Leopold Aschenbrenner fund just reached a new all time high of $20 BILLION.
And he’s literally telling you what to buy right now.
If you pay attention, you can make a lot of money.
Here’s the list:
Big long in Bloom Energy (BE), fuel cells for data center power.
Heavy in Bitcoin miners pivoting to AI hosting: IREN, Core Scientific (CORZ), Applied Digital (APLD), Riot (RIOT), CleanSpark (CLSK).
Recent stake in Nebius (NBIS), AI cloud infrastructure.
Private position in Anthropic.
By the way, if you’re a serious investor and you care about making money, you need to follow @InTheAssembly with notifications.
The door is currently closed but we are reopening access on Monday, for 24 hours only.
In 6 months, half of you are going to wish you got in this Monday, June 22nd.
Follow @InTheAssembly with notifications or you will regret it later.
This guy quit the NFL to build a porta-potty business.
In month 1, he made $6,000.
By year 2, he crossed $1M in revenue.
His biggest growth lever? Reviews.
Here are 5 tactics to get more reviews for your business:
1. Positive review them first
Send customers an auto text after each job:
“Hey, [Tech's Name] said you were lovely to work with. Thanks for being incredible customers. If you felt the same about [him/her], leave him a review here → [link]"
This is what’s known as the law of reciprocity.
You're saying thank you before they've done anything, which creates a psychological obligation to return the favor.
This got us 20% more reviews when we tried it in our business.
2. Throw a special event
Host monthly community nights with free drinks, live music, etc.
Greet people and tell them they could help by posting a Google review. Then walk around and thank reviewers in real time.
You'll pull hundreds of reviews in a single night. And sometimes, your customers will bring friends… which could turn into referrals too.
3. Run a contest
Do a monthly giveaway for reviews. Ask customers to tag you on socials or use a custom hashtag.
Each post counts as an entry to the monthly drawing.
We ran one of these and got 1,000+ reviews and newsletter subscribers from a single giveaway.
4. Celebrate your best customers
Congratulate them for meeting certain milestones:
• being a “power user” on your site
• 1-year anniversary of being a customer
• buying X repeat products
Send a thank you, maybe a small gift, and ask if they’ve left a review yet.
The ask feels like a natural next step in the relationship.
5. Pay your team to ask
Give your employees a small bonus for every review they bring in.
But instead of a generic review request, frame it as tipping the employee.
One version I love: "Leave [Tech's Name] a 5-star review, mention his name, and we'll tip him $10 for you."
Free for the customer. Motivating for the employee. Personal enough that people actually follow through.
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I’ve used every single one of these 5 tactics to get more reviews for my businesses.
And so have thousands of our academy members in the ones they've bought.
Speaking of which…..
Want learn how to find, buy, and run businesses like these?
I’m running a 3-day live event teaching the full process.
Save your spot here:
↓↓
https://t.co/Q5Uk6Ynx4c
Signs of wealth:
- You can afford to watch your kids grow
- You feel mentally at peace with who you are
- You have friends you truly trust
- You have family you truly love
- You feel healthy, free, alive
- You have a purpose that makes you grow into who you want to be
BREAKING: ADVANCED ALZHEIMER’S PATIENT REGAINED SPEECH, MEMORY, AND BLADDER CONTROL AFTER SINGLE PSILOCYBIN DOSE
An 80-year-old woman with advanced Alzheimer’s — who had barely spoken for YEARS — experienced RAPID and SUSTAINED improvement after taking 5g of psilocybin mushrooms.
During the acute phase, she entered a prolonged deep sleep-like state with profuse sweating.
~19 hours later, she spontaneously started talking again for HOURS — sharing detailed autobiographical memories she hadn’t expressed in years.
Over the following days, her family reported improved memory, walking, emotional connection, speech, and regained bladder control.
After 1 month, bladder control REMAINED RESTORED, and she was still functionally improved compared with baseline.
While this is just one published case report, the implications are enormous given that there are currently NO approved medications known to produce effects like this in advanced Alzheimer’s.
These findings urgently need replication. For millions watching a parent or loved one disappear to Alzheimer’s, even the possibility of restoring lost function warrants serious scientific investigation.
Do you understand what is happening?
The founder of $NVDA is indirectly telling you where to invest for the next 5 to 10 years.
Not even debatable at this point.
If you’re serious about investing, you follow this account.
The simplest path I know to get rich....
- Buy a boring business from a retiring boomer
- Use an SBA loan or seller financing
- Add a website, social, reviews
- Raise your prices
- Use the cash flow to buy the next one
- Repeat
I bought my first business while working a 9-5.
If I woke up tomorrow on a corporate salary again and wanted to become a millionaire by 2036, this is what I'd do:
🚨 BREAKING: Canada just spent $200 million on a “spaceport.”
It’s just a gravel pad near Canso, Nova Scotia.
For context, SpaceX spent $200 million building Starbase, a full orbital launch facility with multiple pads, a rocket factory, and a catching tower.
We have a 10 year lease
We don’t own the land
We don’t own the infrastructure
We leased a field.
With no rocket.
Canada has relied on the US to get its satellites into space.
We still will.
Defence Minister McGuinty announced this proudly at a press conference. 🤣
$200 million.
A gravel pad.
A 10-year lease.
Our government blows.
I've read roughly a book a week for 20 years.
These 5 changed how I think about money, freedom, and what it means to be alive:
1. The Creature from Jekyll Island (G. Edward Griffin)
I’m in love with this sentence:
“The degree to which a person can grow is directly proportional to the amount of truth he can accept about himself without running away.”
Meningitis is one a few diseases where your child can be well in the morning and dead by the evening
And if you’d ever seen it happen, you wouldn’t be debating whether to vaccinate or not
Tragic and horrifying
⚡️Straight truth:
A lot of real estate agents are overpriced middlemen, and AI is starting to expose that brutally.
The average seller does not need a smiling commission parasite to tell them to repaint the walls, write a listing, print handouts, pick a listing date, and upload photos. That layer was always softer than the industry pretended. It survived on custom, gatekeeping, and the fact that most people were too intimidated to do the process alone.
AI just kicked a hole in that illusion.
What this really means is that a huge chunk of white collar service work was never deep expertise. It was formatted reassurance sold at premium prices. Real estate is full of that. Scripted advice. Boilerplate marketing. Generic pricing talk. Faux strategy. Artificial complexity. AI can eat that for breakfast.
The people still worth paying are the few who bring actual edge. Serious local knowledge. Real negotiation instinct. Access. Judgment under stress. The ability to manage a messy transaction when buyers, sellers, inspectors, lenders, and lawyers all start colliding. That person still has value.
But the median agent is in trouble.
The median agent’s real product was never brilliance. It was friction management plus social proof. Once software handles most of the visible thinking, the old commission starts looking insane. Then the whole profession gets psychologically broken. People stop asking, “How do I find a good agent?” and start asking, “Why am I giving away this much money at all?”
That is the deeper pattern here.
AI is exposing which professions were built on actual skill and which ones were built on tollbooths. Real estate has a lot of tollbooths.
So the raw answer is this:
The fat is getting cut out of the system.
Some elite agents survive and probably do fine.
A lot of mediocre agents get commoditized, undercut, or erased.
Consumers get more power.
Commission structures get uglier for the people living off them.
This is the beginning of software repricing a profession that charged too much for too little for a very long time.
@CoachDanGo I think the doctor was right with assuming her diet wasn't healthy.. however he should have approached the conversation in a different way. Acknowledging the patients understanding of what they think a healthy diet is.. and then giving suggestions from there.