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Luna Pop

Luna Pop

@datkinsemt

Life’s always pushing us to keep moving, never giving us much of a break

Australia Katılım Mart 2009
265 Takip Edilen18 Takipçiler
Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
Working EMS
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@Vivek4real_ Based on a real public figure’s opinion, but packaged as a certain price surge prediction to amplify market sentiment rather than provide rigorous analysis
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Vivek Sen
Vivek Sen@Vivek4real_·
🇺🇸 TOM LEE JUST SAID BITCOIN IS STILL GOING TO $250,000 WITHIN THE NEXT 233 DAYS 🤯 HE KNOWS WHAT’S COMING 🚀
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@PaulineHansonOz This is a viewpoint rooted in genuine concerns, but packaged in a highly politicised narrative. It has emotional resonance, but lacks structural analysis and causal rigour
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Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺
Pauline Hanson 🇦🇺@PaulineHansonOz·
This Labor government is economically incompetent. They are stealing from the younger generation, putting $1 trillion in debt on the national credit card. This amounts to $36,000 for every Australian, and every young person will have to pay this back and more. They're forcing young Australians to compete against mass migration for a rental, while putting home ownership completely out of reach. I won't take lectures on "intergenerational equity" from this Labor government. They abandoned hope for this country and all of its people long ago.
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@tompanos Policy changes are always debatable, but the bigger issue is consistency and predictability. Investors, business owners, and entrepreneurs can adapt to almost any rules — they just need to know the rules won’t suddenly change halfway through the game
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TOM PANOS
TOM PANOS@tompanos·
This isn’t just about property. Proposed CGT and negative gearing changes could impact investors, business owners, entrepreneurs, and start-ups across Australia. Australians were told these changes weren’t coming, then the rules changed. It’s about trust. #CGT
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Luna Pop retweetledi
Elonogy
Elonogy@ElonogyX·
Elon Musk: "In the next 6 to 12 months, we’ll be doing our first implants for vision, where even if somebody is completely blind, we can write directly to the visual cortex." "Long term, you would have very high resolution and be able to see multispectral wavelengths... you could see in infrared, ultraviolet, radar. It's like a superpower situation."
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Tom ✝️ Restorationist & Investor
I'm just a humble boy from a council estate who started putting away 500 a month 3 years ago. Not because I got a massive wage rise. I've been in the same job 4 years. Because I made lifestyle adjustments. It doesn't sound a lot. But if you invest it, it soon adds up. Just past 23k. My first milestone on the way to a million is 25. I hope to be there soon
Tom ✝️ Restorationist & Investor tweet media
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@DailyLoud Many people think it’s crazy to turn down A$50 million, but for families who have lived there for a long time, that land is more than just an asset — it’s part of their life and identity
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Daily Loud
Daily Loud@DailyLoud·
This Australian family has spent decades refusing to sell their 5-acre property, even as developers built an entire suburb around them, reportedly turning down offers over $50 million. Full Article: realestate.com.au/news/aussie-fa…
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Coin Bureau
Coin Bureau@coinbureau·
🇦🇺 AUSTRALIA TO HIT CRYPTO INVESTORS WITH HIGHER TAXES Australia is preparing to scrap the 50% capital gains tax discount for assets held over 12 months and replace it with an inflation-based system. That means investors would only deduct inflation from their gains, instead of automatically getting half their profits tax-free. For long-term crypto holders, cashing out gains could mean much higher tax bills.
Coin Bureau tweet mediaCoin Bureau tweet media
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@CryptoTice_ The CLARITY Act is worth watching, but it won’t transform the industry overnight. Its impact depends on: the final bill, implementation rules, SEC/CFTC authority, and the U.S. regulatory stance. Short term, it may move market sentiment. Long term, it could reshape the industry
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Crypto Tice
Crypto Tice@CryptoTice_·
BREAKING: May 14. 10:30 AM EST. The CLARITY Act goes to a vote. Official. Scheduled. Confirmed. The most important crypto bill in history. Has a date and a time. $20,000,000,000,000 waiting on the sidelines. May 14. 10:30 AM EST. Set your alarm. Be positioned before that clock hits zero.
Crypto Tice tweet media
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@DrewPavlou At its core, this is a long-standing ethical and legal debate
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Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
It costs the Australian tax payer approximately $1000 a day to house Bondi terrorist Naveed Akram in maximum security prison I seriously reckon we should just hang him He murdered 15 people so he doesn't deserve to live
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet media
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@CryptoPulseGLBL Coinbase’s strategy is increasingly resembling a “crypto version of Nasdaq + a digital bank,” rather than just a crypto exchange
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CryptoPulse
CryptoPulse@CryptoPulseGLBL·
🌏CryptoPulse Research:#Hot Topic Analysis⭐️⭐️⭐️ Coinbase Obtains Australian License, Accelerating its Stock and Payment Business Expansion On April 8th, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase announced that it had successfully obtained an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). This license covers retail derivatives authorization, making Coinbase the first cryptocurrency exchange to receive such approval directly from the regulator. Based on this significant development, Coinbase stated that it will officially expand its business in the Australian market, further developing its stock trading and payment services, and promoting its diversified financial services.🚨🚨🚨 This license acquisition represents a key breakthrough for Coinbase in terms of compliance, not only strengthening its legal operating capabilities in the Australian market but also laying the foundation for expanding its traditional financial business. By introducing stock trading and payment services, the platform is expected to attract more mainstream users, increase user stickiness, and enhance its competitiveness in the global fintech sector. Furthermore, this move sends a positive signal, indicating that regulators are gradually accepting compliant cryptocurrency companies into the broader financial system.🔥🔥🔥 As the global cryptocurrency industry gradually becomes more standardized, major exchanges are accelerating the acquisition of financial licenses in various countries to achieve localized and compliant operations. As a key financial market in the Asia-Pacific region, Australia boasts a relatively clear regulatory environment and an open attitude towards innovative financial businesses. Coinbase's move is not only an important step in its global expansion strategy but also reflects the deepening integration of the crypto industry with traditional finance.🔔🔔🔔 🔡 Subscribe:Major Crypto Events ⭐ t.me/CryptoPulseCom…
CryptoPulse tweet media
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@JosephMooneyMP The ETS was more of an accelerator than the sole cause.A more accurate way to put it would be: The New Zealand government chose not to continue bearing the high economic and carbon costs of maintaining domestic refining capacity. Rather than:The government directly killed
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Joseph Mooney MP
Joseph Mooney MP@JosephMooneyMP·
It’s been interesting hearing Opposition Leader Chris Hipkins saying that the closure of the Marsden Point refinery was a “private business decision.” While strictly correct, it omits significant government policies and decisions which made that “private decision” the only realistic one. I haven’t seen any media commentary on this. A May 2021 letter from the Refinery’s CEO to the then Minister of Finance described Marsden Point as one of “the safest and most reliable refineries in the region.” Notwithstanding that, the letter said it was considering a major change to its business to significantly reduce its Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions, and become an import only terminal. It noted that the Minister had directed ACC to accelerate moves to divest from fossil fuels. The letter noted that ACC held around 10% of Refining NZ’s shares, and as significant investments would be required to change it into an import only terminal, it asked the Minister to distinguish investment in Refining NZ from other fossil fuel investments given its critical infrastructure role. But why was Refining NZ looking at shutting down its refinery despite being one of the “safest and most reliable in the region”? A 2019 Ministry for the Environment Regulatory Impact Statement lays it out plainly. Refining NZ’s Negotiated Greenhouse Agreement - protecting it from full ETS exposure since 2003 - expired 31 December 2022. Under government policy settings it would then receive zero industrial allocation and face the full cost of its emissions. The ministry’s own analysis said this would “nearly halve the profitability of the refining business” - at 2019 prices of just $18 per NZU, it would produce an annual ETS bill of ~$20 million. The RIS recorded Refining NZ’s profits over five years: ∙2012: $31M ∙2013: -$5M (a loss) ∙2014: $10M ∙2015: $151M ∙2016: $47M Average that out and you get roughly $47M per year (with an exceptional 2015 year). The ministry itself said full ETS exposure would nearly halve profitability even at $18/unit. NZU prices didn’t stay at $18 which was readily foreseeable. The NZU price hit a record high of $88.50/unit in late 2022. Applied to the Refinery’s Scope 1 emissions of 1 to 1.3 million tonnes per year, that’s an annual ETS liability of $88.5M to $115M, and that’s before Scope 2 costs on purchased electricity and gas. On a business losing money in bad years, a potential $100M+ annual carbon bill isn’t a headwind. It’s a death sentence. The ministry knew this in 2019, and suggested options the government could take in terms of emissions liabilities to keep the refinery in operation, warning: “The closure of Refining NZ, which employs approximately 300 people, would have a significant negative impact on the Northland economy and would leave New Zealand dependent on the supply of refined petroleum products sourced from overseas refineries that may choose to prioritise supply to other nations ahead of New Zealand at times of shortages.” Read the Ministry’s RIS for yourself (that specific comment is at paragraph 25) 👇 environment.govt.nz/assets/Publica…
Joseph Mooney MP tweet media
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Takamae
Takamae@TakamaeM33463·
@coinbureau GET FUKED. Fuking greedy cnts. Your money going to an immigrant. Vote one nation.
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Sam Scott
Sam Scott@SamScot76395724·
@coinbureau We have a commie government running out of money
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Jeremy
Jeremy@Jeremy514262102·
@coinbureau Our government needs to fund all the immigrants houses so they take from anyone trying to get ahead. Australia is a 💩 🕳️ now unfortunately
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@CryptoMichNL BTC holding above the 21-day moving average only means the uptrend is still intact; it doesn’t mean altcoins are necessarily safe. The real opportunity for altcoins usually comes when BTC is not crashing or pumping aggressively, but instead consolidating steadily at higher levels
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Michaël van de Poppe
Michaël van de Poppe@CryptoMichNL·
The question is: How long does #Bitcoin continue to go up, to give #Altcoins space to continue to run? Well, as long as the daily 21-MA acts beneath the current price, there's more legroom to go. I do think that we'll have more upside and that we might be testing the $90K region, and during this stage, altcoins to outperform Bitcoin, selectively. However, bear in mind that there will always be a correction taking place that could erase all profits.
Michaël van de Poppe tweet media
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Luna Pop
Luna Pop@datkinsemt·
@RobertD11359976 If coal-fired power is not fully phased out until 2049, achieving net zero by 2050 is still theoretically possible, but only if emissions reductions in other sectors, energy storage, transmission, gas backup, carbon offsets, or carbon capture are all delivered on time
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Electroverse
Electroverse@Electroversenet·
AEMO has just blown out the cost of Australia's Net Zero grid to $128 billion and now says coal must run until 2049 to keep the lights on. Wind forecasts for 2030 have been slashed from 42.6 GW to 26 GW, with offshore wind now admitted to cost 40% more and deliver far less power. Transmission, the backbone of Net Zero, has been slashed from 10,000 km to 6,000 km after cancellations and cost blowouts of up to 100%. Coal remains indispensable, says AEMO, and the country's fleet must run 11 years longer than previously promised to stop blackouts and cover stalled renewable build-out. Reliability risks are also rising. Aging coal is being driven past design limits and a failure at any major plant could destabilize the grid. Gas becomes the strategic backup when solar collapses at dusk and during multi-day wind lulls - the exact conditions that already triggered emergency warnings this year. Every pillar of the plan: wind, transmission, timelines, costs, has been revised, delayed or downsized. Net Zero didn't replace coal. It extended it to 2049 (and likely far beyond).
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