@fabrizzio35668@Lidio_Dominante Porque crees que dije 65 años. Quien gobernaba en los 50? Lo de los 90 ya es el mojón mental del que estamos hablando. O sea hablas de cocacolombia y literal a maduro se lo llevaron por narcotraficante o sea es una gimnasia mental muy potente
MacroVoices @ErikSTownsend & @PatrickCeresna welcome, Dr. @anasalhajji . They’ll discuss Anas’s review on how we got into this conflict and why he still believes that it was the goal of the United States to close Hormuz. https://t.co/sU9SJpl7ok
@Pilaressc@OrlvndoA Tienen que arrestar a toda as fuerzas amadas y la policía y como en 5% de la población para hacer eso. Y eso cuesta dinero y tendrían que traer como 50000 tropas y gastar un montón de dinero que no les beneficia ni a corto o mediano plazo además de un costó político
@SebastianNohra@AndresGaviriaC Nadie sobre los niños que de paso que ven menos dias de clase. Uno de los padres debe cuidarlo y por ende no puede trabajar igual en el sector informal.
The FIRE (financial independence retire early) movement has done an immense amount of harm to society
This is coming from someone who used to be a believer in FIRE, but I have realized just how much of a fallacy it is, as I have grown older
Taking a bunch of high potential income earners and convincing them that their life goal should be to pursue a net worth that allows them to check out of society is immensely damaging to the social fabric
Many of these people sit on the upper echelon of office jobs, have built great businesses, or are at the top of their field in their career field
They should be inspired to continue doing what they are best at, and ultimately, mentor and give back to the next generation who want to pursue those same goals
Instead, many of these FIRE folks become wandering retirees with a meaningless life who are trying to grasp on to money as their north star
It is a false sense of security and accomplishment. Becoming wealthy should never be a goal in the first place.
It should have always been to pursue something that adds meaning to your own life and to society
It is a completely fallacy to believe that retiring will be your source of happiness. More often than not, it has the complete opposite effect
The FIRE (financial independence retire early) movement has done an immense amount of harm to society
This is coming from someone who used to be a believer in FIRE, but I have realized just how much of a fallacy it is, as I have grown older
Taking a bunch of high potential income earners and convincing them that their life goal should be to pursue a net worth that allows them to check out of society is immensely damaging to the social fabric
Many of these people sit on the upper echelon of office jobs, have built great businesses, or are at the top of their field in their career field
They should be inspired to continue doing what they are best at, and ultimately, mentor and give back to the next generation who want to pursue those same goals
Instead, many of these FIRE folks become wandering retirees with a meaningless life who are trying to grasp on to money as their north star
It is a false sense of security and accomplishment. Becoming wealthy should never be a goal in the first place.
It should have always been to pursue something that adds meaning to your own life and to society
It is a completely fallacy to believe that retiring will be your source of happiness. More often than not, it has the complete opposite effect
COT positioning is flashing across markets:
• S&P 500 and Dow remain crowded long
• US dollar still dominates
• Oil looks washed out and increasingly interesting
• Coffee, cocoa and cotton may be starting new bull trends
Read the full report: https://t.co/z0AYe1a5Yf