Every age is convinced that it has finally figured everything out.
Every age is eventually humbled.
The advantage of reading old books is that you get to watch this process happen over and over again.
It makes you less gullible.
And a little more cautious about declaring that history is over.
This book club exists to study the greatest books of the Western world.
Below are just a few of the texts we intend to read together (or have already read), from ancient to modern.
What are some others that we absolutely must cover, in your opinion?
This is the most important account on X. Well worth a follow.
Everyone should be part of a book club. This is a wonderful group of people to study with.
In 2003, Jack Nicholson won a Critics Choice Award but was too drunk to give his speech, so he handed the mic to Robin Williams, who delivered one of the funniest acceptance speeches the show ever had.
JAJAJAJAJA 🤣 Oigan a este batracio 🐸 las pendejadas que dice.🥳
#GeneracionZ#15DeNoviembre
¡LOS NIÑOS QUE NO NACEN NO VAN A LA ESCUELA!🙈
#FueraClaudia
Y este es el que se encarga de la educación en México.🙄
🤔Last video of the 🇺🇸American astronauts' moon landing, published by a 53-year-old German man before his arrest❓️
Now we understand why he was arrested...
Everyone keeps searching for the holy grail in trading.
But as Mark Minervini says there’s only one: Risk Management.
In this short 8-minute video, he explains why managing risk is the real secret behind every successful trader.
Watch it this could be the video that changes the way you trade.
The deeper you go into the semiconductor supply chain, the less believable it becomes.
> TSMC, a company on a small island, produces over 90% of the world’s most advanced chips
> TSMC relies on dutch company ASML for EUV lithography machines
> ASML depends on German Company Carl Zeiss, the only firm in the world capable of making mirrors precise enough for ASML’s requirements.
> The light source for ASML’s EUV machines is produced by a single company in San Diego.
> The photoresists used to print transistor patterns are produced by Japanese firms like JSR and Tokyo Ohka Kogyo.
> The ultra-pure quartz needed to make silicon wafers comes entirely from a single mine in Spruce Pine, North Carolina.
> The copper and rare-earth materials inside chips are mined and refined across Chile, the Congo, and China.
> The specialized gases used in chipmaking, like neon and fluorine, largely come from Ukraine and Japan.
> The design blueprints for these chips often come from American companies like NVIDIA, AMD, and Apple, which rely on software tools from U.S. firms like Synopsys and Cadence.
Remove any single piece and the whole system collapses.