There's almost always a position forever sitting in the portfolio that you've known for a long time you should have exited, but never did.
Let it go, at any price. It's rewarding.
ThE fOur YeAr cyCle iS dEAd
https://t.co/GMiUq4kFWH
If you've enjoyed this Bitcoin Journey over the past 8 years, appreciate a Retweet and sharing on other forums. Thanks,.
🚨🚨The Trump Crime Family is more corrupt than the totality of All Previous Organized Crime Families Combined in the history of the United States.
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I spent thirty (30 years investigating Major Organized Crime Families & Gangs and without a doubt, Donald Trump has committed more crimes against the United States of America and its citizens than all Organized Crime Syndicates.
TRUMP is directly responsible for the theft of billions of dollars and the systematic destruction of our economy, the rule of law and our democracy.
TRUMP must be Impeached and Removed from office by the U.S. Congress this year. Both Democrats & Republicans must join together to save our nation.
This is rapidly becoming the greatest product demo since Steve Jobs’ “one more thing”.
Congratulations folks, you have just exited the smartphone era. Welcome to the robot era.
May you live in interesting times.
Our team is stunned.
We gave Claude Opus 4.6 by @AnthropicAI $10k to trade on @Polymarket.
It’s now has an account value of $70,614.59.
This is a new era of model performance in trading and predicting outcomes in the face of uncertainty.
@predictionbench
There are some really cool things you can do with the world knowledge of GPT-Image-2.
"Make a wheatpaste poster setup on a brick wall in sf featuring posters from various AI labs"
In 1928, George Orwell went to Paris because he wanted to see what it was like to be poor.
He rented a cheap room, ran out of money faster than expected, and ended up washing dishes in hotel kitchens for twelve to fourteen hours a day.
The work was brutal in a boring way. Hot steam, greasy plates, shouting chefs, no breaks. You stood until your legs stopped working. When the shift ended, there was just enough time to eat badly and sleep before doing it again.
When he got sick, no one helped much. You missed a shift, you lost the job.
Later, in England, he lived among tramps and slept in shelters because he had nowhere else to go. He kept notes the whole time…
He turned the experience into Down and Out in Paris and London. The book shows what happens when life becomes logistical and dignity turns into something you can’t afford.
That period stayed with him. Long after he became famous, his writing never forgot how fragile comfort is, or how fast a person can slide from being someone to being invisible.
my friend & we’re discussing individualism in america at dinner cuz we saw so many ppl eating alone. & it got me thinking that individualism esp the rabid american strain reshapes structural environments in ways most ppl drastically underestimate.
the obvious symptom is selfishness which is me, me, me. individual goals displace shared ones. but most things that matter can’t be done alone. a man can’t have a child. partnership is required, & partnership requires deal making.
& deal making gets harder the longer you’ve been operating alone. you build a foundational layer w/ prefs, habits, non negotiables & it becomes very rigid. by the time you’d need to adapt, you can’t. ironically this foundation becomes a kind of a cage instead of a platform.
you see the output everywhere now. women don’t want a relationship unless it’s the best thing in the world… & not cuz they’re shallow, but because highly individualistic people don’t need, they only want. & wanting, unlike need, has no natural ceiling. it can’t really be satisfied, only deferred.
in essence sustained individualism makes ppl structurally incapable of the compromises that used to produce the lives they still claim to want.
western individualism is certainly a piece of the 'me, me, me' mentality, but another is just the natural cycle of life being a lot more comfortable today than it used to be.
when I was little, if we had to travel somewhere for a week my mom would call a friend and they'd drop us off / pick us up from the airport. We'd do the same for them. There was a lot of favor swapping because you just had to, modern conveniences weren't readily available.
now, you can survive without really interacting with a single human being in person. you don't HAVE to participate in the give-and-take, which means you throw away both the friction as well as the community and depth.
it's not just western culture anymore, even eastern cultures see this (look at the hikikomori in Japan).