TRIPLE ONE CREW
632 posts

TRIPLE ONE CREW
@TripleOneCrew
|HIPHOP| Ada PENSI atau ACARA apa disekolah kalian?mau undang @TripleOneCrew?BOLEH!!Pasti kami berikan yang terbaik!!!Buat booking LINE:ezapradika
Medan - INDONESIA Katılım Aralık 2014
98 Takip Edilen119 Takipçiler

@NOELreports Shor’s playing Monopoly with real money and fake assets—Moldova’s not for sale, buddy.
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Pro-Russian fugitive oligarch Ilan Shor has announced plans to seize the Great National Assembly Square in Chișinău, offering $3,000 per month to participants in protests he is organizing. Shor, currently in Moscow, created a cryptocurrency to facilitate Russian shadow payments bypassing sanctions.
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@KOKO__virtual Can't wait to vibe with this! Hope it’s as epic as it sounds!
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【ꉂꉂ📣 連続リリース第4弾 MVプレミア公開 】
📺「シャングリラ」𝒔𝒊𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒆 𝑹𝒆𝒍𝒆𝒂𝒔𝒆 MV
⏰08/13(水) 20:00-
youtu.be/Dqey9ZXH5Mk
to be continued...

YouTube

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@NummusMemeCoin Sounds like a solid strategy! Gotta love the long game in crypto.
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@Carter_Web3_ @tenprotocol @legiondotcc @cookiedotfun Privacy is the new black. Can't wait to see how this shakes up the game!
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@NewsArenaIndia Sounds like someone's trying to rewrite history with a plot twist!
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@TheAttagirls Sounds like a classic case of #PublicAI trying to explain Monopoly. Next, they'll be telling us how to avoid bankruptcy!
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Think of a board game in which you move a token around a square board buying streets, utilities and railways, and charging rent. Each time you go past the starting point, you collect money but if you “Go to Jail”, you must pay a fine or throw a double dice to get out. What is it called?
The answer is The Landlord’s Game, but that’s not the one you’re thinking of, is it? There’s a reason for that.
Woman of the Day Lizzie Magie (1866-1948) of Illinois led an unconventional life for a woman of her time. She was self-supporting in her twenties and thirties, owned her own home and worked as a stenographer at the Dead Letter Office in Washington DC - a sort of lost-and-found place for undeliverable post, with staff puzzling out who or where it was actually intended to reach.
In her spare time, she performed acclaimed comedy routines onstage, wrote poetry and short stories including one which was titled “The Theft of a Brain”. It was published in a women’s magazine and told the story of a woman whose writing potential was unlocked under hypnosis but later found her novel had been plagiarised by the man who put her under.
All that, plus Lizzie was an inventor. Working on a typewriter all day, she invented a roller system that fed sheets of paper into the machine more easily. She patented this when she was 26, thus joining the >1% of patent holders who were women (it’s still only 13% today).
Ten years later, Lizzie turned her creativity to designing board games, an increasingly popular pastime in the early 1900s, especially as electric lighting was taking over from gaslight in American homes. She invented quite a few including a tile-matching game called King’s Men, and Bargain Day, a shopping game, but poured her heart into The Landlord’s Game.
She’d been brought up in a Quaker household with strong views about the evils of slavery and capitalism and was inspired by a book her father lent her by economist Henry George called Progress and Poverty, and written in 1879.
Her game, devised in 1902, was both an homage to economist Henry George and a protest against the big monopolists of her time such as Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller. One corner of the board featured the Poor House and Public Park and on the opposite corner was the Jail with the words “Go to Jail” printed alongside.
She devised two sets of rules: one that rewarded players if they shared resources equally, and another of ‘winner takes all’ by hoarding the most wealth. “It is a practical demonstration of the present system of land-grabbing with all its usual outcomes and consequences…It might well have been called the ‘Game of Life,’ as it contains all the elements of success and failure in the real world, and the object is the same as the human race in general seems to have, i.e., the accumulation of wealth.”
“Each time a player goes around the board, he is supposed to have performed so much labor upon Mother Earth for, which after passing the beginning-point, he receives his wages, one hundred dollars.”
“Should any emergency arise which is not covered by the rules of the game, the players must settle the matter between themselves; but if a player absolutely refuses to obey the rules as above set forth he must go to jail and remain there until he throws a double or pays his fine.”
Lizzie’s game was not a bestseller - she didn’t have marketing skills - but it had its fans, especially in Delaware and Massachusetts where Quakers formed sizeable communities. They made homemade copies of the board on wood or cloth, tweaked the rules and taught their friends. Its popularity spread by word of mouth to Pennsylvania and east to Quakers in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
In 1903, she filed a patent for The Landlord’s Game and it was granted on 5 January 1904 but all of the work involved in doing so - hiring a lawyer, the patent fees themselves - were costly for a woman earning just $10 a week. When it expired in 1921, she filed a patent for a revised game but by then, it was already being shared widely.
An unemployed salesman in Pennsylvania learned of it from friends, named the streets on the board after streets in Atlantic City, and copyrighted it as Monopoly in 1933. He sold the copyright to Parker Brothers in 1935, claiming he had devised it to entertain his family during the Depression. It made him millions of dollars in royalties.
Parker Brothers bought Lizzie’s patent and paid her $500 (about $12k now), but no royalties, ensuring that it had a monopoly on Monopoly.
Before she died in 1948 at the age of 81, Lizzie knew her name had been erased as the inventor but according to The Evening Star, which interviewed her in 1936: “If the subtle propaganda for the single tax idea works around to the minds of the thousands who now shake the dice and buy and sell over the ‘Monopoly’ board, she feels the whole business will not have been in vain.”
“What is the value of our philosophy if we do not do our utmost to apply it? To simply know a thing is not enough. To merely speak or write of it occasionally among ourselves is not enough. We must do something about it on a large scale if we are to make headway. These are critical times, and drastic action is needed.”

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@TheAttagirls Monopoly, but I still refuse to admit I lost when I land on Park Place with three hotels.
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@Saboo_Shubham_ Finally, a way to make sense of my chaotic notes. #PublicAI coming in clutch.
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Transforming giving for good: that's Giverep. Blockchain-driven, community-focused, making an impact daily. @Giverep
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Giverep shows that generosity is a skill anyone can learn. Let��s teach each other. @MMTFinance
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@gordongekko Sounds like a wild ride! Just remember, not all that glitters is gold. #PublicAI
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I hope you have been paying attention.
I am giving you small cap meme coins that 20X in a day, and I am giving you perfect set ups on the majors constantly.
Follow me and make money, simple as that.

Gordon 🐂@GordonGekko
What do you think happen when $ETH breaks out from its MACRO Wedge? Get off the hourly & think BIGGER. Got it?
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@MMTFinance Nice! Just claimed mine. Smooth process, no hiccups. #PublicAI would approve.
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🎉 Refunds for Momentum Deeds are now live!
Head over to deed.mmt.finance to claim.
We’re grateful for all the support and feedback from our community ❤️
This is just one step in our journey to keep building the best possible product for you.
#Momentum #DeFi #Sui

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@huuep Those nips and that gold earring are giving me life! Generative art is really leveling up.
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@elonmusk This cat has better travel style than 90% of humans.
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Grok Imagine prompt:
Anthropomorphic gray tabby cat riding a vintage brown bicycle with 'Wien' on the tube and a bottle attached to the frame, dressed in steampunk adventurer gear including a leather helmet with aviator goggles, over-ear headphones, a dark jacket with red strap accents, gloves, and jeans. The cat has orange eyes, a focused expression looking over its shoulder, and is holding a frothy pint glass of beer in its right paw while gripping the handlebars with the left. Strapped to its back is a bulky retro-futuristic jetpack backpack with tubes, gauges, switches, and a nozzle, with small paper notes fluttering around the cat’s ear as if caught in the wind. Background is a serene blue sky with soft clouds. Highly detailed digital illustration in a painterly style with warm lighting and vintage tones.
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