WALL STREET spends millions on quant teams.
I spent $20 on Claude.
Yesterday:
fired.
rent late.
$25 left in my bank account.
I opened Claude and typed:
“Analyze profitable Polymarket wallets from the last 90 days and build me an edge.”
Then went to sleep.
Woke up to:
+$4,237.
While I was asleep, the agent:
• scanned 10,000 wallets
• filtered fake alpha from real edge
• tracked sizing, timing, and conviction
• found traders consistently beating the market
Then it built a fully automated strategy:
→ monitors breaking news
→ maps narratives to active markets
→ detects mispriced odds
→ executes arbitrage
→ sizes positions dynamically
Started at 11:47 PM.
By morning:
94 trades executed.
Zero manual input.
No fear.
No greed.
No second-guessing.
Just data reacting faster than humans can.
People keep asking if AI will replace jobs.
Wrong question.
The real question is:
what happens when one person gets access to tools that used to belong only to Wall Street?
You only need Claude + laptop + 1 hour/day.
Giving This Free for 24 hours. To get it:
1. Comment the word 'AutoPilot'
2. Like and Retweet this post
3. Follow me
@ZayvenKnox
A sure sign of the coming of fascism.
The Metropolitan Police arresting people for the precise behaviour that the High Court has ruled lawful.
It is even the same person and the same sign!
44 years ago today, during the Falklands War, my husband stood on the front line defending our British flag in the South Atlantic.
This is him on the left, captured in this moment after the battle, hands on his head, taken as a prisoner of war. He fought with courage alongside his comrades in the bitter cold and harsh conditions, doing what so many young British servicemen did, answering the call to protect British sovereignty. Until ordered to lay down arms by the Governor Rex Hunt!
Today we remember the bravery of all who served in the Falklands. The ones who came home, the ones who didn’t, and the families who waited and worried. 🫡🇬🇧
To my husband - I’m so proud of the man you were then, and the man you are now. Thank you for your service. 🫡❤️🇬🇧
It makes me furious to watch spineless traitors like Keir Starmer eagerly handing over our sovereign lands at every opportunity and betraying everything people like my husband and his comrades fought, bled and suffered for 🤬🇬🇧
#FalklandsWar #NP8901 #LestWeForget ❤️#BritishArmedForces
When Leadership Is Needed, Britain Gets Process
Iran has fired ballistic missiles at a British base in the Indian Ocean. The Strait of Hormuz has been closed for the first time in history. Oil is heading toward two hundred dollars a barrel. Defence manufacturers are laying off staff. The defence investment plan that should have been ready last year is still blocked in Whitehall because it has to be agreed by everyone across government. And the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom appeared before the liaison committee this week to explain that he considers the conversation on defence and security to have started, but is urged by others to take it to another level.
Tim Stanley, watching from the press gallery, felt a powerful urge to jump into the Thames. He was not alone.
The liaison committee appearance was not an aberration. It was a portrait. Everything was being looked at, consulted on, mulled over and carefully considered. Intensive discussions were under way about how Britain can be involved. Processes were happening in particular ways. At pace. At speed. Going nowhere. Stanley noted the contrast with Donald Trump, interviewed simultaneously on the tarmac, shouting about Ayatollahs and oil prices with the chaotic energy of a man who at least understands that the moment requires action rather than vocabulary. Whatever you think of Trump, he is not setting up committees to investigate underfundment while the country slides into chaos. Starmer is.
It has been obvious for weeks where the biggest blockage in Britain's defence planning sits. Not in the Ministry of Defence. Not in the Treasury. In Downing Street, in Numbers 10 and 11. The Prime Minister cannot tell the country where the money for defence is coming from because doing so would require cuts that would put him in new difficulties with his party. The party that cannot be offended. The coalition that cannot be challenged. The constraint that explains every hesitation, every delay and every process that substitutes for decision. A war is burning in the Gulf and the Prime Minister's answer is that he needs to get it right. And the decision that has been obvious for weeks, the one that a stronger Prime Minister would have taken on day one of this crisis, is to sack Ed Miliband.
Miliband: the man who led the Cabinet revolt against supporting America. The man who blocked the use of Diego Garcia. The man who spent a year dismantling Britain's energy independence and then stood at the despatch box admitting British households would be exposed to international fossil fuel markets. The man who is now presiding over the energy emergency that Andrew Neil has described in the Daily Mail as bordering on the criminally negligent. He is still in post. Still in the Cabinet. Still in the room. Because Starmer cannot afford to remove him. The coalition that put him in power, the parliamentary left, the public sector unions, and the bloc votes Labour cannot afford to lose, will not allow it.
That is the answer to every question this crisis has raised. Why did Britain hesitate over Diego Garcia? Why did it send the wrong ship? Why is the defence plan still unfinished? Why is Miliband still Energy Secretary? Why does the Prime Minister answer every urgent question with a process? Because governing in the national interest would require decisions that the political coalition that put this government in power will not permit.
Stanley put it best. The PM normally operates in a coma. His authority, when tested, goes up in smoke like a mini Krakatoa. The smoke has been visible for three weeks. The fire started long before that.
"And the decision that has been obvious for weeks, the one that a stronger Prime Minister would have taken on day one of this crisis, is to sack Ed Miliband."
Sorry to have to say this...
The British do not like the kind of diversity that intends to take over Britain and kill any infidel that does not convert to Islam
Is that hard to understand, silly little man ?
@BucksCouncil@bucksfreepress Interesting that they have closed the case and said nothing to see.
Unable to report again as saying it has already been reported!
To be clear nothing has happened on the road.
At the end of the road there are 2 gullies, you can’t see them as they are full of dirt and weeds!!