DeFi Cook

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DeFi Cook

DeFi Cook

@deficook

Legal SaaS irl | ex sports bettoor, occasional angel investoor | 0% inv. advice

Katılım Ağustos 2020
718 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
Doubting Sven
Doubting Sven@DoubtingSven·
Ich weiss provokativ: wegen der Personenfreizügigkeit sind in Crans Montana Menschen gestorben.
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Jon Chu // Khosla Ventures
If any world class German researchers want to incubate a German sovereign AI Lab, please reach out. The right team will succeed now that it's beyond clear Aleph Alpha isn't it. All of KV's sovereign lab bets have crushed. We know how to make this playbook work.
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SRF News
SRF News@srfnews·
Das Kopftuch soll gesetzlich aus dem Schulzimmer verbannt werden. Wie erleben Betroffene die Debatte? srf.ch/news/schweiz/e…
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Poloniex Exchange
Poloniex Exchange@Poloniex·
The memecoin grid is set 🏁 Only one takes the lead. Place your bets 👀📈
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DeFi Cook
DeFi Cook@deficook·
@magnushambleton that’s simply because you’re obviously quite clueless and Swiss aren’t as obviously Swiss as the Swedes are Swedish and you’re overindexing on music to prove a point.
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magnus
magnus@magnushambleton·
It wasn’t until I lived in Switzerland, a country with very similar population to Sweden but which has produced basically zero internationally famous people in any domain, that I realised how special Sweden is
puppi@skinnipupp

Why is everyone swedish

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CryptoAmsterdam
CryptoAmsterdam@damskotrades·
the world is too beautiful to keep your kids glued to screens
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Marky
Marky@markysphd·
Le fisc face à un trader DeFi en 2026 : - Donc vous avez mis de l'USDC dans un contrat qui vous a donné un token qui représente votre part d'un pool qui lui-même… - Ouais. - Bon. On dit 45% au pif, ça vous va ?
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Benoit Dubosson
Benoit Dubosson@beniduboss·
I am so tired of the “Switzerland is just evil bankers hiding elite money” narrative Banking is only about 5% of Swiss GDP Pharma is bigger, at 5.8%, fyi we account for 10.5% of global pharmaceutical exports Manufacturing is around 24% We also rank #1 in innovation world wide Oh and we also have the only real democracy in the world The issue is that the foreigners view of Switzerland and its economy is plagued by it’s image… No sorry but it isn’t just Zurich and Geneva carrying a country of cows and ski chalets where inhabitants produce chocolate and expensive watches Zurich canton, aka the state of Zurich, produces roughly 18% of Swiss GDP with about 18% of the population Geneva produces about 8% of GDP with only 5.9% of the population The reality is that the country is full of small towns with industrial and service bases that employ people locally and sustain entire regions Take Monthey, where I grew up. It’s a city of around 15,000 people, yet it holds one of the largest contiguous chemical site in Europe: 2,000 people on site daily, with names like Ciba, BASF, Huntsman, Sun Chemical, and Syngenta. For Syngenta, largest crop protection producer in the world, Monthey is a globally important production hub That site is also where the world famous Ferrari red pigment was invented That’s the real Switzerland Small places quietly making world-class things, and the system works: My father grew up on a rural farm, couldn’t get a higher education. To give my family a better life he got a job at Syngenta working night shifts as a factory worker. 20y later he still works there, but now he moved up to a coordinator role in charge of a part of manufacturing where he leads a team of 20. There aren’t many places where you can leave school at 14, spend your whole life as an employee, never invest a cent beyond your retirement savings, and still work your way from the lower class into a very comfortable middle-class life 2 months ago, I took the day off to join my dad as he picked up his Porsche Taycan 4S. Sure, it was secondhand and around 120k off sticker, but for someone who grew up waking up at 4:30 to milk cows before school, then back to work again after class, and never had a vacation until he met my mom in his mid-20s, it’s an extraordinary milestone The state covered my healthcare until I was 20, and it quite literally saved my life, I would not be here otherwise Swiss taxpayers spent roughly CHF 18 million keeping me alive, and a big part of what drives me is the desire to repay that debt by becoming a net positive for my country And yes, of course Switzerland made real moral compromises during WWII, but for the love of god consider the situation it was in Judging those choices without looking at a map is deeply unserious: by 1940 Switzerland was effectively surrounded by Axis-controlled territory, so neutrality was a survival strategy under extreme pressure, not some claim to moral purity lol. So yes, the Swiss National Bank bought gold from Nazi Germany. The real question is not whether compromises happened, but if survival ended and complicity began. It’s very easy to moralize about clean choices once the war is over and someone else had to live through the alternatives… If you are going to criticize Switzerland, do it where criticism is deserved Lastly, before calling Switzerland cowardly for neutrality, remember that Pope Julius II founded the Swiss Guard in 1506 because Swiss mercenaries were the best in the world and had a reputation for loyalty and military effectiveness. Five centuries later we are still protecting the Pope btw Next time instead of taking about our big bad banks, talk about: our factories, our labs, our medicines, our engineering, or the diplomacy, the humanitarian work and so on Oh and look at your own countries actions before having the audacity to criticize others…
Nicola Amadio@nic_amadio

Switzerland: • 16% Debt to GDP ratio • 0.2% inflation As healthy of an economy as it gets. If you had to pick an "issue", it'd be the GDP growth stagnating at ~1%. But even then: hard not to expect CH to come out as a winner of the AI & Robotics race.

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DeFi Cook
DeFi Cook@deficook·
@CyrusYari „The people are cold assholes“ lmao you are a moron
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Cyrus Yari
Cyrus Yari@CyrusYari·
what europe needs for remote work IMO: working from switzerland/bavaria/austria, the ppl are cold assholes. working from marbella, the ppl are too shallow/scammy + u deal w spanish tax & bureacracy bs. working from Ibiza the ppl are there to have a good time, energy is not work working from cyprus not enough likeminded founders there yet. i remember a while back some american bros started smthin called praxis nation (to build a new city or smthin) but never heard anything since. what we need is not smthin for crypto/dropship bros or the more laid back euro instagram type girls who are all "life coach", but: a town which is southern europe (climate) by the beach, low taxes, business friendly, AND attracts the forward-minded american types (real founders, not noisy types) because the ppl dictate the energy of the place (u don't want another laid back med place), + great infra, great fitness facilities, great organic produce, etc. if someone really wants to start the next praxis that's what they'd solve for. all with intention & by design. i know more americans are also interested in europe than ever before. but it all starts with the ppl.
Nicola Amadio@nic_amadio

How accurate from 1 to 10?

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DeFi Cook
DeFi Cook@deficook·
@Jonas_ALA @GMX_IO thanks for asking. It simply feels and looks unnecessarily dated. It‘s the best perp protocol out there in many dimensions and it should *feel that way as well.
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GMX 🫐
GMX 🫐@GMX_IO·
The Referrals page of the GMX dApp has been redesigned, and now offers users additional value: The Traders tab now displays your active code and all earned discounts, while the Affiliates tab clearly breaks down your referred volume, traders, and earned rewards over time. 1/3 ⬇️
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Igor@hansa.chat
[email protected]@igorhansachat·
@deficook How much would I have left from the average single salary if I would live as a family of 3 on 100m2 on the edge of Zurich? Pennys
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Igor@hansa.chat
[email protected]@igorhansachat·
I moved to Germany from something that is often called the 3rd world. I've been in Germany many times before that and was truly amazed. First years were good. Pink glasses and so on. I am not absolutely happy atm but already got rooted pretty hard. okay I may think about moving again. In the end I am still the foreigner here. But I simply don't see where is THAT better that it WORTH to move. Often simply because of the effort to learn the new language (e.g. Spain - kinda same taxes and policies but at least it is cheaper and MUCH WARMER) or the effort for the immigration (e.g. US is crazy effort - will never even try). I see many options where I may live temporarily, e.g. Thailand is really amazing imo but this is not a country where I want to raise a kid. So far I am hoping that something will get better in Germany, despite the clear decline it is still on a very good foundation.
Luckforest@lubinho_k

I left Germany 7 years ago. And the longer I'm gone, the clearer I see it: this country is heading for a wall. Germany is in serious trouble. Economically and politically. The economic part can probably be fixed if people really commit. The political part, I'm not so sure. Most Germans don't see it because they're too close to it. If you want to understand Germany, you need to understand one thing: World War II left a trauma in our DNA that still shapes how we think, judge, and react. It's a living operating system. Germans, especially the educated elite, see the world through a moral lens first, a pragmatic lens second. But it makes honest conversation about real problems almost impossible. In 2015, over 800,000 refugees came to Germany in a single year. Merkel said "Wir schaffen das" (we can do this), and the media ran with it like a PR campaign. Professors were cited saying refugees would lift the economy. BILD, the biggest tabloid, printed "Refugees welcome." Thousands of Germans showed up at train stations, applauding as refugees arrived. I remember watching this thinking: something else is going on here. Of course many people were genuinely warm. But for a lot of them, it felt like a chance to finally show the world (and themselves) that Germany can be the good guys too. Decades of guilt, and here was a moment to redeem it. Emotional, collective, and not up for debate. That's the part that broke things. Millions of Germans had real concerns. Not because they were Nazis. Because they were worried about capacity, integration, safety, money. But those concerns were not represented in the media. Not in politics. Not anywhere. If you raised them, you were brushed aside or associated with the far right. And German media, dominated by progressive, academic city people shaped by that same WW2 guilt, did PR for the government instead of holding it accountable. This is when Germany lost millions of voters to the AfD. The AfD caught every person who felt unheard. Yes, there are extremists in that party. But there are also a lot of normal people who just wanted someone to acknowledge their concerns. Instead of engaging with that, the political establishment built a "firewall." Whatever the AfD proposes gets rejected by all other parties. No discussion. Just: they're far right, so we don't talk to them. This makes the political climate toxic. If the AfD says the sky is blue, the other parties have to disagree. Whatever they propose, you have to be against it, otherwise you're one of them. Here's what bothers me the most: the AfD has never governed. Not once. All the problems Germany has right now were created by the parties in power for the last 30 years. Insane bureaucracy. A pension system so broken it needs tax money to survive. Housing so expensive normal people can't afford it, and so many regulations developers can't build their way out. In Cologne, you can't build higher than the cathedral. That's an actual rule. I live in Bangkok, skyscrapers everywhere, room for people to live. Germany can't do that because there's always a rule preventing it. But instead of taking accountability, the old parties and media point at the AfD and say: those are the real troublemakers. Easier than looking in the mirror. The CDU, which used to be the people's party, can't coalition with the AfD without being destroyed by the left. So it's forced into coalitions with parties that don't represent what CDU voters actually want. A political system that's totally gridlocked. I don't think the AfD will solve any of these problems. They're populists. But the way the rest of Germany is acting, the denial, the finger-pointing, the refusal to have an honest conversation, that won't help either. It'll only make things worse.

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Igor@hansa.chat
[email protected]@igorhansachat·
@deficook Not really imo. It has everything paywalled. Like you can't do anything because everything is too expensive. Starting from kindergartens
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DeFi Cook
DeFi Cook@deficook·
@Kazuya_888 @redhairshanks86 it’s not that bad. From Zurich you’re on the local hill within 20m, in sctual mountains within 40 and it’s sunny there when it’s not snowing. Completely different than, say, most of central/Eastern Europe.
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Kazuya
Kazuya@Kazuya_888·
Thanks, all helpful. Yeah I loved Zurich as a city, but just the gray for 6 months is the only negative I see against it, everything else is a major + Spent a lot of time around the world and Switzerland seems like one of the last few places with high trust society and a great overall lifestyle
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