Pelé vs. Messi.
Vejam que interessante.
- Apenas em jogos oficiais:
🇧🇷 Pelé tem 831 jogos, com 767 gols, média de 0,92.
🇦🇷 Messi tem 1.063 jogos, com 913 gols, média de 0,86.
- Apenas em Copas:
🇧🇷 Pelé tem 14 jogos, com 12 gols, média de 0,86.
🇦🇷 Messi tem 28 jogos, com 18 gols, média de 0,64.
🛑 Agora, vamos fazer um recorte interessante. Vamos excluir os 112 gols de pênalti (sendo 5 deles em Copas do Mundo) de Messi e os 56 gols de pênalti do Pelé (nenhum em Copas do Mundo).
- Apenas em jogos oficiais:
🇧🇷 Pelé tem 831 jogos, com 711 gols, média de 0,85.
🇦🇷 Messi tem 1.063 jogos, com 801 gols, média de 0,75.
- Apenas em Copas:
🇧🇷 Pelé tem 14 jogos, com 12 gols, média de 0,86.
🇦🇷 Messi tem 28 jogos, com 13 gols, média de 0,46.
Sem os gols de pênaltis, a média geral de Messi cai de 0,86 para 0,75. A de Pelé cai de 0,92 para 0,85.
Em Copas, a de Messi cai de 0,64 para 0,46 😱.
Jamais comparem!!!
@AlexMasonCrypto This has to be the laziest post! You couldn't even research the actual pre-split prices? TSLA IPO: Priced at $17, $TSLA opened at $19 on June 29, 2010
Pre-split performance:
• 30 Days: $19.05
• 90 Days: $21.98
• 6 Months: $27.73
• 1 Year: $28.31
🚨 James Talarico just won the Dem primary in Texas. Still, many people still have no idea who he is or how his campaign was built on the intentional distortion of scripture.
Watch this *full* episode of the Live Free Podcast to learn how to spot a wolf in sheep's clothing 👇
@VirBritannicus@stats_feed Can’t rig a World Cup?!? Either you’re a FIFA bot or from another planet😂😂
Go read about the refereeing during that tournament and the go-ahead “goal” (didn’t cross line)
@VirBritannicus@stats_feed 🤨is this satire 😂😂
Only “won” in ‘66 because the FIFA president rigged it for them to win it at home. Lucky they weren’t in the cups during the ‘50s everyone would’ve known earlier how fraudulent they were and are.
If you overlay Christian beliefs on the end times with Islamic beliefs on the end times, what you discover will send a chill down your spine.
Buckle up for this one 👇
Today is Holy Wednesday, or as we traditionally call it: Spy Wednesday the day Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 silver coins.
But something curious most people miss is the fact Judas betrayed the Son of Man for little more than 4 months of wage. Literally.
When we hear "thirty pieces of silver," it sounds like a mythical, massive pirate's treasure. It wasn't.
Let's do some quick math.
The coins were likely Tyrian shekels. One shekel was worth exactly four Roman denarii. A denarius was the standard wage for one day of hard manual labor.
Thirty shekels equaled 120 days of work. Exactly four months' wages.
Judas Iscariot didn't get a palace. He didn't get an army. He didn't get political immunity. He handed over the Creator of the Universe to be tortured to death for the equivalent of a used car or a few months of cheap rent.
We look at Judas with absolute disgust, but we do the exact same thing. Sin never offers you a fair trade.
The devil doesn't need to offer you the entire world to buy your soul; he just needs to find out how ridiculously cheap your price is.
Men abandon their faith, break their vows, and compromise their integrity every single day for a slight promotion, a fleeting moment of pleasure, or a tiny bit of social approval.
You are trading eternity for pocket change.
Every major correction on this chart started the same way.
The Weekly 9 EMA crossed below the 21 EMA.
2022 Bear Market
• Drop: -27%
Market rallied…
Then another correction
• -10%
Market rallied harder...
Fast forward to now:
Tariff Panic
• Drop: -21%
We rallied again…
And the same weekly bearish cross just printed.
If the pattern repeats, the next move could be roughly another -13% correction.
One green day doesn’t change the weekly structure.
Weekly charts > Daily charts.
@Absolutebrazil Imagina falar que tá recebendo o mesmo cara hoje e esquecer que esse mesmo cara já teve várias chances e desperdiçou todas!!!!!
Já passou da hora de seguir em frente sem ele, graças a Deus.
Hello Mr. Stiller.
You: "War is not a movie."
Also you: wrote, directed, and pocketed $188M from Tropic Thunder, a film whose entire premise is actors who mistake a war for a movie. You literally already made this point, for profit.
Let's check your oh-so-virtuous leftist credentials.
Your film put Robert Downey Jr. in blackface. You directed that. Your script used the word "r*tard" 17 times. You wrote that. Twenty-two disability organizations (Special Olympics, The Arc, National Down Syndrome Congress, the AAPD) launched a national boycott. That actually happened.
You took the $188M and kept every frame.
2018: "I stand by my apology."
2023: "I make no apologies for Tropic Thunder. Proud of it."
Pick one.
Your father: Jerry Stiller. Your mother: Anne Meara, an Emmy-nominated actress. Your first job: Saturday Night Live. July 2021, asked about Hollywood nepotism: "Show biz is ultimately a meritocracy. Untalented people don't really last if they get a break because of who they are or who they're related to."
The ultimate nepo baby telling people the game is fair... equity is for everyone who isn't you, apparently.
At the Comics for Kamala fundraiser you raised $150,000 for Harris. At that same event you said: "Every white Jewish guy wishes he was Black."
You are a UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador. In June 2022 you flew to Kyiv for a photo with Zelensky.
Summing it up... A $200M Hamptons liberal who played everyman for profit. Blackface on screen, a disability slur 17 times in the script, an apology issued and then retracted, a humanitarian title treated as a press credential, and now... outrage that someone used your war movie about war.
"War is not a movie."
No. But your career has been.
JUST IN: Tim Tebow shows senators a map of the United States showing every single location where someone is downloading, sharing, or distributing CSAM.
“We are losing the battle, and we are losing the war, and boys and girls are suffering for it…”
“Every red dot that is on there is someone that is downloading, sharing, or distributing [CSAM].”
“55% to 85% of them are also hands-on offenders, and we know that your average offender has thirteen victims in their lifetime.”
“The scale of harm right here in America is, to a certain extent, hard to comprehend, but that's why we're here.”
2000 — Bush v. Gore
Democrats claimed Florida was stolen and that the Supreme Court selected Bush.
2004 — Bush v. Kerry
Democrats claimed voting machines in Ohio were rigged to deliver the election to Bush.
2016 — Trump v. Clinton
Democrats claimed Russia brainwashed millions of Americans with memes and Facebook posts to vote for Trump.
2024 — Trump v. Biden
Democrats claimed the election was rigged by disinformation, suppression, and that Elon Musk used Starlink to manipulate the outcome.
But in 2020 — the one year Biden won after the pandemic, mass rule changes, mass mail‑ins, counting pauses, statistical anomalies, and nationwide disputes, we were told cheating was impossible and that it was the most secure election in history.
Funny how that works.
The Hollow Men
American capitalism is rotting from the head down. We have replaced the "Owner-Operator"—the risk-taker-with a new, parasitic class of corporate bureaucrat: The Risk-Free Insider.
By "Insider," I am not referring to a specific title. I am referring to the entire administrative state that has captured the modern corporation. This includes the Directors who exist solely to collect fees, the Executives who exist solely to collect bonuses, and the Managers who exist solely to hire consultants.
These are the hollow men of the boardroom. They are masters of PowerPoint. They wear the right suits. They say the right buzzwords about "governance" and "ESG." But they are mercenaries fighting a war with someone else’s ammunition.
In a functioning economy, authority is tied to liability. If you make a bad decision, you lose your own money. That fear of loss is the only thing that keeps a business honest. It forces you to cut waste, obsess over the customer, and stay late to fix what is broken.
Today, we have severed that link.
We have rigged the game so that heads, the Insider wins; tails, the shareholder loses.
If the stock goes up, the Insider collects a massive performance bonus. If the stock crashes due to their own incompetence, they are fired with a "Golden Parachute" worth tens of millions. They are gambling with the house’s money, and they never leave the table poorer than they arrived.
This looting starts in the boardroom.
We have normalized a "Country Club" culture where directors are selected based on social profiling rather than their ability to build a business. The modern board member is often a professional tourist—paid an average of $350,000 a year.
Let’s be brutally honest about what that number represents. The average director is paid nearly five times the GDP per capita of the United States. They earn more for attending four quarterly lunches than the vast majority of Americans earn in five years of hard labor.
And for what?
Most of these directors are "over-boarded," sitting on three or four boards simultaneously. They treat directorships as a gig economy for the elite. They fly in, rubber-stamp a compensation package they didn't read, and fly out. They collect checks from companies they do not understand, do not use, and certainly do not love.
They are not there to ask hard questions. They are there to be collegial. They are there to protect the other Insiders.
And what happens when these boards hire executives who also have no personal capital at risk?
We get the Delegation Economy.
When a Risk-Free Insider faces a crisis—bloated expenses, a broken supply chain, or a stale product—they do not roll up their sleeves. They hire a consultant. They pay a strategy firm millions of shareholder dollars to produce a 100-page deck telling them what they already know.
This is not management. It is intellectual money laundering.
They use shareholder capital to buy an insurance policy for their own careers. If the plan fails, they can blame the consultants. They delegate the work because they are terrified of the responsibility. They would rather preside over a slow, comfortable decline than risk a bold mistake.
While American Insiders are busy optimizing their severance packages, our global competitors are optimizing their products. They are not slowed down by bureaucracy. They are not waiting for a slide deck. They are outworking us.
If we continue to fill our C-suites with administrators instead of operators, we will lose our edge. We will see iconic American franchises hollowed out by fees, managed for the benefit of the Insiders, while the true owners—the shareholders—are left holding the bag.
The time for polite governance is over.
If we want to save the American economy from mediocrity, we must demand a return to the "Owner’s Mentality." We need leaders who treat shareholder capital with the same reverence they treat their own savings. The era of the Risk-Free Insider must end.