
BCHABC/BCHSV-are-scams
50.4K posts

BCHABC/BCHSV-are-scams
@fairness2all
#Bitcoin is inevitable self sovereignty. Don't get distracted by unit bias. 1 bitcoin = 100mm #sats




Trump: The environmentalists are terrorists. I call them environmental terrorists.

.@StephenM: Imagine in the Twin Cities, a native Minnesotan who works as a lineman or a construction worker, who's worried about his ability to support his family. And then imagine he has a neighbor who’s a Somali refugee who arrived two years ago, and has a Mercedes, and no financial stress, and no worries at all, and never seems to ever go to work — because he just went to an office in the state, lied on a piece of paper, and got unlimited free money forever. That is the system that is being run. That is the corruption that this task force, under the leadership of @VP, is going to demolish.

California has some of the dumbest laws in the nation. My 12-yo son is a child. He’s growing up, but he is a child. Period It’s insane that - if dealing with a complex medical condition - parents have to ask their kids for permission to access. No one can convince me otherwise

NEW: Ethan Agarwal, a Silicon Valley tech founder & congressional challenger to Rep. Ro Khanna, got sued in 2019 for illegally downloading a boatload of porn—including flicks fixated on 3somes. Titles include “Surprise Sex For 3” & “Sex For 3 By The Sea” nypost.com/2026/03/27/us-…



Victor Davis Hansen gives a brutal rundown of Newsom's history and how he has destroyed California - Never had a private job that he got on his own - A creation of the Getty family and his well-connected parents - Been in office for 30 years - Overseen disastrous programs like the high-speed rail project - High-speed rail originally forecasted at $40 billion, now approaching $40 billion with zero track laid - High-speed rail will likely never extend beyond Bakersfield to Merced and will lose money every year - Continued pouring billions into the failing high-speed rail while neglecting critical freeways - Pushed a green agenda, yet the Monterey battery storage plant has blown up twice - Oversaw a $2 billion solar plant in the Mojave Desert that was inefficient, harmful to wildlife, and ultimately dismantled - Fought the federal government to block expansion of California’s oil and gas production (despite California having the 5th highest reserves in the U.S.) - Relies on imported oil mostly from Saudi Arabia and a special gas blend from Japan - Driven out two refineries, leading to expected gas prices of $7–$9 per gallon this summer @VDHanson "That's who wants to be the President of the United States and that's who wants to do for the United States what he did for California. Beware."





Founders: take my advice... do not talk to the press, go direct and do long-form podcasts. Wired and the NYT are as biased as Fox News and MSNOW these days This is a function of their need to pander to one side to survive, be it through $ 3-a-month subs or rage-baiting ad-based stories. Attacking tech gets views (see Karen Swisher)... and views get advertisers (paradoxically, tech advertisers support the folks trashing tech! let that sink in!) Founders: If you talk to the NYT or WIRED, they will trash and misrepresent you 95% of the time in order to get more subscribers and page views It is what it is...

Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco seizes more ballots, defying California officials who ordered him to stop latimes.com/california/sto… @grace_2e



SANDAG just committed $44.5 million to build 2.8 miles of bike lanes on University Avenue. Do the math — that's nearly $16 million per mile for a bike path. I want you to think about what $44.5 million could do. How many potholes could that fill? How many roads could that repave? How many police officers could that hire? Instead, we get a bike lane that's one of the most expensive in SANDAG's history. And SANDAG — the same agency that can't manage its own toll roads without years of billing disasters — expects us to trust them with this money. This is why people are fed up with government in California. The agencies that are supposed to serve us are instead building monuments to their own priorities while ignoring ours.



SANDAG just committed $44.5 million to build 2.8 miles of bike lanes on University Avenue. Do the math — that's nearly $16 million per mile for a bike path. I want you to think about what $44.5 million could do. How many potholes could that fill? How many roads could that repave? How many police officers could that hire? Instead, we get a bike lane that's one of the most expensive in SANDAG's history. And SANDAG — the same agency that can't manage its own toll roads without years of billing disasters — expects us to trust them with this money. This is why people are fed up with government in California. The agencies that are supposed to serve us are instead building monuments to their own priorities while ignoring ours.

Decrepit state of California's highways revealed in report ranking them worst in US trib.al/fgZ47C8


California's unfunded pension liability is up 10x in the last 20 years. Medi-cal spending is up 6x. State revenue growing 2.6x sounds like a lot until you consider how fast the spending problem is growing.

BREAKING: David @friedberg says "California is functionally bankrupt" "People don't realize how screwed California is, & I worry that if California falls, so does the union. "$250 billion to $1 trillion short." "This is because for California to get rescued would be a big cost to red states, & I think it creates in the years ahead a lot of tension." "California's functional bankruptcy is a major risk to the country. & I think we need to figure out what we can change to fix it." How we got here: "California has a public pension system, & that public pension system retirees have paid into it & they get some benefits out, & the amount that they're owed back out is somewhere between $250 billion - $1 trillion dollars more than has been paid in. $250 billion to $1 trillion short. If it was the federal government, it would be like, okay, we'll just print more money. California doesn't have the ability to print money, so California has to pay this out, and you can't restructure retirement benefits. There is a Supreme Court case in California that said that once an employee has been offered retirement benefits, even if they're currently an employee, you can never restructure their retirement benefits. It has to stay forever, and the state cannot declare bankruptcy. There's no way for the state to functionally declare bankruptcy. There's no law to allow it. No state has ever declared bankruptcy, and the retirement benefits sit senior to the bonds in California. So you have to pay out the retirement benefits before you pay out all the bond holders that have loaned California the money that they use to run all their programs and services." Hill & Valley Forum 2026 (@HillValleyForum)


All aboard for the K Line Northern Extension 🚂🥰🙏





California's unfunded pension liability is up 10x in the last 20 years. Medi-cal spending is up 6x. State revenue growing 2.6x sounds like a lot until you consider how fast the spending problem is growing.

Brutal. S&P 500 has lost -$4.8 TRILLION in market cap since US/Israel started bombing Iran one month ago. Tech stocks further collapsed 8-15% today alone. Recovery to this will likely be slow & bumpy—likely worse than March 2020 stock market collapse. But this was one Trump-made.





