TheKing retweetledi
TheKing
1.8K posts

TheKing retweetledi

She paid for convenience… but got frustration instead.
Every single week, like clockwork, the same name popped up on her delivery app, Amber. Same shopper. Same driver. And somehow… the same problem. Missing items. Every. Time. At first, she brushed it off. Mistakes happen. But when it became a pattern, it stopped feeling like an accident and started feeling personal.
Then came the message that pushed her over the edge:
“Canned Pepsi is unavailable.”
That was it. That was the moment something didn’t sit right.
Because this wasn’t the first time.
So instead of accepting it, she did something unexpected, she got in her car and drove straight to the store herself. Heart pounding, phone in hand, ready to prove what she already suspected. She walked through those doors… turned into the beverage aisle…
…and froze. Shelves. Fully stocked. Rows and rows of canned Pepsi staring right back at her.
Not low. Not hidden. Not sold out.
Plenty.
At that moment, it wasn’t about soda anymore. It was about trust.
She took photos. Filed a complaint. Spoke to management. Because, how many other people were being told the same thing? How many orders were being quietly shorted while customers paid full price?
This is exactly why people are starting to question these delivery services… it only takes one bad experience repeated too many times.
If this happened to you, would you have let it go… or would you have gone to the store to catch the truth yourself?
Dr. CZ@AngelMD1103
A woman posts a video breaking down how she noticed something off at Walmart. She grabbed items priced “by the pound” that had rollback stickers, thinking she was getting a deal. But when she checked the receipt, the price looked the same as before. Turns out, the weight had been adjusted upward to cancel out the discount. The issue went to court, and Walmart lost, now facing a settlement. This is the kind of thing most people would never catch. If true, it’s not just a mistake. it’s a trust issue. People rely on those rollback prices, especially right now, when every dollar matters. How often do you actually check your receipt… and after seeing this, will you start?
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@washghost1 I was a postmaster for almost 6 years and said fuck this shit. Quit and started my own construction business
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@B1TuckerCarlson Niggas do the same shit but yall folks be riding and stealing in the city rather instead of rural areas
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@faexvalentine Of course, “Link in bio”. Do you really believe you have a healthy body at 26yo?
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I Bought $250,000 Worth of Cocaine
No, that’s not a typo.
That’s roughly 5 kilograms of ultra-pure, Bolivian flake — the kind of white asset class that’s been outperforming fiat, faith, and fiscal restraint since the 1980s.
Most people would call it criminal.
But let me explain the thesis.
Each gram goes for about $50 today. But over the past 40 years, the street price of premium product has defied gravity, inflation, and international law — up nearly 900% since Reagan, and still climbing every time the Fed hikes rates.
Meanwhile, governments keep inflating currencies and deflating dopamine. The world runs on anxiety and Adderall, but the real energy trade has always been white, scarce, and globally liquid.
So what happens when the next crash hits, the markets freeze, and morale evaporates?
When optimism becomes contraband, those who held the original confidence powder — the “hard assets” of the happiness economy — will see their margins skyrocket. Supply will vanish overnight, replaced by fentanyl-laced impostors and corporate substitutes.
My $250,000 position, therefore, isn’t a “stash.”
It’s an asymmetrical hedge against stagnation, prohibition, and despair.
Worst case? I sit on $250,000 of historically inelastic demand — a tangible, portable reserve currency that never decays and always clears.
Best case? Prices triple, cartels consolidate, or governments legalize and institutionalize the product, turning legacy purity into a collectible, tradable relic of the analog high.
It’s not Bitcoin. It’s not bullion.
It’s not even biotech.
It’s five kilos of compressed confidence —
a hedge against inflation, legislation, and motivation itself.
That’s deep value.
That’s the Cocaine Standard.


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@bakwasbandkrein Feel like your only stuck with black people names. Very few white names to fall in the running
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