Marcus Mossdorf

3.3K posts

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Marcus Mossdorf

Marcus Mossdorf

@MMossdorf

IT & Business Change Professional | Dreamer | Bitcoiner

London, England Katılım Temmuz 2021
394 Takip Edilen575 Takipçiler
T J - 🇬🇧 FSD Advocate
Tesla is killing the one-time FSD purchase country by country. UK 🇬🇧owners: FSD at £99+ p/m worth it or no?
T J - 🇬🇧 FSD Advocate tweet media
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Marcus Mossdorf
Marcus Mossdorf@MMossdorf·
@tesla_jokes My money is on regulators. Not to mention in London Khan probably wants to block it (implications eventually for robotaxi impact on black cabs). Main point is this is coming and uk is behind. The data speaks for itself.
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T J - 🇬🇧 FSD Advocate
Who are we waiting for to approve FSD in the UK? 🇬🇧 Tesla Or UK regulators?
T J - 🇬🇧 FSD Advocate tweet media
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Ben Stong MD
Ben Stong MD@BenjaminStongMD·
$MSTR shareholders talk a lot about the endgame. What happens when they accumulate 1M, 2M, 5M, or how about 10M $BTC? Rightfully so, there is a concern about one entity owning “too much” of the network. We can all understand the idea that if they acquired 99% of the network, it would be silly to use BTC as the reserve store of value. Therefore we can surmise that there is a level at which it would benefit both Strategy and its shareholders to sell the network to achieve homeostasis. Could you imagine a world where @Strategy identified a target threshold of network ownership, above which they distributed shareholder dividends in BTC? A centralized distribution channel for a decentralized network. @saylor and @phongle could completely return trip the BTC network to hyperbitcoinize the world. Owning 20% of the network, while continuously smoothing out BTC distribution to the rest of the world. It would be the greatest Trojan Horse of all time!
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Saskia
Saskia@Saskiaaa_____·
I cant stop laughing 🤣 because I can totally relate! M&S is elite 💎
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pi != e
pi != e@bayes_euler·
@MMossdorf @Saskiaaa_____ Waitrose ??? Man thinks Waitrose is better than MnS 😂. Anyways Harrods is better for meat, fish and those big juicy prawns
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Marcus Mossdorf
Marcus Mossdorf@MMossdorf·
@ZynxBTC Absolutely! Once one sees through the lens so many things become ‘obvious’ or ‘aha’ deductions based on the facts
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Zynx
Zynx@ZynxBTC·
Anyone else scroll through X and see all the political discourse and instantly recognise that the solution to most of these problems is the return to sound money? Housing, cost of living, migration, corruption, wars, whatever it is you name it. All of it is caused or exacerbated by the ability of Governments to print money at will. Endless discussion on everything but the root cause. I wish the normies would get it. Fix the money, fix the world.
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Marcus Mossdorf
Marcus Mossdorf@MMossdorf·
@pirooooon3 No. If it’s not rude in your culture in your country then carry on It’s not like you’re doing it to cause a scene or be offensive. You’re just enjoying food 😀
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ぴろん🌸
ぴろん🌸@pirooooon3·
ラーメンをすすって食べたら 隣の席の外国人観光客に ジロリと見られました ここは日本なので、 日本の食べ方で食べます 私は間違っていますか? ①間違ってない ②間違っている ③その他 日本でも外国人に気を使って食事する必要ありますか 自国で肩身の狭い思いはしたくない #マナー
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Mr Anis
Mr Anis@AnisRahim14·
薬を使わずに…不安やうつ病に対する最大の武器は何でしょうか?
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Adrian Morris
Adrian Morris@_Adrian·
$BTC: Shut your dirty degenerate mouths... No one say a damn thing.
Adrian Morris tweet media
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Marcus Mossdorf
Marcus Mossdorf@MMossdorf·
@SamaHoole Love your posts! One could draw and analogy for economic migration today eg moving to more tax favourable jurisdictions or places where the upper echelon’s advantages are more accessible.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
The school textbooks tell you the settlers crossed the Atlantic for religious freedom. Some of them did, partly. What the textbooks leave out is the thing that sits in the actual letters, in the sailors' accounts, in the merchant pamphlets circulating in English ports from the 1580s onwards: a major reason people came to America was the wild game. Meat you could take. Meat nobody owned. Meat that walked into camp. For a population legally separated from the animal for five hundred years, this was the whole pitch. Consider what they were leaving. A family in a Devon cottage in 1618 eats pottage. Oats, barley, an onion, whatever greens grew near the back door. No meat in it this week. No meat in it last week. There will be meat in it on Christmas Day, God willing, if the chicken is still alive by then. The deer in the forest at the end of the lane have been the king's property under the Forest Laws since 1066. Taking one is a hanging offence. The father has never taken one. His father never took one. The institutional memory of not taking one goes back five hundred and fifty-two years. Then the stories arrive. From sailors. From ship's captains. From merchants returning through Bristol and Plymouth. The birds come in flocks that darken the sky for three days. Not an afternoon. Three days. Passenger pigeons in numbers later estimated at three to five billion in a single flock, making a sound early settlers compared to the roar of a river that refused to stop. A man with a net could take five hundred in an afternoon. The king of England had no claim on the sky over Massachusetts. The rivers, the captains said, ran so thick with salmon that the water appeared to boil. The deer walked into camp, looked at the fire, and were shot. The oysters on the Atlantic shore came the size of dinner plates, piled in reefs you could lean over the side of a boat to harvest. Turkeys weighing thirty pounds stood in clearings with the fearlessness of an animal that had never been hunted by anything on two legs. Bison herds on the plains took four hours to cross a ford. And nobody, crucially, owned any of it. The father in Devon lies awake that night thinking about the sky going dark for three days. He is also thinking about religious freedom. Theological persecution was real. The Mayflower passenger list included genuine dissenters. That was part of it. It was not, for most of them, the biggest part. The biggest part was that the animals in the captain's story belonged to nobody, and the family had been watching animals that belonged to somebody else walk past their cottage for twenty generations. Between 1620 and 1640, roughly 20,000 people made the crossing. By 1700, 250,000. By 1900, fifty million Europeans had crossed, most of them peasants from cultures where meat had been restricted for centuries, most of them arriving within the first generation at a standard of eating their grandparents would not have believed. A labourer in Pennsylvania in 1750 was eating more meat per week than an English nobleman had eaten in 1450. An Irish emigrant's grandchild in Boston in 1900, whose great-grandmother had starved in 1847 while Irish cattle were shipped past the coffin ships to English markets, was eating steak on a Tuesday and not thinking about it. At the centre of the great migration was hunger. Specifically, hunger for meat. Enforced since 1066, reinforced by Enclosure for another four hundred years, reinforced by the quiet understanding that the venison belonged to the lord and the pottage belonged to you. They crossed an ocean because, finally, you could go somewhere the deer walked into camp and the pigeons blocked out the sun and nobody had a legal claim on any of it. You could eat like a lord without owing a lord anything. They crossed an ocean for that. And having got to it, they did not give it back.
Sama Hoole tweet media
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mrredpillz jokaqarmy
mrredpillz jokaqarmy@JOKAQARMY1·
Dr Jared Cooney Horvath.
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鈴木素 ミライ服「カバロス」
@MMossdorf Thank you so much. 🙏 I’m really sorry to hear about your family member. I truly hope they wake up and begin their recovery soon. Wishing strength to you and your family during this time.
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鈴木素 ミライ服「カバロス」
脳出血で左半身麻痺。 10ヶ月経った昨日、 杖で7km歩いた。 そして今日、 人生で一番うれしい筋肉痛。 痛い。 でも、泣けるほどうれしい。 ようやく、 脳と筋肉が繋がってきた。 倒れても、終わりじゃない。 積み重ねは嘘をつかない。
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Jen k 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
I’ve gone back to drinking full fat milk, use real butter & lard because I think we were wrongly advised these products were bad for you when in fact they aren’t. Have others changed back?
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Adam Livingston
Adam Livingston@AdamBLiv·
The Strategy endgame is so far outside normal corporate finance that people still try to analyze it with the mental software they used for buybacks and treasury ladders. If Strategy reaches 3,000,000 BTC by 2030, and Bitcoin is $500,000, that is a $1.5 trillion NAV. That is bigger than Berkshire’s cash and T-bills. Bigger than Apple’s cash + marketable securities. Bigger than Alphabet’s. Bigger than Amazon’s. Bigger than Microsoft’s. In fact, it would be larger than those five combined. Berkshire: ~$373B Apple: ~$145B Alphabet: ~$127B Amazon: ~$123B Microsoft: ~$95B Combined: ~$863B So the endgame is not “Strategy becomes a company with a lot of Bitcoin.” The endgame is that Strategy becomes a capital singularity, a publicly traded black hole of pristine collateral sitting on a sovereign-scale reserve asset. People still think Saylor is buying Bitcoin. He is buying a future where one corporate balance sheet holds more hard capital than the old regime’s most liquid giants combined. This is all within a few years. STRC is the singularity. BUCKLE UP, KIDS.
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The Bitcoin Historian
The Bitcoin Historian@pete_rizzo_·
BREAKING: $11 TRILLION CHARLES SCHWAB JUST TOLD 40 MILLION INVESTORS IT'S TIME TO START ADDING #BITCOIN TO PORTFOLIOS THEY ARE RECOMMENDING UP TO 7% ALLOCATIONS THE 60/40 PORTFOLIO IS OFFICIALLY OVER 🔥
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