Bulletdodgingsatstacker ⚡️13%⚡️80 IQ

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Bulletdodgingsatstacker ⚡️13%⚡️80 IQ

Bulletdodgingsatstacker ⚡️13%⚡️80 IQ

@SatoshiInUsAll

Creator of Bitcoin. "I don't believe we shall ever have a good money again before we take the thing out of the hands of government" ∞/21e6

Moscow, Russia Katılım Haziran 2022
1.9K Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Bulletdodgingsatstacker ⚡️13%⚡️80 IQ
I have directed my cold storage to suspend temporarily the convertibility of #bitcoin into the dollar or other reserve assets, except in amounts and conditions determined to be in the interest of sovereignty and in the best interest of our future dynasty. -Plebs
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Kashyap Sriram
Kashyap Sriram@kashyap286·
Larry @LawrenceLepard was a nice guy when he ran a gold fund. Then he pivoted to bitcoin and lost his mind. Never join a cult.
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Simple Mining
Simple Mining@simpleminingio·
We’re doing the LARGEST BITCOIN MINING GIVEAWAY OF ALL TIME S21+ hydro AND S21+ air cooled. $20,000 value. Two grand prize winners. If someone you refer wins, you also win. And if you don’t win grand prize, everyone who enters will win a bonus gift after giveaway ends (7 days from now) How to enter: 1) Follow, like, repost, comment 2) Fill out the form in the comments
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Lina Seiche
Lina Seiche@LinaSeiche·
I grew up here
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Lina Seiche
Lina Seiche@LinaSeiche·
What are must-read novels for kids anywhere between the ages of 10 and 16?
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End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
"You can burn any flag you want" 3 kids literally got charged with felonies for a few scooter marks on an LGBTQ+ mural
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Hitchslap
Hitchslap@Hitchslap1·
Low IQ people often accuse me of using a thesaurus to look up big words. They can’t imagine someone just organically hearing interesting words and absorbing them. I guess I will never live down the thesaurus gate accusations.
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yellow.🍌🍞
yellow.🍌🍞@ICOffenderII·
wait, wat? 👀
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S Tominaga (Aka Dr Craig Wright)
A tariff is a tax with a nationalist’s grin and a businessman’s noose. It parades itself as the bulwark against foreign wolves, the savior of domestic industry, the righteous cudgel of protectionism wielded in the hands of bureaucrats who have never created anything, never lifted steel or coded a single efficient function. It is the illusion of strength built on an edifice of restriction, a castle made of paperwork and duty fees, where the consumer is locked inside, paying ever more for the privilege of less. The justification is always the same: protect our own, strengthen our industry, keep the money here. A politician in a crumpled suit, backed by a union man with hands that have forgotten work, will tell you that tariffs will save the working man, protect the steel mill, keep jobs in the homeland. But the numbers betray them. A tariff is a price hike by decree. It doesn’t birth new industry—it nurses inefficiency. The consumer, the forgotten man, sees the price of his goods climb, his wages stagnate, and his choices narrow. And yet he is told that this is for his benefit. That he must pay more so that an industry that should have evolved can instead entrench itself, immune to competition, coddled by law. A tariff is the drug of the industrialist who cannot compete. It is the grant of power to those who have failed at the free market’s brutal but fair game. In an economy where tariffs rise, businesses stop striving to be better—they only need to be well-connected. The handshake of the businessman no longer extends to the customer but to the politician who signs the protectionist decree. The invisible hand, the hand that should guide the market, is shackled by bureaucracy. And what is bureaucracy but the place where efficiency goes to die, where men who cannot create dictate the terms to those who can? The local economy under tariffs becomes an ecosystem of stagnation. The domestic producer, shielded from competition, grows complacent. Why innovate when the government has ensured the foreigner cannot undercut your price? Why improve if the consumer has no alternative? The tariff is the enemy of progress, the indulgence of those who fear the crucible of competition. The local producer, now emboldened, sets prices not by the rigors of supply and demand but by the artificial constraints of government fiat. The consumer has no choice but to pay, and so he does. Or he does not, and instead, he buys less, consumes less, the economy shrinks, and the industry that was meant to be protected now finds itself withering from within. The argument is that tariffs create jobs, that they keep industry afloat, that without them, local production will vanish. But the reality is more sinister: tariffs do not protect jobs, they protect inefficiencies. A business that requires government intervention to survive is not a business at all—it is a parasite, feeding not off of competition and ingenuity, but off of legislation and coercion. And so the consumer subsidizes failure, the economy is molded not by merit but by political favor, and the industry that should have perished in the fire of innovation instead lumbers forward, bloated and archaic. And yet, there is a political genius in tariffs. A clever leader, one who understands the cynicism of his trade, knows that the average man does not follow the long arc of economic consequence. He sees only the immediate. A factory saved, a job retained, a wage not yet cut. The cost of his groceries rising? A tax here, a fee there? These are scattered burdens, felt individually, never laid at the feet of the tariff itself. The politician counts on this ignorance. He feeds it. He will tell the voter that foreign interests are the enemy, that the tariff is the weapon of sovereignty. He does not tell him that he has just traded long-term prosperity for short-term optics, that the protection of today is the stagnation of tomorrow.
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Bulletdodgingsatstacker ⚡️13%⚡️80 IQ retweetledi
Jack Mallers
Jack Mallers@jackmallers·
Gold had no premine. Corn had no premine. Aluminum had no premine. #Bitcoin had no premine. Hard money is earned, not allocated. Premined, centralized garbage isn’t strategic. I call it like I see it. This isn’t about making friends, it’s about changing the world for the better
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Gary Cardone
Gary Cardone@GaryCardone·
If you haven’t gotten this book yet you are missing out! I am already into 5 chapters,while buying btc at $83k! I will@look back in 4 years and value greatly having friends in my life like Lawrence Lepard. Buy this book, then buy btc!
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Daniel Batten
Daniel Batten@DSBatten·
Another small win for Bitcoin mining 2 organizations that I've written to have recently retracted misleading articles on Bitcoin mining; this one has revised their Bitcoin editorial policy
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Daniel Batten
Daniel Batten@DSBatten·
0/7 Waited 34 months for this moment! In March '22 I said that Bitcoin mining helps avoid expensive grid upgrades and decarbonize grids, a lot of non-Bitcoiners were skeptical Now, a Duke University Report confirms all this and more nicholasinstitute.duke.edu/sites/default/… Report TL;DR 👇
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Hitchslap
Hitchslap@Hitchslap1·
If they try hard enough, do you think it's possible for someone with a 90 IQ to get a PhD in nuclear physics?
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Bittr 🐷💰
Bittr 🐷💰@GetBittr·
Tell me you're a Bitcoiner with only 3 words
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