Maybesome11
23.8K posts

Maybesome11 รีทวีตแล้ว

🇨🇦 This is exactly how the Liberals think they win elections.
Inject massive amounts of taxpayer money into targeted ridings, make sure the sitting MP is not a Liberal, then quietly make your bid to flip them.
Mélanie Joly just explained it out loud on a hot mic — if your riding doesn’t vote Liberal, you don’t get the funding.
This isn’t governance.
This is straight-up desperation and backroom deal-making to buy a majority.
They’re not earning support from Canadians — they’re purchasing it.
What do YOU think?
How is this legal in a real democracy?
How many more Conservative MPs are they quietly pressuring right now?
Is this the kind of “leadership” we’re supposed to accept?
Drop your honest thoughts below 👇
— this one is exposing exactly how desperate they’ve become.
#CanadaFirst #cdnpoli #LiberalDesperation
Marc Nixon@MarcNixon24
Melanie Joly just admitted if you don’t vote for the liberal party, you won’t be getting any money in your riding. How is this legal?
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Maybesome11 รีทวีตแล้ว

Bloomberg literally doesn’t know the difference between demand and supply.
Dear lord, LNG imports in Asia crashed because of a supply shock and LNG cannot get delivered from Hormuz not because they suddenly stopped ordering LNG.
This is the level of ignorance driving markets
عبدالعزيز المقبل@AzizSapphire
Asian imports of LNG is at Covid-19 lows
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@MarcNixon24 i never watch cbc, so i don't care what they say,
audience of 500k-600k cdn;s, most cdns dont watch either
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@MorningBrew meaningless, prize money now tripled since tiger's day,,
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@andrew_leach carney left england with double the inflation rate versus the rest of europe., great job,
careny will increase debt more than jt in next 4 yrs vs jt last 4 yrs, great job
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He has economics degrees from Harvard and Oxford and has led two G7 central banks. Two.
Scott Robertson@sarobertsonca
"There's one thing that's worse than being uneducated and it's being badly educated. And Mr. Carney is very badly educated on economics." -- Pierre Poilievre says, as water dribbles down his chin
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@PierrePoilievre i think most people agree if a member switches party, a by election must hapen,immediatly,,,
you are leader of oppsition, if you cant this nonsense maybe time to step aside,
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The Carney Liberals did not win a majority government through a general election or today's by-elections. Instead, it was won through backroom deals with politicians who betrayed the people who voted for them.
While the Prime Minister spent the year on this cynical power grab, he has doubled the deficit, and given Canada the worst grocery prices and housing costs in the G7.
Liberals expect Canadians to give up, get complacent and go away, so Carney can have total power without any accountability. That will not happen. Our country and its people are worth fighting for.
We will continue to fight for people to afford homes, food and fuel.
We will continue to fight for safety in our streets.
We will continue to fight for our resource workers and soldiers.
I will continue to lead that fight every day and in every way in Parliament, across the country and in the next election, when Canadians will reclaim the country we know and love.
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@junonewscom cbc panhandling to there paymaster , the liberal party,, 1,4 bln buys a ton of nonsense.
i thought bribing party memebers to switch was illegal,, silly me
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Justin Sun accused WLFI of fraud on Sunday.
by Sunday night, WLFI had responded.
>Not with transparency.
>Not with evidence.
>Not with an explanation.
With: "See you in court."
That's the full response from a project backed by the President of the United States.
To its literal largest investor.
Who put in $75 million.
Whose wallet they froze without notice.
"See you in court" is not a defense.
It's simply a confirmation.


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@Geiger_Capital Staek buy backs don't care if nuclear war rages gotta buy buy buy... fed .M2 is frightening.........25 dollar coffee coming
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@benchrates Reilley 5X5 was worst player in nhl.. Last yr was 841 out of 890
Domi reilley worst defensive players in league fire berube
3 simple moves improves team
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Morgan Rielly logged 23+ minutes per night, scored 50+ points, played at a $8.7m level, and overproduced his money just 2 seasons ago. But he has been slowing down since that, and the team's performance hasn't helped him this year. The change of scenery could reboot him
#LeafsForever

Mark Masters@markhmasters
Did it cross Morgan Rielly's mind that this could be his last home game as a Leaf? "It’s crossed my mind before. All athletes have that at some point. They think about that. Again, tonight’s no different than that." @TSN_Sports
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@toiletkingcap When fed heads realized vack in the dark ages ie GFC any problem is quickly solved by hitting ctrl print
A trln or 4 or 30
Solves mrkt worries...
Screws over bottom. 90 but phuck
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@BullTheoryio Qe baby nuth slick greaseball wall streeters love moar than the smell of qe in the morning
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🚨 THE FED IS NOW PRIVATELY PREPARING FOR A POSSIBLE $2 TRILLION CREDIT MARKET COLLAPSE.
For the first time in over a decade, the Fed has started directly asking U.S. banks to hand over their exposure numbers to the private credit market.
This is the exact move regulators make when they stop trusting public numbers and start preparing for real stress.
Bloomberg reported on April 11 that the Fed has formally reached out to major U.S. banks for detailed information on how much risk they're carrying from private credit firms, and whether stress inside that sector could spread into the wider financial system.
Here's why this is happening now.
Over the past few weeks, three of the largest private credit funds in the market have limited investor withdrawals:
- Blue Owl Capital restricted redemptions on its $14B fund
- BlackRock capped withdrawals on its $26B HPS Corporate Lending Fund after investors requested $1.2B in redemptions
- Cliffwater capped withdrawals on its $33B fund after investors tried to pull 14% and only 7% was allowed to exit
Three of the biggest names in the industry, all hitting redemption limits within a short period. That's not random. That's investors trying to get out faster than the funds can return their money.
At the same time, Apollo executive John Zito publicly said private equity marks are wrong across the board. He said he "literally thinks all the marks are wrong."
His estimate: loans to a typical mid size software company bought between 2018 and 2022 could recover only 20 to 40 cents on the dollar in a slowdown. That implies losses of 60 to 80 percent.
So the pattern:
- Investors trying to withdraw from private credit funds
- Funds blocking those withdrawals
- A senior Apollo executive saying valuations across the industry aren't real
- The Treasury calling a meeting with insurance regulators this month to discuss the $2T private credit market
- The Fed directly asking banks for their exposure numbers
Now here's why this matters far beyond the U.S.
Private credit has grown to around $2T over the past decade, but it's not isolated. It sits in the middle of the global financial system. Pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, and foreign banks all have money parked in these funds because they were marketed as higher yielding and more stable than public bonds.
If valuations are revised down the way Apollo's own executive is suggesting, the losses don't stay with a handful of U.S. firms. They flow directly into:
- Public and private pension funds across Europe, Canada, Japan, and the Gulf that allocated heavily to private credit for yield
- Insurance companies, some of the largest buyers of private credit whose solvency ratios are tied to these valuations
- Banks in the U.S., Europe, and Asia that lend to the private credit firms themselves, which is exactly what the Fed is now trying to measure
Most people miss this part. A private credit fund limiting withdrawals isn't just a problem for that fund. The banks lend to the funds. The funds lend to private equity. Private equity owns thousands of mid sized companies. Those companies employ millions.
When valuations at the top are wrong, the entire chain underneath is mispriced.
The exposure also ties directly into the AI infrastructure buildout. Blue Owl alone is behind some of the largest AI infrastructure deals in the world:
- $27B joint venture with Meta in Louisiana
- $15B deal with Crusoe in Texas
- $5B backing CoreWeave
Oracle now carries over $100B in debt, much tied to AI infrastructure that will take years to generate returns. Companies like CoreWeave, Crusoe, and others are funding their buildouts through private credit rather than public bond markets.
The structure works as long as AI revenue grows fast enough to service the debt.
If it slows, the stress doesn't stay in tech stocks. It moves straight into the credit side of the system, which is the exact part the Fed is now trying to get a clearer picture of.
Globally, this is also colliding with:
- Japan dealing with the weakest yen in decades and rising bond yields
- Europe trying to manage weak growth and stretched sovereign balance sheets
- China still working through its own property and local government debt problems
- A U.S. consumer already showing signs of strain at the lower end
The world financial system has been running on elevated debt and loose valuations for years. Private credit is one of the largest and least transparent parts of that system.
If the valuations are wrong, if redemptions keep accelerating, and if AI revenue assumptions disappoint, losses could cascade through pensions, insurers, and banks across multiple countries at the same time.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last month he doesn't currently see private credit issues infecting the wider financial system. St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said stress is "largely limited" to the sector.
But the fact the Fed is now pulling exposure numbers directly from banks suggests the central bank wants to verify that for itself rather than take those statements at face value.
And this happens when regulators are no longer comfortable being surprised by what they find later. If stress inside this $2T market turns into actual losses, it won't stay inside the U.S., and it won't stay inside one sector.
It will move through pensions, insurers, banks, and AI infrastructure debt across the global system at the same time.




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@JonnyRoot_ Not all golfers are super rich
Rory skipped 3 pga events
So if all top 15 guys skipped 3 weeks prior to major
Bye bye tour
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A lot of the conversation around Rory McIlroy's "unfair advantage", especially from golf media, is completely missing the point...
There's no reason there shouldn't be a cap on the amount of times golfers can play Augusta the month prior to The Masters, whether they're past champs or not.
This ensures there isn't a blatant competitive disparity.
Yes, golfers that qualify for the tournament can access the course the month prior, but everyone can't skip three straight tournaments* & fly private whenever they want to Augusta.
*Again, this encourages top golfers to skip tournaments, devaluing those tournaments for broadcast partners, patrons, & sponsors.
For example, if the cap is 3-4 practice rounds at Augusta the month prior to the tournament, consider them like timeouts. Use them or lose them.
Problem solved. Debate over.
Past champions still get their well-deserved perks, but they don't get a blatant unfair advantage.

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🚨👀🤣 #NEW — “I’m like wait a minute then… were you over there practicing for 2-3 weeks getting set for The Masters when nobody else got to do that?”
Stephen A Smith discusses Rory’s prep for Augusta (which he can do as a past champ).
➡️Thoughts?
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@DarioCpx who got the 12 pm ramp call ? dj up 700 pts, on what,, 7th deal,,,,, this mrkt needs a regulator,,, oy ya SEc,, boooohoooo
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💯 the dumbest financial market in the history of mankind

JustDario 🏊♂️@DarioCpx
Let's face it: this is the dumbest financial market in the history of mankind
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@chambleebrandel no every player played and supported the past 3 tournaments, of the PGA,, so now the stars can skip pga events and practice 3 -4 weeks before a major,,,
seems a little offside
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