When they overthrew the US government in 2020 — Trump collected evidence. When they released COVID — he collected evidence. Russian collusion, both impeachments, the assassination attempt, the indictments — he collected evidence on ALL of it.
This is the biggest sting operation the world has ever seen.
@MasalaFry69@AlpacaAurelius I dont rat right when I wake up. 2-3 hours after usually first I hit my garden, get some sunshine, do some emails then my power meal. It works, dude
fasting is a scam. skipping breakfast is associated with a:
- 24% increase in all cause mortality
- 17% higher rate of obesity
- 28% higher risk of cardiovascular disease
- 34% higher risk of cancer death
in the morning your metabolism % cortisol is the highest. this is when you should be eating.
if you want to fast, stop eating 3 hours before bed, not in the morning.
@countDeMonay789@X22Report If he didn't, the lock downs could have gone on for years,until.they did develop a vaccine.Vaccines take years to be developed properly.
@countDeMonay789@X22Report What about?? What if he would have been against that? The establishment would have had a field day. Thats why, sometimes, you go with the flow.
I’m seeing a lot of investor fatigue in $TSLA today after the earnings call yesterday. I don’t blame you guys. If trading options in $TSLA wasn’t so attractive, I would consider selling as well.
I eat a 5oz wild salmon daily. I buy wild in bulk and ends up being about 3.69 per 5 oz portion. two pieces off 100 dark chocolate, a scoop of fermented sauerkraut and a small argula salad with olive oil and a squeeze of lemon. The meal is cheap and keeps me full until dinner. you can do it too
Heart disease is the #1 killer globally.
(1 person die every 2 seconds)
Your doctor won’t help you avoid it, but I will.
Here's every food you have to eat daily:
1. Beets
$TSLA I've sold the last of my Tesla position.
Tesla has been in a weird place for me for a while. I love the product. I am enamored with how amazing FSD (in a HW4 stack) is, and how excellent the vehicle is. My wife and I aren't likely to buy any vehicle that isn't a Tesla, and I'm already thinking of that nice upgrade (3-4 years from now) for my '22 Model 3.
I also would love to own an Optimus at some point. I love the vision, the vertical integration, and wouldn't bet against Elon.
Yet the stock is not the company. Tesla has always traded at a premium, but that premium is increasing over time. That's fine if it's in anticipation of significant future acceleration, but it's questionable when that happens.
On the call, they stated, “over time, we expect our hardware-related profits to be accompanied by an acceleration of AI, software and fleet-based profits,” but were effusive on the dates. That's probably for the best, as Elon timelines usually need to be extended.
Gross margins have improved, and the P/FCF looks like it's improving, but with the CapEx they're needing to do, this ratio will soon be negative.
I don't mind buying a stock with extreme multiples, but I see easier opportunities with clearer runways for acceleration elsewhere.
Tesla hasn't been a meaningful position for me for over a year, but I'm out for now. I'll still be rooting for the company (and shareholders) even while hoping the stock comes down to more reasonable levels where the R/R fits my portfolio better.
$SOFI is one of those stocks that will make a lot of people rich in my opinion...
And im just a 22 year old college student buying as much as a can to actually benefit from my predictions
question is, are you?
I genuinely hate earnings season. It’s fine to get an update on how the business performed over the last 90 days, but it comes with so much noise. Excitement, optimism, pessimism, overreactions, and endless opinions, it’s largely a distraction.
The biggest mistake people make is treating earnings like the end game when it’s really just a temporary scorecard. A single quarter tells you almost nothing about the long term trajectory of a business. Stocks can move 10% or more overnight while the actual value of the business barely changes (both to the upside and to the downside).
Businesses don’t move in a straight line. Sometimes you get a tailwind, sometimes a headwind. Some quarters are strong, some are weak. That’s just the reality of operating in the real world.
What actually matters is free cash flow per share and the underlying economics of the business. Buybacks, dilution, reinvestment, returns on capital, etc. That’s where the real compounding happens, not whether EPS missed by a few cents.
If you owned 100% of a private business, you wouldn’t care about one quarter. You’d care about what it earns over years. Public markets just make people forget that. That’s why earnings season creates so much useless volatility.
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