do you think that your solution to a problem will be better than the 100 iq guy thats been solving those problems for 50 years?
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The bigger question here - and the real problem - is why does it take 5 years to become an electrician?
You're seriously gonna tell me the smartest white collar workers (soon to be unemployed) are effectively prohibited from getting employed as a lucrative tradesperson during the final period where human employment even matters, because of regulations?
It's insane.
A smart person could turbo charge this in 6 months.
The West needs fast-track trades programs.
Jason Shuman@JasonrShuman
The US needs 500,000 new electricians this decade. Apprenticeships take 5 years. Microsoft’s Brad Smith says it’s the #1 thing slowing data center expansion. The AI bottleneck isn’t chips. It’s the trades.
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@MagicCyberMoney @apugeneral And to be honest BTC is, in a sense, at least partially backed by gold via Tether. However this assumes tether is and will continue to be the dominate driving force of the formers adoption and price appreciation, which it may or may not be.
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LOL no it isn't nobody is using it to settle trade imbalances. The United States, and basically the rest of the world are currently using gold not BTC for EXACTLY that reason. In the future they might but it will be a more speculative play like El Salvadore
Let's do a thought experiment: Think about this as a nation-state with access to significant resources, and societal level liabilities, not as a retail incvestor. Crypto has a definitive place in the modern financial hemisphere, but not for ultimate settlement purposes or national savings. You are not going to put the net balance of your entire nations economic productivity into some lines of code that can be easily hacked, forked, or whatever when your adversaries could easily go out and spend a couple measly several billion on Asiacs/gpu's to decimate your wealth. This would either A) destroy BTC entirely B) eliminate its scarcity (one of its proponents favorite arguments) C) ruin its fungibility.
Stop comparing bitcoin to gold it's lame a marketing gimmick. They are two entirely different assets with that serve very different purposes.
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@Liquidationist_ @apugeneral You haven’t even made a single argument yet. The upgrade from gold to Bitcoin as a global reserve asset is obvious.
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@Warabyski @mhp_guy Why not? apparently experience isn’t require to train/educate them.
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@Liquidationist_ @mhp_guy Dude, log off.
No one is opening hvacr or pipefitting school with no experience. Chill.
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Did you know the government will pay you $10,000+ per student to run a trade school?
You don't write the courses. Just buy 'em from someone else for $500.
You don't need a campus. Online works great.
You don't need to be a tradesperson or know the lingo. You just connect the dots.
My neighbor scaled to $2.4M his first year with almost nothing in marketing. He just walked into churches and said "anyone want to go to school for free?"
There's one masonry school in all of Arizona.
One appliance repair school in all of DFW.
The demand for trades is so far ahead of supply it's almost embarrassing.
And if you already own a business? You can get paid to train your own employees through this same grant.
Then get free labor for 300 hours through a separate program.
I sat down with my neighbor @TS_Secrets (great follow BTW) to break down exactly how this works. Full episode linked in the top comment below.
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@0xplastic_ @apugeneral highlighting a grammatical error in place of a substantive refutation is wild
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@MagicCyberMoney @apugeneral "I don't understand Bitcoin so I think it's infallible."
I don't like authoritative type arguments but I've probably owned crypto longer than you.
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@Liquidationist_ @apugeneral “I don’t understand Bitcoin so this doesn’t make sense to me”
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