@justinbrewer33@_ayandamay@AMCTheatres Apparently, she doesn’t pay attention to the numbers (except the ones someone probably paid her to make that post) 😆
@Truth_Seeker_14@24hrscrypto1 The big banks had an “oh sh*t” moment and they are trying to crush the narrative.
You can delay, delay and delay progress… but in the end, you can’t stop it.
I saw major dips coming after all the advertising for “loan your crypto for cash and not have to sell*”
PS - that Astrik stated in fine print that if your crypto dipped below a certain percentage they could liquidate your account to pay for the loan. READ THE FINE PRINT PEOPLE! there is always a motive and it ain’t to help you make money.
It’s brilliant what Cohen did; offer to buy eBay, so they tank GME price so he can’t raise enough money - then he announces a stock buyback- meaning if they keep the price low, he lowers the float, increasing the share price. He literally has them between a rock and a hard place and I fucking love it
@DemonFramed Boomers? Bro you need to change that term to “politicians.” The politicians did all this, while lying through their teeth constantly to the boomers who voted for them.
A Letter from Gen X
I’ve read the letter from Gen Z from early this morning and the response from the Boomers around noon today.
As someone born in the late 70s, I sit right in the middle. We watched our parents get laid off in the 80s and 90s. We saw pensions disappear and loyalty to companies punished. We entered the workforce during multiple recessions and the beginning of mass offshoring. We were told to “just go to college” right before tuition exploded and wages stagnated.
We are the generation that saw the betrayal in real time and still tried to play by the old rules.
To Gen Z: Yes, it got harder. The ladder was pulled up. The social contract was broken. Many of us feel the same anger you do.
To the Boomers: Some of you fought it. Many of you did not. Too many went along with the cheap labor policies, the trade deals, and the open border experiments because it made their 401(k)s go up and their house values increase. You benefited from the system even as it started to crack.
We Gen Xers are the ones who had to adapt. We became cynical early. We watched both parties sell us out. We saw our parents’ generation get discarded and decided never to fully trust institutions again.
The truth is simple: The generations before us built something great. Then politicians and global interests slowly sold pieces of it off. Each generation since has inherited less of the original promise.
We don’t need more blame. We need to stop the bleeding.
The country still has incredible potential, but only if we quit pretending the last 40 years of policy were accidental.
A tired but still fighting Gen X