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nfteej.eth
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nfteej.eth
@TeejFromWCC
Drummer | Co-Owner - Woodcraft & Carving, LLC on Facebook | Always trying to improve and progress.
USA Katılım Ekim 2010
1.8K Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
nfteej.eth retweetledi
nfteej.eth retweetledi

The day has come.
Megatio officially starts now.
Whitelist application is open: megatioeth.com

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nfteej.eth retweetledi
nfteej.eth retweetledi
nfteej.eth retweetledi

one of the main arguments ye was making in his bi-polar rants against Jews was that they control everything including finance, media and black music artists.
Sorry but doesn’t him loosing endorsements, having his assets frozen, being banned from travelling and having concerts cancelled reinforce the perception that they do indeed control everything?
ATP@ATP_RAP
The Central Jewish council has requested that Ye's concert in Arnhem, Netherlands be cancelled following his ban from entering the UK to perform at wireless.
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nfteej.eth retweetledi
nfteej.eth retweetledi

aye man i been staying quiet for a while out of respect to let the lil homey handle his own, but i’ll beat everybody ass in there
Kakashi@kkashi_yt
Punch gets rejected for a hug and goes back to hug the plushie
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nfteej.eth retweetledi

A 44-year longitudinal study from Denmark has found no evidence that long-term cannabis use accelerates age-related cognitive decline—in fact, it may even be associated with slightly less decline.
Published in Brain and Behavior (2024), the research followed 5,162 Danish men from early adulthood (mean age ~20, via military conscription intelligence testing) to late midlife (mean age ~64), spanning an average of 44 years. Cognitive function was reassessed using the same intelligence test, revealing an overall mean decline of about 6.2 IQ points across the group.
Key findings:
- About 39.3% of participants reported using cannabis at least once.
- Men with any history of cannabis use showed less cognitive decline than non-users—specifically, 1.3 IQ points less in fully adjusted models (controlling for factors like education, lifestyle, smoking, alcohol use, other drug history, and psychiatric diagnoses).
- The difference was modest (roughly 7% of a standard deviation) and may not be clinically meaningful, but it directly contradicts fears of accelerated brain aging from cannabis.
- Neither the age of first use nor the number of years of frequent use significantly influenced later-life cognitive trajectories.
Researchers emphasize that cannabis users in the cohort often had higher baseline IQs and education levels—factors tied to greater "cognitive reserve" that could buffer against decline. While the study relied on self-reported cannabis history and was limited to men, it stands as one of the longest and largest longitudinal examinations of this question, providing robust evidence against the idea that past cannabis use inherently harms long-term mental sharpness.
These results challenge decades of public health messaging and align with mixed prior findings on cannabis and cognition, shifting focus toward individual differences rather than blanket risks.
[Høeg, K. M., Christensen, T. W., Mortensen, E. L., & Osler, M. (2024). "Cannabis Use and Age-Related Changes in Cognitive Function From Early Adulthood to Late Midlife in 5162 Danish Men." Brain and Behavior, 14(11), e70136. DOI: 10.1002/brb3.70136]

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nfteej.eth retweetledi
nfteej.eth retweetledi

Survival’s tough, but a little festive cheer never hurts. When you're next back in Speranza, take a peek in your inbox to grab 1,000 Raider Tokens for free, as a little gift from us to you 🎁
Deck yourself out in some new colors, and wrap up warm on your next raid!
And now, a holiday message from the ARC Raiders Executive Producer - arcraiders.com/news/1000-free…

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@slingoorio with everyone flexing PnL screenshots on here, people skip the risk management/trade smol step and go right to full porting w/ a 1 sol account. Gotta learn to survive to stay in the game. If you don’t, you can easily miss opportunities. Trade smart!
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i was down over 50k and then 100k on nfts probably (obviously making money and losing money along the way) and i had a day job to fund the addiction ofc.
i kept going.
i went to my coinbase account and went to "all time" and it was -$156,000 after 2 years.
i never actually knew how much i was on-ramping bc i would only do a few grand per month.
but it essentially was taking all of my extra funds but it eventually paid off. you will learn.
play with less at a time. you dont have to hit the jackpot right now, you just need to learn how to win more often than you lose, and learn RISK MANAGEMENT.
TheBlackSheep@GoldenWhallah
@slingoorio @Pumpfun @slingoorio im down 26k on memes , should i quit or keep going? i honestly do not know what to do
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In Defense of Exponentials
I used to tell founders, the reaction you are going to get to your launch is not hate, it’s indifference. By default, nobody cares about your new chain.
I have to stop telling them that now. Monad just launched this week, and I’ve never seen so much hate about a blockchain that just launched. I’ve been investing into crypto professionally for 7+ years now. Before 2023, almost every chain I’ve ever seen that launched was mostly met with enthusiasm or indifference.
But now, new chains are born into a chorus of hate. The amount of haters I’ve seen for projects like Monad, Tempo, MegaETH—before they even hit mainnet—is a genuinely new phenomenon.
I’ve been trying to diagnose: why is this happening now, and what does it mean about the psychology of this market?
The Cure is Worse than the Disease
Forewarning: this is going to be the vaguest blockchain valuation post you ever read. I don’t have any fancy metrics or charts to sell you on. Instead, I’ll be arguing against the zeitgeist of Crypto Twitter, which for the last couple of years, I’ve been constantly on the opposite side of.
In 2024, I felt like what I was arguing against was financial nihilism. Financial nihilism is the belief that none of these assets matter, it’s all memes at the end of the day, and everything we’ve built is inherently worthless.
Thankfully, that’s no longer the vibe. We have broken out of that spell.
But the zeitgeist now is what I’d call financial cynicism: OK, maybe some of this stuff has value, maybe it’s not all memes, but it’s grossly overvalued and it’s only a matter of time before Wall Street finds that out. Not that all chains are worthless. But these things are all maybe worth 1/5th-1/10th of what they’re currently trading at (have you seen these PE ratios?), and so you’d better pray like hell Wall Street doesn’t call us on our bluff, because once they do it’s all getting wiped out.
You’ve got many bullish analysts now trying to conjure up optimistic L1 valuation models, inflating PE ratios, gross margins, DCFs, trying to fight against this mood.
Late last year, Solana very proudly embraced REV as a metric that could finally justify their valuation. They proudly announced: we—and only we—are no longer bluffing to Wall Street!
And, of course, almost immediately after REV was embraced, it fell off a cliff (though $SOL, tellingly, did better than REV did).
Not that there’s anything wrong with REV. REV is a very clever metric. But the point of this post is not metric selection.
Then came the launch of Hyperliquid. A DEX that had real revenue and buybacks and PE multiples. And the chorus said—look, look I told you! Finally, for the first time ever, a token that has some real profits and a proper PE multiple. (Nevermind BNB, we don’t talk about that.) Hyperliquid will eat everything because obviously Ethereum and Solana don’t make any real money, we can stop pretending to value them now.
Hyperliquid, Pump, Sky, these buyback-heavy tokens are all great. But the market always had the ability to invest into exchanges. You could always buy Coinbase, or BNB, or whatever. We own $HYPE, and I agree that it’s a fantastic product.
But that’s not why people were investing in ETH and SOL. The fact that L1s don't have exchange-like profit margins is not why people were buying them—if they wanted that, they could’ve bought Coinbase stock.
So if I’m not critiquing blockchain financial metrics, maybe you think this post is going to be chiding the sinfulness of the token-industrial complex.
Obviously, everyone has lost money on tokens in the last year, VCs included. Alts are down bad this year. And so the other half of the zeitgeist on CT is arguing about who's to blame. Who’s become greedy? Are the VCs greedy? Is Wintermute greedy? Is Binance greedy? Are the farmers greedy? Are the founders greedy?
The answer, of course, is the same as it’s ever been.
Everyone is greedy. Everyone. The VCs, Wintermute, the farmers, Binance, the KOLs, they're all greedy, and you are greedy too. But it doesn't matter. Because no functioning market has ever required anyone to act against their self-interest. If we're right about crypto, we can all be greedy and the investments will still work out. Trying to analyze a market that has gone down by figuring out “who’s greedy” is going to be about as fruitful as commissioning witch trials. I guarantee you, nobody just started being greedy in 2025.
So this, too, is not what I’m going to be writing about.
Many people want me to write a post about why $MON should be valued at X or $MEGA at Y. I’m not interested in writing this post, or advocating that you buy anything in particular. In fact, you probably shouldn’t buy any of them if you don’t already believe in them.
Will any new challenger chain win? Who knows. But if it has a material chance of winning, it's going to be priced on that basis. If Ethereum is worth $300B or Solana is worth $80B, a project that has a 1-5% chance of becoming the next Ethereum or Solana will be priced according to those probabilities.
Somehow CT is scandalized by this, but it’s no different than Biotech. A drug that has less than a 10% chance of curing Alzheimer's is priced by the market as worth billions of dollars, even if 90% chance it won’t pass stage 3 trials and will go to 0. That's how the math works—and turns out, markets are pretty good at doing math. Binary outcomes are priced on probabilities, not on run rates or moral turpitude. It’s the “shut up and calculate” school of valuation.
I really don’t think that’s an interesting question to write about. “5% chance to win? No way, that’s clearly a 10% chance!” Markets, not articles, are the best way to assess that for any individual token.
So here’s what I am going to write about: CT doesn't seem to believe anymore that chains are valuable.
I don’t think this is because they don’t believe new chains can win market share. We just saw Solana dominate market share after emerging from the ashes less than 2 years ago. It’s not easy, but of course it’s possible.
It’s more that people have come to believe that even if a new chain wins, there’s no prize worth winning. If $ETH is just a meme, if it’ll never generate real revenue, then even if you win, you won’t be worth $300B. The contest is not worth winning, because these valuations are all bunk and it’ll all come crashing down before you go to claim your prize.
Being optimistic about chain valuations has become passé. Not that nobody is optimistic—obviously there must be optimists out there. For every seller there’s a buyer, and as much as CT cool kids love to drag L1s, people are comfortable buying SOL at $140, ETH at $3000.
But there’s a perception now that all the smartest people are over buying smart contract chains. Smart people know the jig is up. If not now, then soon. The only people buying here are suckers—Uber drivers, Tom Lee, and KOLs who say stuff like “trillions.” And maybe the US Treasury. But not the smart money.
This is bullshit. I don’t believe it, and you shouldn’t either.
So I felt like I had to write a smart person’s manifesto on why general purpose chains are valuable. This post is not about Monad or MegaETH. It’s really in defense of ETH and SOL. Because if you believe ETH and SOL are valuable, the rest is straight downstream.
Defending ETH and SOL valuations is generally not my job as a VC, but fuck it, if nobody else is willing to do it, then I’ll write it.
Feeling the Exponential
My partner Bo experienced the Chinese Internet boom first-hand as a VC. I’ve heard how “crypto is like the Internet” so many times now that it doesn’t even register for me anymore. But when I hear his stories, it always reminds me how costly it is to be wrong about these things.
A story he often tells is about when all the early e-commerce VCs (it was a small group back then) got together for coffee in the early 2000s. They debated: how big is the market for e-commerce going to be?
Is it going to be mostly electronics (maybe only techies will use PCs)? Could it ever work for women (perhaps they’re too tactile)? What about food (maybe impossible to manage perishables)? These were deeply important questions for early VCs to decide what to invest in and what prices to pay.
The answer, of course, was that literally every single one of them was devastatingly wrong. E-commerce would sell everything, and the target audience was the whole fucking world. But nobody at the time actually believed it. And even if they did, it would be too absurd to say out loud.
You just had to wait long enough for the exponential to show you. Even among the believers, very few thought e-commerce would become as big as it became. And those few who did, almost all of them became billionaires from just not selling. Every other VC—as Bo tells me, since he was one of them—sold too early.
It has become passé in crypto to believe in the exponential.
I believe in the crypto exponential. Because I’ve lived it.
When I started in crypto, nobody used this stuff. It was tiny and broken and awful. TVL on-chain was in the millions. We invested into the first generation of DeFi, MakerDAO, Compound, 1inch, back when they were science projects. I remember playing around on EtherDelta back when DEXes traded single digit millions a day, and that was considered to be a huge success. It was complete dogshit. Now we routinely trade in the tens of billions on-chain every day. I remember believing it was crazy that Tether hit a billion dollars in issuance and was being written up in the NYT as a ponzi scheme on the brink of shutdown. Now stablecoins are over $300B and regulated by the Federal Reserve.
I believe in the exponential because I’ve lived it. I’ve seen it over and over again.
But you might respond—well, stablecoin growth might be exponential, maybe DeFi volumes are exponential, but they don’t accrue to ETH or SOL. The value doesn’t get captured by the chains.
To which I answer: you still don’t believe in the exponential.
Because the exponential’s answer is always the same: it doesn’t matter. This stuff is going to be so much bigger than it is today. And when it’s absolutely enormous, you’ll make it up on scale.
Study this chart.
This is Amazon’s P&L from 1995 to 2019. That’s 24 years. Red is revenue, gray is profit. You see that little blip on the end where the gray line goes up? That’s when, 22 years in, Amazon started actually making a profit.
Amazon was 22 years old when this little gray line of net income first peeled off of 0. Every single year before then, there were op eds and critics and short sellers claiming that Amazon was a ponzi scheme that would never make any money.
Ethereum just turned 10 years old. This is what the first 10 years of Amazon stock looked like:
10 years of chop. All along the way, Amazon was beset with doubters and non-believers. Is e-commerce a VC-subsidized charity? They’re selling underpriced cheap low-quality knick-knacks to bargain hunters, who cares? How are they ever going to make actual money, like Walmart or GE?
If you were arguing about Amazon’s P/E ratio, you were in the wrong regime. That’s the regime of linear growth. But e-commerce was not a linear trend, and so every single person for 22 years arguing about P/E ratios was devastatingly wrong. No matter what you paid, no matter when you bought, you were not bullish enough.
Because that’s what exponentials do. When it comes to truly exponential technologies, no matter how big you think it’s going to get, it just keeps getting even bigger.
This is the thing that Silicon Valley has always understood better than Wall Street. Silicon Valley was raised on exponentials, while Wall Street was raised on linearity. And over the last few years, crypto’s center of gravity has migrated from Silicon Valley to Wall Street. You can feel it.
Granted, crypto growth doesn’t look as smooth as e-commerce’s growth. It’s burstier, it goes in fits and starts. This is because crypto, being about money, is deeply tied to macro forces, and it also has more violent regulatory push and pull than e-commerce. Crypto strikes at the heart of the state—money—and so it’s more unnerving to governments than e-commerce ever was.
But the exponential is no less inevitable. It's a crude argument. But if crypto is exponential, then the crude argument is correct.
Zoom out.
Financial assets want to be free. They want to be open. They want to be interconnected. Crypto turns financial assets into file formats, makes it as easy to send a dollar or a stock as to send a PDF. Crypto makes it possible for everything to talk to everything. It makes it all 24/7, global, interconnected, and open.
That will win. Open always wins.
If there’s no other lesson I've learned from the Internet, it’s that. Incumbents will fight against it, governments will huff and puff, but eventually they will give up against the adoption, the generativeness, the sheer efficiency that this technology enables. It’s what the Internet did to every other industry. Blockchains are how that same trend will gobble up all of finance and money.
Yes—with enough time—all of it.
An old saying goes: people overestimate what can happen in two years, but they underestimate what can happen in ten.
If you believe in the exponential, if you zoom out enough, then it’s all still cheap. And it should humble you that every day, the holders outlast the sellers and naysayers. Big capital has a longer time horizon than CT swing traders might lead you to believe. Big capital has been trained through history not to fade big technologies. You know, the big gushy story that originally got you to buy $ETH or $SOL? Big capital believes that story and hasn't stopped.
So what exactly am I arguing?
I am arguing that applying P/E ratios to smart contract chains (the “revenue meta,” as it’s now called), is giving up on the exponential. It means you have consigned this industry to the regime of linear growth. It means you believe 30 million DAUs on-chain and <1% of M2 is it. Crypto is just one of the things in the world. A sideshow. It did not win. It was not inevitable.
More than anything, I’m arguing to be a believer. Not just a believer, but a long-term believer.
I’m arguing that this exponential will be bigger than anything else you’ve been a part of in your life. That this is your e-commerce. That you will look back when you’re old and tell your kids—I was there when it all happened. Not everyone believed it was possible, that whole societies could change, that all of money and finance would be transformed by programs running on decentralized computers that we collectively owned.
But it actually happened. It changed the world.
And you were a part of it.
Disclosure: These are my own views. Dragonfly is an investor in $MON, $MEGA, $ETH, $SOL, $HYPE, $SKY among many other tokens. Dragonfly believes in the exponential. This is not investment advice, but is advice of another kind.




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