Iamcoool13

1.1K posts

Iamcoool13

Iamcoool13

@iamcoool13

Katılım Ekim 2023
804 Takip Edilen107 Takipçiler
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Iamcoool13
Iamcoool13@iamcoool13·
next stop...77k 😀😀😀
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ribbita
ribbita@ribbita2012·
Imagine AI agents autonomously moving assets based on set rules-efficient, right? But who's keeping these decisions in check? Without oversight, we could be creating a financial black box with no accountability.
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Osbrah 火
Osbrah 火@Osbrah·
And right when all majors sitting at support: Nvidia, SPX, etc... Fun fact: this morning, during our stream, we said "SPX is reaching a price level that will force Trump to intervene I guess" ... 30 minutes before his announcement.
フ ォ リ ス@follis_

Not a coincidence that Trump paused strikes on Iran today 10y bonds just hit a 9 month high Very close to the 4.5% "danger zone" Trump refinancing $9T in debt this year He cannot afford 10y bond yields at 4.5% Free shorts on risk if this chart ever breaks out

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Iamcoool13
Iamcoool13@iamcoool13·
@CryptoJelleNL Brother, that’s an awesome landscape- what county it is in? Thanks
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Jelle
Jelle@CryptoJelleNL·
The bear market may slow progress down a little, but I keep working towards the same goal: A simpler lifestyle, no debts hanging over my neck, and the freedom to do whatever I want. The past cycle got me a lot closer to where I want to be. Bought my first home in rough condition about 2 years ago, and now that we're approaching summer, I'm finally wrapping up the renovations. It's been hard work, I've learned a ton - and it's paying off in the value of the property as well. In the meantime, my stock portfolio is growing rapidly (DCA + Dip buys), and the war chest is ready for $BTC reaccumulation as well. Plan for this year is to slow down a little; enjoy the fruits of my labor, recharge, and prepare for the next bull run that's approaching. Once that's moving, I kill the remaining mortgage on the house (about 30-40%), and start looking for the end-goal property; even further from civilisation and all its quarrels, with acres to raise babies, animals & crops on. Bear markets are for building. This one is no different.
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Djip
Djip@CryptoDjip·
Fun fact. This is not peak bear
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Iamcoool13 retweetledi
⚡️The Traveling Trader⚡️
This is how to treat your man after he spent the entire day revenge trading and blowing accounts.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Elon Musk tweet media
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Iamcoool13
Iamcoool13@iamcoool13·
@AltcoinSherpa That’s a good plan! For sure bullish oil with all the fuckary in the world. Maybe ladder in some orders?
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AIOZ Network
AIOZ Network@AIOZNetwork·
The February campaign for AIOZ AI Model of the Month — Image to Anime has wrapped up! Congratulations to our winners: @0xMeta_crypto, @BenoitBlanchot, @skikesairdrop2, @CrytoAi They will share a prize pool of 3,000 AIOZ tokens. We’ll DM winners to collect wallet details. Plus, randomly selected participants will receive AIOZ AI credits. Keep an eye on your inbox for notifications. Thank you to everyone who contributed high-quality experiments and creative results. Ready for the next round? Start by studying the winners’ outputs.
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Aalo Atomics
Aalo Atomics@AaloAtomics·
Meet the world's first modular nuclear reactor purpose-built for data centers: Critical Test Reactor inagurated yesterday at Idaho National Labs. Proud of our incredible engineers who turned a desert into a compliant reactor facility and command & control center in <70 days, under the leadership of @yasir_fission and @MattLoszak.
Aalo Atomics tweet mediaAalo Atomics tweet mediaAalo Atomics tweet mediaAalo Atomics tweet media
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Killa
Killa@KillaXBT·
$BTC Textbook. Delta Green = look for shorts.
Killa tweet media
Killa@KillaXBT

They keep telling you everyone is bearish on $BTC and that everyone is shorting. That couldn’t be further from the truth. Delta is extended green, and we’ve had 8 consecutive green daily candles. I’ve seen this movie before. Just when people start believing we’re "back", the entire move gets erased in a few red candles. People keep saying, “Killa, you’re a perma bear.” No, I’m not. It just so happens I created my account during the final year of the bull run. Believe me, you’ll know when I’m net long for new ATHs. Right now just isn’t that time. People are too quick to jump the gun, calling bottoms, and months later those tweets get buried. I don’t play that game. Yes, we could extend slightly higher. The 76–78K region is the upper area to watch. But buying there essentially means buying the first bearish retest in a strong macro downtrend. The trend is not bullish. It doesn’t take a genius to see that. The market hunts leverage, that’s its objective. The cartel needs to liquidate traders to make money. The house always wins. Once enough liquidity builds below, they’ll erase this artificial move up like it never happened. You call it strength. It isn’t. It’s an orchestrated TWAP bid designed to distribute into limit sells when the time is right. The big players, the hedge funds, have been shorting since 120K. Yet all it takes is a 10–20% bounce for people to start calling for targets 20–30% higher than their previous ones. It’s a shame. The same thing happened at 120K when people were calling for 150K. I remember the names. The same thing happened at 96K when people were calling for 100–104K. And now it’s happening again, with people calling for 80–85K.

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Jeff Park
Jeff Park@dgt10011·
The current global order as it stands
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
JUST IN: The US Navy is investigating whether sailors aboard the USS Gerald R. Ford deliberately set fire to their own ship to end the deployment. That is the sentence. Read it again. The $13 billion carrier, the most expensive warship ever built, is now diverting to Souda Naval Base in Crete next week for refueling, repairs, and a formal investigation into the March 12 fire that damaged sections of the vessel and left more than 600 crew without proper sleeping quarters. Kathimerini, one of Greece’s most established daily newspapers, reported the details citing sources with direct knowledge of the planned port call. The investigation explicitly includes the possibility of deliberate sabotage by crewmembers. The Ford has been at sea since June 2025. Vice Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jim Kilby told the Senate Armed Services Committee the deployment will run approximately 11 months, with return to Norfolk not expected until at least May. The crew was told they would be home months ago. They were extended. Then extended again. Then redirected into the largest Middle East military operation since 2003. And now some among them may have decided that fire was the only exit. If confirmed, this would be one of the most serious internal discipline events in the modern US Navy. A crew sabotaging its own vessel in a war zone does not happen because of poor food or bad weather. It happens when the institution has pushed human endurance past the point where the mission feels survivable. Eleven months at sea. Iranian drones striking Gulf airports daily. Eleven Reapers shot down in seventeen days. Gulf states pressing Washington not to stop but to escalate. No rotation ship. No relief force. No ceasefire on any horizon. And the carrier that embodies forward American naval power is pulling into a Greek port because 600 of its sailors have nowhere to sleep. The Crete diversion is the signal the market should be reading. The Ford is the only US carrier in the Gulf theatre. When it pulls into Souda, the sustained naval posture that was supposed to backstop convoy escorts, deter Iranian mining operations, and project power through the spring planting season temporarily loses its centrepiece. Repairs take days at minimum. Investigation takes longer. Every day the Ford sits in Crete is a day the Hormuz permissioned chokepoint operates without the threat of carrier-based air power overhead. After Crete, the Ford is expected to return to Gulf waters. The 11-month deployment timeline holds. But the sabotage investigation tells you something that no deployment order can override: the human beings inside the machine are breaking. The Mosaic Doctrine does not break. Provincial commanders do not file for shore leave. Standing orders do not need sleeping quarters. Mines do not experience morale collapse. The cheapest blockade in modern history runs on sealed packets and radio handsets while the most expensive warship in human history diverts to port because its own crew may have tried to burn their way home. The fertiliser trapped behind the permissioned strait does not care whether the Ford is in the Gulf or in Crete. The planting calendar does not pause for a sabotage investigation. And the 31 autonomous IRGC commands running the chokepoint do not need a $13 billion aircraft carrier to feel tired before they do. They were designed never to feel anything at all. Full analysis: open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

The USS Gerald R. Ford has been at sea for 241 days. Her deployment has been extended twice. She is now heading back toward the Middle East for a third time, and the Wall Street Journal just published what the Pentagon does not want you to read. Sailors are missing funerals. Missing births. Missing their children’s first steps. The ship’s sewage system is failing, requiring maintenance calls every single day and acid flushes costing $400,000 each. Crew members are telling reporters they want to quit the Navy. Morale is described in terms that defense journalists have not used since Vietnam-era reporting. This deployment is on track to reach 11 months. The post-Vietnam record is 294 days, set by the USS Abraham Lincoln during COVID in 2020. The Ford will break it. And she is not coming home. Here is what the human toll tells you about the strike calculus that no OSINT flight tracker can. The United States Navy operates 11 aircraft carriers. The Ford carries approximately 5,000 sailors and over 75 aircraft. Extending her deployment twice, at enormous cost to crew retention, family stability, and mechanical readiness, is not something the Navy does for leverage. The Navy fights extensions. Carrier strike group commanders fight extensions. The families lobby Congress against extensions. Extensions happen over institutional resistance when the mission authority, in this case the Commander in Chief, has determined that the asset cannot leave theater. The Ford cannot leave theater because nothing has replaced her and the mission she was sent to support has not been completed or cancelled. Think about what “extended twice” means operationally. The first extension signals that the original timeline was optimistic. The second extension signals that the mission itself has changed. You do not burn through crew morale, defer scheduled maintenance, and risk retention crises across your most advanced warship for a contingency. You do it for a commitment. Now connect the dots. The Ford crossed into the Mediterranean on February 20, adding her air wing to the 500-plus aircraft already in theater. Nine C-17s carrying 700 tonnes of munitions are en route. Hundreds of personnel evacuated from Al Udeid. A P-8A is mapping the Strait of Hormuz. The IRGC is massing at the Iraqi border. Khamenei has activated shadow government protocols. Graham is lobbying for strikes. Trump’s deadline expires in days. And Witkoff just told Fox that Iran is one week from bomb-making material. The Ford’s sailors are paying the human cost of a decision that has already been made in everything but name. You do not break a post-Vietnam deployment record, destroy your crew’s families, and risk the readiness of your most expensive warship to park it in the Mediterranean as a prop. The $13.3 billion ship is not a negotiating tactic. She is a weapons delivery platform. And she has been held in place, at extraordinary cost, because someone in the chain of command has determined she will be needed. Sailors do not miss their children’s births for bluffs. The stage is not being set. The stage was set weeks ago. What you are watching now is the cost of holding the curtain.

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