
NoBullCrypto
510 posts

NoBullCrypto
@NoBullCryptoBen
No bells, no whistles, NO HYPE. https://t.co/QXALD3Wv4M I encourage ANYONE to debate me. Keep it factual and I'll concede if you talk the truth.



Ripple pays its bills by dumping 300 MILLION XRP on its own holders When XRP launched in 2012, 100 BILLION tokens were created at once, all at genesis The founders kept 20 billion for themselves and gave the other 80 billion to the company In December 2017, Ripple locked 55 billion XRP into smart contracts so they couldn't just dump the supply whenever they wanted That escrow releases 1 billion XRP every single month on the 1st, automatically, with zero human intervention required Ripple typically relocks 70 to 80% back into new escrow contracts and they keep the rest, which is roughly 200 to 300 million XRP, to fund the entire company At XRP's current price, 300 million tokens is $400 million, every single month Ripple's CEO Brad Garlinghouse told the Financial Times directly that the company "would not be profitable or cash flow positive without selling XRP." The CEO himself admitted the entire company runs on dumping its own token Ripple paid MoneyGram over 61 million dollars in "market development fees" to use XRP MoneyGram then told reporters: "We sell XRP as soon as we receive it because we don't hold any XRP" Ripple pays partners in XRP, the partners dump it on the market immediately, and Ripple announces it as adoption The SEC called this out in their own complaint They wrote that MoneyGram "became yet another conduit for Ripple's unregistered XRP sales into the market, with Ripple receiving the added benefit that it could tout its inorganic XRP use and trading volume" The co founder who left, Jed McCaleb, kept 9 billion XRP on his way out, spent 8 years dumping from a wallet the community named 'Tacostand,' and walked away with 3.2 billion dollars. Ripple had to sue him just to slow the sales down The bull case for the last decade has been "banks are coming" Bank of America, Santander, PNC, American Express, and JPMorgan all partnered with Ripple. None of them actually use XRP They use Ripple's messaging software without ever touching the token Ripple still holds around 39 billion XRP in escrow, roughly 39% of total supply Every holder of XRP is being slowly diluted by the company itself, by design, on a monthly schedule that's written into the blockchain XRP is now down 6 consecutive months A big reason is that every month, a new batch of supply hits the market from the same wallet, and everyone knows it's coming The company that fought the SEC for 5 years and won is funded almost entirely by printing its own token and selling it to the people who believe in it








@BankXRP I'm going to work on credibility first, but I wish you luck on this. patternrecogglobal.com This is my data vis. Hopefully it can help someone somewhere visualise what's coming. Had to repost, as the link didn't work.

I'm looking to collaborate with builders who want to join forces. • YouTube creators • Content/Research: Credible writers, bloggers, • Sharp strategists & growth experts • Credible analysts & finance thought leaders • Finance/Investments: Industry professionals, investors, and analysts Interested? If you have a proven track record, I want to hear from you. Please DM me with: A brief background on who you are and your experience. Why you believe our visions align. Links to your best work (YouTube, research, or past projects). Looking for serious, like-minded people ready to build something that lasts. Let’s grow together.




I’ve been in crypto since 2018. Made 6 figures. But if I had to start again from $0 in 2026… I’d do it COMPLETELY differently. Here are 10 lessons beginners need to hear before buying their first coin 🧵👇 1/ Stop trying to get rich fast. Crypto rewards patience more than hype. Most people lose money because they want overnight success. 2/ Learn Bitcoin first. Before meme coins. Before “next 100x gems.” Before random tips. If you don’t understand Bitcoin, you don’t understand crypto. 3/ Not every coin is an investment. Some are: experiments trends speculation scams Treat them differently. 4/ Security matters more than profits. One bad click. One fake link. One leaked seed phrase. And it’s game over. Protect your wallet like your bank account. 5/ Never buy because someone posted 🚀 emojis. If you can’t explain WHY you’re buying it… Don’t buy it. 6/ Bull markets make everyone look smart. Real skill shows in bad markets: patience discipline risk control emotional control 7/ Small wins compound. You don’t need to turn $500 into $500k. You need consistency. 8/ The best beginners ask questions. The worst beginners pretend they know everything. Stay coachable. 9/ Build a system: learn weekly track mistakes manage risk stay calm Systems beat emotions. 10/ Crypto can change your life. But only if you treat it seriously. Not like a casino. If I were new today, I’d focus on education first, profits second. If this helped, follow @mooncommanderx I’m sharing beginner-friendly crypto lessons from real experience since 2018.








Ripple is centralised, hands down, they are built for institutions, they are not naive. What they built is the most compliant platform in existence and marketed it as such. Unlike many other chains, ETH for example, that misled people into believing they are something they are not. Ripple chose the higher ground by speaking truth instead of nonsense, got chastised by the government and no one stood in solidarity. Now we get "decentralisation is a spectrum" and everyone else is mature, while riding, Ripple's coattails through regulatory hell. Also side note. In the age of institutions and compliance, it's not a bad move to be %100 clear. It's a ticket into the inner circles. @Ripple


The Arbitrum Security Council has taken emergency action to freeze the 30,766 ETH being held in the address on Arbitrum One that is connected to the KelpDAO exploit. The Security Council acted with input from law enforcement as to the exploiter’s identity, and, at all times, weighed its commitment to the security and integrity of the Arbitrum community without impacting any Arbitrum users or applications. After significant technical diligence and deliberation, the Security Council identified and executed a technical approach to move funds to safety without affecting any other chain state or Arbitrum users. As of April 20 11:26pm ET the funds have been successfully transferred to an intermediary frozen wallet. They are no longer accessible to the address that originally held the funds, and can only be moved by further action by Arbitrum governance, which will be coordinated with relevant parties.





