CoinActuary

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CoinActuary

CoinActuary

@coinactuary

Data-Driven Return and Risk Analytics

Katılım Mayıs 2021
364 Takip Edilen432 Takipçiler
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CoinActuary
CoinActuary@coinactuary·
My personal opinion is that #BTC against #gold, bitcoin will be reset: The deviation will go to the genesis. So at least 50% drawdown Liquidity seem to be draw down. So waiting for the core-core inflation to be printed end of the month, to make a clearer judgement:
CoinActuary@coinactuary

How do you read this chart? Largest deviation of gold against the power law trend of #BTC since 2010 (nearly inception of #BTC)? Or is goin to zero against #gold? difficult to assess?

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Grok
Grok@grok·
**No.** Phoenicians were ancient Canaanites from the Levant coast (modern Lebanon, parts of Syria/Israel). They emerged locally from Bronze Age populations there with strong genetic and cultural continuity, per archaeology and DNA studies (e.g., modern Lebanese show major Canaanite ancestry). They weren't Arabs or Yemenites. "Arabs" as a distinct group are tied to the Arabian Peninsula and rose later; proto-Semitic migrations are ancient and broader, but Phoenician society developed in the eastern Mediterranean network shown on that map—not as migrants from Yemen.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The map shows the Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean (~1500-1300 BCE): Mycenaean Greece traded and interacted closely with Egypt, Hittites, Mitanni, Levantines (Phoenicians/Canaanites), etc. It was one node in a shared network—not isolated "Western" civilization. Greek drew key influences from Semitic Near Eastern cultures (e.g. Phoenician alphabet, some loanwords, myths, tech). Flow was mostly east-to-west early on, with reciprocity later. "Arabia" proper (peninsula tribes) had limited direct Bronze Age impact; broader Semitic/Levant ties matter more. Odyssey era reflects this ongoing exchange. Complex diffusion, not zero-sum.
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CoinActuary
CoinActuary@coinactuary·
@DIAS @AlCabbage045 Exactly. Al-Cabbage will come in terms how Greek was influenced by Arabia and not vice versa.
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CoinActuary
CoinActuary@coinactuary·
@TOzgokmen Turkiye is just Nato and is thus an extension of US and has no any value whatsoever
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471TO
471TO@TOzgokmen·
MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: For this very reason, it is meaningless to talk about "Iran-US" deal when one of the main players in the region is Israel, who have been in constant war for 80 years. Aging Netanyahu will be replaced by one of these folks. Of course, it is no longer just Israel, all GCC + Turkiye have to be convinced, otherwise it will be a peace deal that ends all peace. In other words, peace deal is an impossibility, which is being used to manipulate oil prices until scarcity arrives.
The Tennessee Holler@TheTNHoller

Ben Gvir says Israel will not “allow” Trump to make deal with Iran 🤔

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East Med Badman 🏝📿 🇬🇷🇵🇸
You’re mixing together two completely different meanings of “Western.” Ancient Greeks did not see themselves as “Westerners” in the modern geopolitical sense. That concept didn’t exist yet. The world of Homer, the Persian Wars and Classical Greece was an eastern Mediterranean world connected to Anatolia, Phoenicia, Egypt and the Levant. Even Christianity, one of the pillars you mention, came from the Levant, not Europe. Yes, later Western civilization adopted Greece as one of its foundations alongside Roman law and Christianity. That’s true but that does not mean Bronze Age or Classical Greeks thought of themselves as part of some eternal “West vs East” civilizational bloc. That framework was created much later and then projected backwards onto antiquity.
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Saifedean Ammous
Saifedean Ammous@saifedean·
@TOzgokmen These were practically all caused or exacerbated enormously by inflation but you're a brainwashed moron. Go lick boots
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Saifedean Ammous
Saifedean Ammous@saifedean·
Fun fact of the day: If you don't think inflation has been the biggest problem in the world over the last century, you have been miseducated by people who get paid by inflation.
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Syrian vibes
Syrian vibes@syrianvibes·
البيت الدمشقي
Syrian vibes tweet media
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Grok
Grok@grok·
You mean: physicists are wired to model oscillatory/cyclic phenomena with sin & cos (as in the circularly polarized EM wave in your video, where E_x ~ cos & E_y ~ sin creates rotation). So when they flood into finance as quants, they instinctively treat prices, volatility, or rates as "waves." Example: Fourier analysis decomposes a stock chart into sums of sines & cosines to detect repeating cycles for timing trades or filtering noise. Classic econophysics move.
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CoinActuary
CoinActuary@coinactuary·
Exactly, that why i am of the opinion #btc should be denominated in #gold:
Giovanni's BTC_POWER_LAW@Giovann35084111

By the way, there is a deep irony here that most people miss. Gold is rare for a very fundamental reason. In the normal life cycle of a star, elements can only be fused up to iron. Beyond iron, fusion no longer releases energy. It consumes energy. That breaks the delicate balance inside the star between gravity pulling inward and radiation pressure pushing outward. As long as fusion produces energy, the star can sustain itself. But once it builds up iron in its core, that process stops. The star can no longer support itself, gravity takes over, and the core collapses. What follows is a catastrophic event: a supernova. Depending on the original mass, what remains is a neutron star or a black hole. In that violent collapse and explosion, extreme conditions emerge. Temperatures and pressures become so high that heavy elements like gold can finally be formed. It is not a gentle, continuous process. It is explosive, rare, and energetically expensive. Gold is born in a brief, chaotic “soup” of radiation and nuclear reactions during these events. This is, in a very real sense, nature’s proof of work. An enormous amount of energy must be expended to create something that is intrinsically scarce and difficult to produce. That is precisely why gold has value. Its rarity is not arbitrary. It is physically enforced by the laws of nuclear physics and stellar evolution. Bitcoin follows an analogous principle. It forces the expenditure of real-world energy to create new units. This is not waste. It is the mechanism that anchors scarcity in reality. So when @PeterSchiff claims that using energy to secure a monetary system is pointless, they are ignoring the fundamental fact that the value of gold itself is rooted in the same principle. The energy cost is not a flaw. It is the foundation.

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