Ville AroS
3.7K posts

Ville AroS
@VilleAroS
From 🇫🇮. Currently in 🇿🇼. *What are you afraid of losing, when nothing in the world actually belongs to you?*
Helsinki/Harare Katılım Ağustos 2012
971 Takip Edilen466 Takipçiler

@TheProfInvestor You also said S&P will hit 6k in the next six months...1🤔
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So let me say this:
AI bubble is not even half filled yet
Robots will be here to stay
The Unemployment rate is going to soar
Self driving cars will be the future
S&P 500 will hit 10k in the next 12 months
Bitcoin will be at 200k in next 18 months
Government & Billionaires doesnt care for people
all of this is happening and will continue.
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@vtchakarova @TassPapanagn Totally finnish - quite typival finnish singing actually - but the guy is half something more tropical
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@bosdovja92 Yep total garbage. That guy is a cruise ship singer and the song is a banal pizzeria background music ...
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Who the fuck in the ‘professional jury’ looked at Italy and thought ‘yep, best of the night’? Fuck all the way off #eurovision
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@benoitz @dougboneparth Executed this strategy flawlessly in last month 🤣
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@dougboneparth The winning strategy:
- Buy the top
- Panic sell at -50%
- Rotate into another stock at ATH
DM for more investing tips
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Think of what Putin did during this war.
Took 20 percent of Ukrainian territory
Killed 500,000 Ukrainian men
Sent a unified multi-religious, multi-ethnic army to fight for the Russian federation
Russian economy did not collapse under sanctions
Sent 500,000 Ukrainian women into the brothels of Europe
Stared down the US and EU
BBC News (World)@BBCWorld
Putin says he thinks Ukraine conflict 'coming to an end' bbc.in/42qvkh3
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Foliohatut voi jättää kaapin perukoille. Hammersin hylätty maali oli oikea tuomio. Pablo piti selvästi Rayaa kädestä kiinni. Se on täysin eri asia kuin veskan blokkaaminen edessä seisomalla, jota Arsenal on itse hyvällä menestyksellä harrastanut. #Valioliiga
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@centregoals Whatever Arsenal players may have done in other games, this is obstruction, elbow in the face of keeper, holding his left arm, and another guy pulling the shirt of the keeper in the back
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@bla_bidza Yeah, it has some special charm and it has vic falls but it's just too expensive. I lived here now for years and my regular friends don't have the money to come here unless they single. Only those high earners can bring a family here...
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This summer, I have another three European tourists scheduled to visit Victoria Falls, six in total, including their partners. I market Zimbabwe extensively and actively promote the country alongside other businesses' conversations within the ecosystem.
Last year, I had four prospective visitors lined up, although only two eventually travelled with their partners. However, one consistent concern raised by most travellers is that Zimbabwe is perceived as considerably more expensive than destinations such as South Africa, Kenya and Tanzania.
In the end, I usually succeed in convincing them that Zimbabwe positions itself as a premium tourism destination catering to the high-end market, and that this is reflected in its pricing structure, safety and the quality of the experience on offer. There is one guy whom I rely on to back me up; he and his partner had a wonderful experience, and so he always comes up with raving feedback - ndikangoti bvunza nhingi!

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@Hieraaetus "The used to" part refers usually to colonial times and it's not popular in official speak to admit that although most people do in private...
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@Handre I lived in Egypt this time. It was a surreal feeling to wake up and hear the news. For the next months, before prices adjusted, Egypt felt dirt cheap for a foreigner with forex income...
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November 3, 2016. Central Bank Governor Tarek Amer walks into his office in Cairo and decides to cut the Egyptian pound in half. One day you could buy a dollar for 8.8 pounds, the next morning it cost you 13 pounds (and climbing fast toward 18 by year's end). Amer called this "bold reform" while Egyptian families watched their savings evaporate faster than morning mist over the Nile.
The IMF loved it, naturally. They'd been pressuring Egypt for years to stop pretending their currency was worth more than toilet paper, and President Sisi finally caved in exchange for a $12 billion bailout package. Government economists celebrated this "market-oriented adjustment" while regular Egyptians lined up at ATMs that dispensed worthless paper. Import prices doubled overnight, inflation hit 30%, and anyone who'd saved money in pounds got financially murdered.
You can trace this mess back to decades of currency controls, subsidies, and the classic government move of printing money to fund everything from bread subsidies to military adventures. Egyptian authorities had been burning through foreign reserves trying to defend an artificial exchange rate that made Venezuelan price controls look sophisticated. When reality finally hit, they declared the disaster a victory and blamed external factors.
The playbook never changes. Turkey's doing the same dance right now, Argentina perfected it decades ago, and you'll see it again somewhere else within five years. Politicians create the distortions, central bankers "fix" them with shock therapy, and ordinary people pay the bill while international institutions applaud the "structural reforms."
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Ville AroS retweetledi

@AmosAhola Ei tällaista kyllä saisi tapahtua. Tuossa on helposti elämä pilalla pienemmästäkin
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