Jololo

225 posts

Jololo

Jololo

@Ptitjo12

Never sell your bitcoin and never sell your soul.

Laval, Québec Katılım Temmuz 2013
195 Takip Edilen33 Takipçiler
naiive
naiive@naiivememe·
" Sell your crypto or sing in chinese " Crypto Guys :
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Shakepay — Buy Bitcoin 🇨🇦
Everyone has a category they keep coming back to 👀 Groceries. Restaurants. Gas. It’s probably where most of your rewards come from. Where do you use your Shakepay Card most? Drop your shaketag and we’ll share your top category + % of total rewards it earned 📱
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Shakepay — Buy Bitcoin 🇨🇦
Hidden stacking stat unlocked 🔓 How long has your recurring buy been running? If you’ve had one for a while, we want to see it. Drop your shaketag and we’ll check your streak and the change in value over time 📱
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
Y'a tu encore de la place pour l'amour ?
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Shakepay — Buy Bitcoin 🇨🇦
🚨 24 Hour Contest 🚨 Do you know how many rewards you’ve earned since you joined Shakepay? Open your shaker profile, tap on the total rewards sats stacked to see the CAD value, screenshot it, then tell us what it could buy. Like + RT, reply w/ screenshot + answer + shaketag.
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
Quantum this, quantum that, but can quantum bring btc lower ? plz ty
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Bitcoin Teddy
Bitcoin Teddy@Bitcoin_Teddy·
Throwback: 19 year old Vitalik In 2012, he was just a writer for Bitcoin Magazine, traveling the world preaching decentralization Today, the network he wrote about is worth $2.43 TRILLION. He saw it before anyone else.
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
All my bots are from Hong Kong lolol
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Mr Nouvelle
Mr Nouvelle@mrsaittout·
@PaulPlamondon J’avais 22 au 1er référendum, 37 ans au 2e et j’aurai passé le 70 ans au 3e, si entre 2028-2030…..OUF
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Paul St-Pierre Plamondon
Paul St-Pierre Plamondon@PaulPlamondon·
Au Parti Québécois, nous croyons profondément à la décentralisation. Et lorsque nous rapatrierons les 90G$ d’Ottawa en faisant l’indépendance du Québec, ce ne sera pas pour centraliser davantage. Ce sera pour remettre plus de pouvoir dans les mains des régions et aussi pour redonner une plus grande liberté financière aux Québécois. René Lévesque disait d’ailleurs « qu’on ne fera pas l’indépendance pour renforcer le pouvoir des fonctionnaires à Québec ». Notre priorité c’est les PME québécoises et leur prospérité. On veut que chaque région ait les moyens de son développement. Les PME partout au Québec réalisent que le modèle actuel d'une économie gonflée aux subventions est brisé. Ce modèle, c’est celui où une poignée de personnes à Québec ont le pouvoir de choisir quelques entreprises gagnantes, en fonction de leur « pif ». Au Parti Québécois, nous avons un plan clair pour changer ce modèle brisé. Un gouvernement du PQ va remplacer le bar ouvert des subventions par un allègement fiscal pour toutes les PME québécoises, en plus de réduire massivement la paperasse et la bureaucratie inutile pour nos entreprises. Lorsqu'on donne une chance équitable à toutes nos PME de réussir sans avoir la prétention de choisir les gagnants, on est fidèle à nos racines profondes en matière de décentralisation.
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rich Lam🇨🇦👉🇺🇸💵51st
@PaulPlamondon Projet de république de 🍌1971 fin 1:1 or, système d’argent dette. Ton pays en devenir possède t’il une réserve d’or pour backer le Genius act afin de statuer le clarity act? Projet de CBDC pour ton pays avec ton pesos du Qc. Dit moi la monaie utilisé et tu verras ton fort allié.
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Paul St-Pierre Plamondon
Paul St-Pierre Plamondon@PaulPlamondon·
La crise inflationniste des années 1980 est le parfait exemple d’un Québec fortement désavantagé par la politique monétaire canadienne. En effet, il fallait freiner l’inflation galopante, mais la Banque du Canada a mis en place une politique monétaire beaucoup trop agressive pour le Québec dans les circonstances. Résultat : Un taux de chômage de 10,4% au Québec pendant que celui de l’Alberta se situait à 3,8%. L’ancien gouverneur de la Banque du Canada, John Crowe tire même la conclusion suivante: «All the same, if pressed I would have had to allow that it was conceivable that even if monetary conditions were right for the nation as a whole, they might not be right for any single region or province. In other words, there might be no region or province that was actually at the national average in terms of economic conditions a head in the refrigerator, feet in the oven kind of thing. The only systematic "cure" for that problem would have been different currencies and different central banks in different parts of the country-although cyclically responsive budgetary transfers from the federal government, such as unemployment insurance, could be a significant, if partial, offset. I did not get the impression that anyone really wanted to take the regional differentiation argument into the separate currency plane except, that is, in Quebec.»
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
@E_Duhaime Bitcoin comme monnaie légale sans taxe pour les produits usagés ?
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Eric Duhaime
Eric Duhaime@E_Duhaime·
Le gouvernement est un ogre avec un appétit insatiable. Il taxe les produits usagés. Ainsi, du linge, une voiture ou une tondeuse se retrouvent à être taxés 5, 8 ou 10 fois. À la fin, le gouvernement collecte plus de taxe sur un même produit que le coût de départ. C’est aberrant. Seul le Parti conservateur du Québec promet d’abolir les taxes sur tous les produits usages.
Eric Duhaime tweet media
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
Jololo tweet media
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
Based only from what i see on X, looks like islam, porn and gambling are taking over the world.
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Open Minded Approach
Open Minded Approach@OMApproach·
In the core–mantle decoupling theory, large waves like these are possible. This is also described in the crustal displacement theory discussed by Chan Thomas in his book, and can occur during geomagnetic excursions. The Sumerian flood of Utnapishtim, the Biblical flood of Noah, the Hindu flood of Manu, and the Greek flood of Deucalion might all describe the same event. This is cyclical!
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Coinfessions
Coinfessions@coinfessions·
Back in the day I used to participate in YouTube bitcoin giveaways by a guy who promoted this huge ponzi. Got frustrated after while called it rigged, and ended up winning. Still have the same 0.1 BTC.
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Jololo
Jololo@Ptitjo12·
Who the fuck are those boomers anyway ? Talking like a bunch of scared rats. The currencies arround the world are only depreciating in value over time while Bitcoin is only apreciating in value over time. The #1 doesn't care and talk about #2 and the rest. That's #2's job. Go buy your Sp500 or your mutual fund or wtv your favorite banker told you to buy and stfu. ty
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Max Keiser
Max Keiser@maxkeiser·
False: You’re confusing money with currency.
Steve Miller@askslim

1. Money has to be a stable medium of exchange. Bitcoin isn’t. To function as money, a unit’s purchasing power must be relatively stable. Bitcoin’s volatility (often 3–5% swings daily, sometimes 20%+ monthly) makes it useless for pricing goods or wages. No one wants to buy a $50,000 car with BTC if it might be worth $60,000 tomorrow — or $40,000. That instability pushes everyone to convert in and out of fiat, meaning Bitcoin rides on top of the money system, not within it. ⸻ 2. Money must be a unit of account. Bitcoin isn’t. Businesses and governments denominate in dollars, euros, yen — not BTC. Taxes, salaries, contracts, loans — all priced in fiat. Even crypto companies that “accept Bitcoin” instantly convert it to dollars for accounting and tax purposes. If you can’t quote prices in it, it’s not a unit of account. ⸻ 3. Money should be a widely accepted medium of payment. Bitcoin isn’t. Outside of niche online retailers, crypto exchanges, or fan communities, you can’t use Bitcoin directly. Try paying your rent, taxes, or groceries — you’ll still need fiat. That limited acceptance means it’s an asset, not currency. ⸻ 4. Money must be a relatively efficient store of value. Bitcoin’s isn’t proven. Gold has 5,000 years of track record. Bitcoin has 15 years, mostly speculative. A store of value can’t collapse 75% multiple times within a decade and still claim monetary reliability. Its price depends heavily on new demand — it’s reflexive, not intrinsic. ⸻ 5. Money has to be scalable and low-friction. Bitcoin isn’t (yet). Transaction fees and block times make everyday use impractical. Even with Lightning Network or layer-2 solutions, routing liquidity and confirmation reliability remain technical bottlenecks. Meanwhile, Visa handles ~24,000 tx/sec. Bitcoin handles ~7. ⸻ 6. Bitcoin is digital property, not money. It’s better classified as speculative digital collateral: scarce, bearer-transferable, censorship-resistant — but not stable, not sovereign, not elastic. Its strength lies in being outside the monetary system — not replacing it. ⸻ 7. Governments define legal tender — and Bitcoin isn’t it. In every major economy, “money” means what’s legally accepted for debts, taxes, and trade. No state gives Bitcoin that status (El Salvador tried, but even there, people use the dollar).

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