Peter

4K posts

Peter

Peter

@ptcosca

Troy, MI شامل ہوئے Kasım 2013
291 فالونگ192 فالوورز
Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@KobeissiLetter solution: sell Gold again and the # will work 😂
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The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
BREAKING: The US goods trade deficit widened by -$22.8 billion, or -27%, in May, to -$105.8 billion, the largest since March 2025. This marks the largest monthly increase since November 2025. US goods exports fell -$11.8 billion, or -5%, to $207.7 billion, the lowest since February, driven by a sharp decline in industrial supplies, particularly energy shipments. Meanwhile, imports rose +$10.9 billion, or +4%, to $313.4 billion, the highest since March 2025. The increase was driven by continued imports of data center equipment, including computers, semiconductors, and telecom equipment. The trade deficit is widening again.
The Kobeissi Letter tweet media
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Ron Filipkowski
Ron Filipkowski@RonFilipkowski·
Trump and his sons ripped off nearly one million of their supporters and made a fortune producing nothing of value for anyone. Blood sucking leeches, using the US presidency to do it. And they couldn’t care less and their cult doesn’t seem to mind. Strange times in America.
Ron Filipkowski tweet media
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@jonbrooks they should crank up emigration enforcement even more 😂 tourists State forgot about their main industry which should say : everyone is welcome(to spend $) instead made news building Alligator Alcatraz - beyond stupid
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Jon Brooks
Jon Brooks@jonbrooks·
Everyone still thinks people are flooding into Florida. The data says otherwise. Net domestic migration: • 2022: +310,000 • 2023: +184,000 • 2024: +58,000 • 2025: +22,500 That's a 93% collapse from the peak. Housing markets don't crash because people stop wanting houses. They crack when they stop showing up. Is Florida the first domino?
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@mikealfred Peasants need to know where their place is ! 😂
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@phongle I ❤️ it. My little daughter would say : ”same”
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Phong Le
Phong Le@phongle·
Bitcoin is Freedom I spent the last few weeks in my motherland, Vietnam. The country has transformed since my family escaped in 1978. It is more prosperous, energetic, and ambitious than the Vietnam I left behind. A young population, rising investment, and global aspiration have created extraordinary momentum. And yet one thing remains clear. For many in Vietnam, the ultimate dream is still America. And if they cannot make it to America, they want to wear American brands, eat American food, listen to American music, and exude American confidence. My trip to Vietnam reminded me of this, and the World Cup has made it visible on a global stage. America remains not only a country people admire, but a place people still want to reach, represent, and belong to. The United States remains the land of the free, the Wild Wild West, and the home of the American Dream. Walmart and Waffle House. Boston and Austin. Silicon Valley and Wall Street. A country where people can still rise from welfare to extraordinary success through hard work, ingenuity, risk taking, and some luck. My family experienced that promise directly. We arrived in America as refugees, sponsored by a Catholic church in Syracuse, New York. We received public assistance, food stamps, and free school lunches. My father worked three jobs. We lived frugally and dealt with poverty and racism. America was not easy, but it was open. It gave us a system where effort, education, entrepreneurship, and perseverance could compound. This is America. The world still aspires to be like us. What has made America successful over the last 250 years is not accidental. It is a principled Constitution, geographic scale, abundant resources, and a culture of liberty, capitalism, entrepreneurship, and reinvention. Other nations try to replicate the recipe, but often waver. Interventionism, bureaucracy, corruption, and ego get in the way. Which brings me to Bitcoin. Bitcoin is the United States of money. It aspires to do for money what the American Constitution aspired to do for government: create a system governed by transparent rules rather than the discretion of individuals. Built on a principled white paper, digitally enforced scarcity, and proof of work, Bitcoin is digital capital governed by code, energy, and consensus. But beyond that, Bitcoin is hope. It provides hope for those who have worked hard for their money and want to protect it from monetary inflation. It provides hope for those born in countries without reliable rule of law or economic freedoms. It provides hope for anyone seeking protection, opportunity, and a form of property that does not depend on geography, politics, or permission. I was born in the year of America’s bicentennial. Fifty years later, the future of American dominance is being questioned. I have no question. The United States of America is the greatest country in the world. My life is proof of what America makes possible. I left Vietnam as a refugee, grew up poor in America, built a career through education and hard work, and now have a wonderful wife and three children. That is the American Dream to me. It is not just wealth. It is freedom, family, opportunity, and the ability to determine your own future. That is also why Bitcoin resonated with me. I found Bitcoin because it reflected the same principles that shaped my life: clear rules, individual sovereignty, property rights, resilience, open competition, and long-term conviction. America gave my family freedom through a country. Bitcoin offers individuals monetary freedom through a network. One opened the door for me. The other opens a door for anyone, anywhere, to protect the fruits of their labor. That is why Bitcoin is freedom.
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@cpscott16 keep the war Machine going, Poland can afford to buy moooooooooore military equipment 😂
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Chad Scott
Chad Scott@cpscott16·
There’s no way Russia is this stupid. Even if Article 5 cracks, understand that Poland is probably the only country in Europe that could roll its military all the way to Moscow. This is not the Poland of World War II. The Poles are not to be fucked with. They’ve spent the last generation building a military specifically designed to counter Russia. If Russia really wanted to test NATO’s Article 5 commitments, they’d do it against Estonia. Poland doesn’t need Article 5 to wreck Russia’s shit.
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

US intelligence warns that Russia is planning an armed provocation on Polish territory within the next few months, potentially involving missile or drone strikes on strategic sites. According to Polish security services, Russia could launch drone attacks on critical infrastructure, including power plants, or stage simulated airstrikes designed to force Poland to activate its air defense systems. The authorities also do not rule out the possibility of a limited ground incursion by Russian troops across the border from Belarus or from the Kaliningrad region. Source: The Telegraph

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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@GiertychRoman debil … Poland is couple days away from developing Nuclear Weapons 😂
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Roman Giertych
Roman Giertych@GiertychRoman·
Słuchajcie ostrzeżeń USA. Jesteśmy w przededniu ataku Rosji na Polskę. Tymczasem my zajmujemy się sprawami czwartorzędnymi. Na Ukrainie też nie wierzyli, że Rosja zaatakuje. Stało się jednak inaczej.
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@sjanus_pl like 👍 , szkoda że niewielu potrafi to pojąć
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Szymon Janus
Szymon Janus@sjanus_pl·
Jestem pod wrażeniem jak Ukraina to zajebiście spierdoliła. Przyznam, że ja z 2022/23 w życiu by w to nie uwierzył. Mieli do zrobienia najprostszą rzecz na świecie. Dostali od Polski pomoc idącą w dziesiątki miliardów pln. Dostali nowe otwarcie w polsko-ukraińskich relacjach. Zyskali sojusznika, na którym mogli oprzeć reformy i swoją drogę do (jakiejś formy relacji z) UE i NATO. I co Polacy za to chcieli? Przejąć ropę, gaz i metale? Lol, nie. To może chcieli dostać Lwów? Nie no, co ty. To może zażądaliśmy sprzedania nam swoich banków, zakładów wydobywczych i największych sieci handlowych? Nie no, gdzie. My tak nigdy. Głupi Polacy wymyślili sobie, że będzie wszystko git jak Prezydent powie "no sorry, bracia Polacy, głupio wyszło, przepraszamy." Potem klęknie, uroni łzę (w końcu aktor) i zezwoli na masowe ekshumacje, a potem postawi się jakieś polskie cmentarze i trochę pomników. Dzięki, nara, odbębnione. Jak wizyta u nielubianej ciotki. Nie wiem czy jest w historii ludzkości lepszy deal. Kilkadziesiąt miliardów pln w zamian za totalnie darmowy i symboliczny gest, kosztujący kompletnie nic. Nawet mógłby płotem płakać ze śmiechu jacy byliśmy durni, albo wyrzygać się z obrzydzenia jak to się "poniżył" przed Polakami. Ba, po wojnie mogli wykorzystać to, że dysproporcje między Polską, a Ukrainą, są mniejsze niż między Ukrainą i Niemcami i zyskać dużo więcej w dwustronnych relacjach niż kiedykolwiek uzyskają od Niemców. To nie. Wymyślili sobie, że wkurwią 80% Polaków wierząc, że to przyniesie im jakąkolwiek długofalową korzyść i wyjebali do kosza wszystko co zyskali przez 4 lata. Mój X zalewają płacze ze wschodu, że jesteśmy, lol, prorosyjscy. Trzymając się tej narracji to najbardziej prorosyjski jest w tym wszystkim Zełenski.
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@unusual_whales dumb parents will pay them now and another 50+ years …
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
1 in 3 men aged 20 and older are neither working nor looking for a job in the US, per WSJ
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@sweatystartup with decreasing population and negative emigration U gotta be dumb as hell to touch real estate…
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Nick Huber
Nick Huber@sweatystartup·
Real estate bloodbath is upon us. If your deals are healthy and you haven't had to call capital over the last 3 years, you are in a good spot. Whoever can raise money to buy real estate over the next 5 years will do very, very well. Storage, multifamily, industrial, you name it.
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@Abomination81 ur 🇺🇸 property is city/county employees slash fund
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Abomination
Abomination@Abomination81·
Never sell property... ever, sell your ass first if you have to. The dumbest thing you will ever do, is sell a home, piece of property, commercial real estate etc. You might get it from an inheritance, maybe you're buying a new home for yourself... DONT DO IT. There are many other ways to get cash from that home.. Get a heloc, refi, do whatever you need to do... but don't sell it. Nothing will appreciate as consistently, generate cash and create generational wealth quicker than property. If you have parents that are sick, or have property you want to get rid of... book mark this and just DM me first. Let me talk you out of it.
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@KinggTrades Strategy Saylor once bought 25K BTC - 0.15% whole asset supply in one week with STRC proceeds and idiots can’t get it … just imagine what btc price would be if only 1% of people would be smart enough to monetise that knowledge
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King 📈
King 📈@KinggTrades·
Imagine Bitcoin pumping to $90k over the weekend because of bullish Clarity Act news. And $MSTR opening at $500 Monday morning. Just imagine.
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Makayla | Real Estate Investor
The richest person I've ever met at a closing table wore a Carhartt jacket and drove a 2009 Silverado with 210,000 miles on it I assumed he was the contractor He was buying the house next to mine. Cash. His 63rd He's a retired mailman We talked in the title company parking lot for 40 minutes and he rearranged my brain. This man delivered mail for 31 years. Never made more than $61,000 in a single year. His coworkers retired with a pension and a bass boat He retired with 63 paid-off rental houses and around $52,000 a month in rent I asked him how. He said something I think about constantly: "One house a year. That's it. Everybody wants ten houses by Tuesday. I bought one ugly house a year for 30 years and let the tenants pay for all of them" His system was almost embarrassingly simple: Every year he bought the cheapest structurally-sound house he could find in a working-class neighborhood. The kind of house that scares regular buyers. Bad carpet, ugly kitchen, overgrown yard. He paid $30,000-$80,000 depending on the decade He fixed ONLY what mattered. Paint, floors, a clean kitchen, working systems. He never once installed anything fancy. "Tenants don't pay extra for granite. They pay for clean and safe" He rented it out and used the rent to pay the mortgage. Then he mostly forgot about it Here's the part that made me put my coffee down. I asked him how much of his own money was still in those 63 houses "None. Hasn't been for 20 years" Every few years he'd refinance a few houses (the bank hands you cash against the value of a property you own) and use that money to buy the next ones. The tenants' rent paid back every loan. His mailman salary paid for his groceries and that was it. The portfolio built itself off its own rent Nobody at his job knew. For 31 years. He said his supervisor found out two weeks before he retired and thought he was lying Then he told me the thing I want tattooed on the inside of my eyelids: "People think real estate is fast money. It's slow money that gets fast at the end. The first 5 houses feel like nothing. The last 30 bought themselves" The math on his "boring" pace: Year 1: 1 house, maybe $400/month in profit after the mortgage Year 5: 5 houses, $2,000/month Year 10: 10 houses, $4,500/month and the early ones are half paid off Year 20: 25+ houses, $12,000/month, refinances funding everything Year 30: 63 houses, $52,000/month, wearing a Carhartt to closings and confusing 25-year-olds like me He never had a viral moment. Never raised money. Never watched a course. He bought one unsexy house a year in a flyover state and let three decades of rent do the heavy lifting Meanwhile people won't start because they can't have 55 houses by age 27 You don't need 55. You need ONE this year. The mailman math works at literally any speed He shook my hand, got in the Silverado, and drove off to Home Depot. 63 houses. $52,000 a month. 210,000 miles on the truck Most retirement plans are a prayer. His was a paint roller If you want to flip a house but have $0 in the bank, you can get funded for up to $150k with a hard money loan or 0% APR credit cards. I'm going to keep sharing what actually works, keep an eye out
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Emoluments Clause
Emoluments Clause@Emolclause·
#BREAKING: Psaki: “Do you remember last year when Trump announced his massive across the board tariffs…He called it liberation day, it actually led to a stock market crash. That liberation day announcement was made on April 2nd of last year, and Trump’s financial disclosures show that he made 327 stock purchases six days later, on April 8th, while the market was down…So he makes those purchases on April 8th. The next morning, just after the market opened, he told his followers on Truth social: ‘THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY.’ Hours later, he paused his tariffs and the stock market had a historic rally, so historic in fact, it represented the biggest single day gain in the history of the Bloomberg billionaires index. To put it simply, it appears an official act by Trump cratered the stock market. Trump then bought the dip and then used another official act to bring the price of the market back up. Trump of course insists that all his stock transactions are handled by his two adult sons [@EricTrump & @DonaldJTrumpJr] without his involvement or knowledge of the individual trades carried out on his behalf. When asked about the timing of these specific trades, the White House told us tonight that President Trump only acts in the best interests of the American public, saying there was no conflict of interest. The White House also directed us to the Trump Organization. We’ve reached out to them, but we haven’t heard [anything] back.”🤦‍♀️
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Cuckturd
Cuckturd@CattardSlim·
In 18 months Trump has made more than all U.S Presidents combined. He's made more than he did his first 78 years. (Despite starting with $400 million) In 12 years he's done NOTHING to better Maga lives, only his, & yet the Morons celebrate.
Cuckturd tweet media
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Peter
Peter@ptcosca·
@BrettErickson28 pretend and extend until Nov elections, then the Hell will break loose
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Brett Erickson
Brett Erickson@BrettErickson28·
The U.S./Iran War isn’t over… it’s just far more covert. Right now, we are seeing an increasingly dangerous battle take place in the Strait of Hormuz. Under what some are calling Operation Freedom 2.0, the United States is escorting (via air cover) vessels through the Omani side of the Strait. More and more, this is being conducted via convoys of 3-5 vessels at a time, and in both directions. Here is why this is… complicated and risky. Since the dueling blockades between Iran and the United States was unofficially lifted on June 15th, it has quickly become a battle of who can leverage this window more effectively to their advantage. Thus far, there is little argument that Iran has seen more benefit, with recent data showing they exported 50M barrels in the first 14 days alone. A rate double of their normal daily exports. However, in THEORY, the United States can create a de facto unwinding of global economic damage by providing sufficient air support to maximize the exports of global oil in a manner and rate that is disproportionately favorable to the United States. Given that pipelines are moving some 7M barrels per day, and normal oil flows through the Strait is 20M/day, that means they need to force through at MINIMUM 13Mbpd to stagnate the losses… but not unwind them. In order to unwind, they would be needing to export beyond normal flows. The challenge here though… the math is just very hard to justify this. Iran still has a SIGNIFICANT amount of oil in onshore storage (~60M), plus oil already loaded onto vessels in the Strait (~10M). Given that Iran isexporting at approximately double the standard rate (3.4Mbpd since blockade lifting vs 1.7Mbpd pre-conflict exports), and can maintain this rate for several more weeks with the ~70M barrels already produced, they can rapidly unwind the damages of the blockade through these exports. The United States and the global economy on the other hand... They're barely able to even reach normal export rates via the Omani route, much less exceed it to such a degree that they can begin unwinding the 1.1B of barrels unproduced during this conflict. And what are the risks here? Already, we have seen at least one Apache Helicopter get shot down by Iran. Several vessels transiting via this route have been struck by Iran. And the two Apache aviators? Nobody has yet heard a word from them. What happens if Americans are killed providing air coverage for this route? What happens if an American is shot down and captured? Will Trump be forced to return back to all out war? The risk/reward calculus simply doesn't make sense. The math doesn't work. The strategy isn't viable. Washington needs to quickly come to their sense before Iran re-closes the Strait, or before Americans are needlessly killed.
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Spencer Hakimian
Spencer Hakimian@SpencerHakimian·
There’s somebody making $22,000/year in rural America going to bed right now that sincerely believes Donald Trump spent his whole day fighting for them.
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Mike Levin
Mike Levin@MikeLevin·
To everyone celebrating the first flight on Qatar Force One today, understand what you are actually applauding. A foreign government handed the sitting President of the United States a $400 million plane. American taxpayers then paid to retrofit it, with an estimated cost of at least another $400 million (some estimates far higher), for security and communications work in a Texas hangar since last September. When Trump leaves office, the plane does not stay with the government. Ownership transfers to his presidential library foundation. In other words, he keeps it. You are being asked to treat pure corruption as normal, to shrug at a President personally profiting from a foreign gift the taxpayers paid to upgrade. In any other administration this would be the scandal that ends a presidency. With Trump, it’s Wednesday. abcnews.com/Politics/trump…
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