Britain has the dirtiest rivers, the most expensive energy, the least reliable trains, the most overcrowded prisons, the worst access to healthcare and the widest gap between rich and poor in all of Europe. If you want a verdict on 40 years of neoliberalism, there it is.
@Mofoman360@elonmusk Rupert Low-life is the perfect person for zero-IQ 10p lee to get behind in another adventure down the 'let's ruin Britain' rabbit hole. Lee's as dumb as they come folks
These days I’m at a loss for words. The new corruption scandal is just bananas. Trump has been using inside information to trade stocks and make millions. And the scale of the trading is just mind blowing.
Here’s what we know.
@MilesTrav You think you actually have a quality of life when your kids practice active shooter drills at school on a regular basis? You're issue is you only see what money can buy and not past that. Your vast houses keep you apart and prevent you from living in communities etc.. jeez
Thomas Massie is an absolute legend. He's the only man on Capitol Hill with the integrity and moral fortitude stand up and name the Epstein paedophiles and demand that justice is done.
This is the most OUTRAGEOUS deal I've seen in my 45 years on Wall Street.
SpaceX just disclosed Musk's new compensation package:
He gets up to 200 million super-voting shares if SpaceX hits a $7.5 trillion valuation, establishes a permanent human settlement of at least ONE MILLION people on Mars, and deploys roughly 100 terawatts of space-based computing power.
Let me put the 100 terawatts in perspective:
The entire electricity generation capacity of the United States is around 1.2 terawatts. The comp plan asks Musk to build more than 80x America's entire power grid... in orbit.
This is a science fiction screenplay that somehow landed in front of the SEC.
But here's why it actually matters for your portfolio...
The S-1 reportedly claims a $28.5 trillion total addressable market, with over 90 percent attributed to AI. CapeFearAdvisors flagged this one cleanly: when Palantir went public, it disclosed a $119 billion TAM and the SEC reviewed and accepted it.
SpaceX is claiming a market roughly 240x BIGGER.
Now let's talk about what is actually being sold here:
Reported 2025 revenue is approximately $15.5 billion. Starlink delivers around $11 billion of that with healthy margins, and the launch business is genuinely dominant. The problem is xAI - the AI piece doing all the heavy lifting in the trillion-dollar valuation pitch.
xAI generated just $210 million of revenue in the first 3 quarters of 2025 while burning through $9.5 billion in cash.
Ben Brey and Rupert Mitchell - a former Fidelity portfolio manager and a former head of equity capital markets at Goldman and Citi between them - ran a serious discounted cash flow on the actual operating businesses and arrived at roughly $400 billion. Lawrence Fossi covered their work recently and the math holds up.
The IPO is being marketed at $1.75 TRILLION.
The gap between what these businesses support and what Musk is asking the public to pay is roughly $1.35 trillion of pure narrative.
Then layer on what we just learned last week...
The New York Times investigation revealed Musk personally borrowed $500 million from SpaceX between 2018 and 2020 at rates as low as 1%, while bank prime rates sat around 5%. The same SpaceX has been used to bail out SolarCity, prop up Tesla during cash crunches, and absorb xAI when the AI losses became unmanageable.
This is the same playbook he's run for two decades.
Use a privately controlled entity as a personal piggy bank, and when the bills come due, find new investors to absorb the losses.
The IPO is structured to keep that game going FOREVER.
The Texas reincorporation strips away Delaware's fiduciary protections. Controlled-company status on the Nasdaq eliminates independent board requirements. And retail is being offered up to 30% of the offering (3x the normal allocation) because the institutions who actually do the math are quietly stepping away.
Here is the part that finishes the case for me:
Roughly $40 billion of the IPO proceeds are already spoken for before a single dollar reaches operations. About $23 billion retires SpaceX debt. Another $17 billion retires the high-interest debt sitting on xAI and X.
This raise is not funding the future. It's just plugging existing holes that retail investors will now own.
In my 45 years I've never seen a deal where the comp hurdle is colonizing another planet.
I've never seen a disclosed TAM that exceeds verified comparables by two orders of magnitude.
I've never seen a company asking the public to fund the retirement of debt incurred by separate private entities controlled by the same individual.
Every red flag I've watched precede a major bust over four decades is sitting in this prospectus, in plain sight.
The Tesla mispricing is being repeated on a far larger scale.
And this time the bag is being handed directly to retail.
Don't be the one holding it.
I have three monitors on my desk. The left one shows the order book. The middle one shows Truth Social. The right one shows the investigation queue.
On April 21st, the left screen moved first.
I am a Senior Surveillance Analyst at a commodities exchange. I have held this position for nineteen years. My job is to monitor trading activity for suspicious patterns and generate compliance reports. I am employee of the quarter. I have a mug.
At 19:54 GMT on April 21st, someone placed 4,260 sell orders on Brent crude futures. They did this during post-settlement. The window after the market closes when daily volume is typically in the dozens. Sometimes single digits. Sometimes I watch the screen and nothing happens for forty minutes and I think about whether my daughter is happy.
On April 21st, someone placed $430 million in directional bets in 120 seconds during that window. One hundred and twenty seconds. I timed it on my watch because the system clock rounds to the nearest minute and I have found, in nineteen years, that precision matters to no one but me.
At 20:10 GMT, the President posted on Truth Social that he was extending the Iran ceasefire.
Brent dropped from $100.91 to $96.83.
I flagged the trade. I flag a lot of trades. I want to tell you what happens to my flags.
My flags go into a system called TRACE. Trade Review and Compliance Evaluation. I did not name it. The system generates a report. The report goes to a committee. The committee has a name I am not allowed to share but I can tell you it meets quarterly and the conference room has a credenza with bottled water that is sparkling because someone once put still water in the room and a managing director sent an email about it that was longer than most of my surveillance reports.
The committee reviews my flags. The committee has reviewed all of my flags. Here is the complete record of actions taken on my flags in 2026:
Reviewed.
That's it. "Reviewed" is a status. In compliance, a status is the absence of an action that has been given a name so it looks like one.
Let me show you my flags.
March 9th. Someone bet millions on oil falling at 18:29 GMT. Forty-seven minutes later, a CBS reporter posted that the President said the Iran war was "very complete, pretty much." Oil dropped 25%. Forty-seven minutes. I flagged it.
March 23rd. Someone sold 5,100 lots of Brent and WTI crude futures between 10:49 and 10:50 GMT. Fourteen minutes later, the President posted on Truth Social about a "COMPLETE AND TOTAL RESOLUTION" to hostilities. Oil dropped 11%. Over 13,000 contracts traded in sixty seconds after the post. Fourteen minutes. I flagged it.
April 7th. Someone established a $950 million short position in oil futures at 19:45 GMT. Three hours later, the President declared a two-week ceasefire. Nine hundred and fifty million dollars. I flagged it.
April 17th. Someone placed $760 million in bearish bets twenty minutes before Iran's foreign minister confirmed the Strait of Hormuz would reopen. Seven hundred and sixty million. I flagged it.
April 21st. The $430 million. Fifteen minutes. I flagged it.
That is $2.1 billion in directional oil bets in April alone. Every one of them landed on the correct side of a presidential announcement. Every one of them was placed in a window so narrow you could measure it in bathroom breaks. I flagged every single one.
The CFTC chair told a Congressional committee that his organization has "zero tolerance" for fraud and insider trading. I wrote that quote on a Post-it note and stuck it to my right monitor. The one that shows the investigation queue. The investigation queue has not moved since March.
Zero tolerance. Zero staff. Zero budget. Zero prosecutions under the STOCK Act since it was signed in 2012.
Fourteen years. The law has existed for fourteen years and has been enforced zero times. In compliance, we call that a compliance rate of one hundred percent. No cases filed means no cases lost. You cannot fail an audit you never conduct. We call that excellence.
Last month the White House sent an internal email to staff. I was not on the distribution list but I have read reporting on it and I need you to sit with what I am about to say. The email instructed White House staff not to use insider information to place bets on prediction markets.
The White House had to send a memo telling its own employees not to insider-trade.
I want you to read that sentence again. Not because the instruction was unclear. Because the instruction was necessary. Because someone in the building looked at the same pattern I have been flagging for months on my three monitors and decided the appropriate response was an email.
The President's son sits on the advisory board of Kalshi. He is an investor in Polymarket. Both are prediction markets. Both saw accounts created days before U.S. military action.
One account. I cannot stop thinking about this account. It was called "Burdensome-Mix." It was created in December. On January 2nd, it placed $32,500 on Venezuela's president being removed from power. On January 3rd, Maduro was seized by U.S. special forces. Burdensome-Mix collected $436,000. Then it changed its username. Then it disappeared.
One account is a coincidence. But there were six.
Six accounts were created on Polymarket in February. All bet on U.S. strikes on Iran by the 28th. When the President confirmed the strikes, the six accounts collected $1.2 million between them. Five of the six never placed another bet. The sixth went on to correctly predict the ceasefire date and made another $163,000.
My surveillance system logged all of this. My system logs everything. My system does not have opinions and neither do I. I generate reports. The reports go to committees. The committees meet quarterly. Between meetings, the windows get shorter and the bets get larger.
March 9th: 47 minutes. March 23rd: 14 minutes. April 17th: 20 minutes. April 21st: 15 minutes.
The window is compressing. In March, you had time to make coffee between the trade and the announcement. By April, you had time to send a text. By summer, at this rate, the trade and the announcement will be the same event.
The spokesman said any implication that administration officials are engaged in insider trading is "baseless and irresponsible reporting."
Then the White House sent the email again.
I have been in compliance for nineteen years. I have seen insider trading run out of strip mall offices by men who could not spell "derivative." I have seen pump-and-dump schemes coordinated over WhatsApp by people who used their real names. I have seen a man try to manipulate soybean futures from a Panera Bread.
I have never seen $2.1 billion in perfectly timed trades across five presidential announcements in a single month go uninvestigated.
But I have also never seen a compliance system work this beautifully. Every trade flagged. Every report filed. Every committee briefed. Every quarterly meeting attended. Bottled water: sparkling. Minutes: distributed.
Zero prosecutions.
As long as the flags go up and the cases don't, my performance review says I am meeting expectations.
I am meeting expectations. The system is meeting expectations. The $2.1 billion is meeting expectations. The fourteen-year-old law with zero prosecutions is meeting expectations.
The left screen moves. The middle screen moves. The right screen stays perfectly, immaculately still.
In my field, we call this price discovery.
A message for all you people leaving MAGA -
Fuck You.
It wasn’t the “Grab ‘em by the pussy”,
It wasn’t the mocking of a disabled person,
It wasn’t the thousands of lies,
It wasn’t the $130,000. 00 Porn Star Payout.
It wasn’t the rest of the infidelity,
It wasn’t the 34 felony convictions,
It wasn’t the 400 million dollar jet from Qatar,
It wasn’t the withholding of federal funds to Blue States devastated by wild fires, hurricanes and tornadoes.
It wasn’t the Americans killed and deported,
It wasn’t the illegal wars started without Congressional approval.
It wasn’t the 160 school girls he murdered with a Tomahawk Missile.
It wasn’t the Children He Raped.
It was a fucking AI picture that drove you over the edge.
I will never forgive you.
I will never forget who you are.
You are, and always will be a Trump supporter.
Read the list again.
You Are Shit.
I am the smart contract engineer who built the function that lets one anonymous wallet freeze any token holder's assets in the President's crypto project.
I added it one week before trading opened.
Nobody told the investors.
At deployment, in September 2024, the contract was clean. Standard ERC-20. Auditable. The kind of contract you show to investors and say: "See? Decentralized." But we made it upgradeable.
Eleven months later, on August 24th, 2025 — one week before trading — I pushed the v2 upgrade. The blacklist function. The freeze authority, routed through a 3-of-5 multisig where a single externally owned address serves as both the guardian and a signer on the multisig.
One wallet. Two roles. Three of five votes to freeze anyone's tokens.
Anyone's.
We built a special vesting category. Category 3. There are 519 other investors. They're all in Category 1. Category 3 has exactly one member: Justin Sun, who put $75 million into the project. His allocation, isolated into its own bucket, governed by its own rules, monitored by its own triggers. But the blacklist function doesn't take a name. It takes a wallet address. Any wallet address.
Then, in November, I added what we call "batch reallocation." It can move tokens from any wallet to any other wallet, at any time, at the discretion of the admin. We told people it was a phishing recovery tool. That's phishing recovery.
The Trump family takes 75% of net proceeds from token sales. Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. manage the project. By December 2025, they had extracted roughly $1 billion. They hold another $3 billion in unsold tokens. The project calls itself decentralized governance. The governance token can be frozen by one person nobody will identify. That's governance.
Three days before everything went public, on April 9th, the project deposited 5 billion WLFI tokens into Dolomite — a lending protocol co-founded by WLFI's own Head of Technical Strategy, Corey Caplan — as collateral and borrowed $75 million. Sixty-five million of it in USD1, the project's own stablecoin. After the deposit, WLFI accounted for 55% of Dolomite's entire total supply. Ordinary depositors who'd lent USD1 to the pool couldn't withdraw. Their liquidity was locked so ours could be free.
Over $40 million of those borrowed funds went to Coinbase Prime. That's a fiat off-ramp. You borrow against your own token on a platform co-founded by your own Head of Technical Strategy in your own stablecoin, convert to cash, and call it treasury management.
Sun moved 55 million tokens to HTX over three days. Minutes after he activated his wallet, the multisig changed his Category 3 to allow 20% transferable. Then froze him the moment he transferred. They were watching in real time. He called it a backdoor. Used that word. "A trap masquerading as a door." We sent the cease-and-desist on April 13th. "See you in court pal," the project wrote.
Not for freezing his tokens. We can do that. The compliance module says so. The whitepaper says so. The single wallet controlling the multisig says so.
We're suing him for calling it what it is.
The function is not a backdoor. The function is a regulatory compliance mechanism that was absent from the original contract, added via an upgradeable proxy eleven months after a $75 million investment, one week before trading, into a custom vesting category built for a single investor, controlled by a single anonymous wallet, on a platform where the President's sons have already taken $1 billion in proceeds and borrowed $75 million against their own token on a lending protocol co-founded by their own Head of Technical Strategy in their own stablecoin three days before the largest investor went public.
That's compliance.
And if you're holding WLFI tokens right now, the same anonymous wallet that froze a billionaire can freeze you too.
Shakespeare spent a career inventing the worst people power could produce. Trump would have broken him.
Not because he’s more purely evil than Richard III. But because he’s all of them at once, and the play never ends.
Richard III charmed crowds while destroying rivals, performing populism as pure theatre. He was compelling, energetic, shameless. But Richard had a destination. He wanted the crown, got it, and then the paranoia consumed him. Trump has been running the same con for 40 years and is still adding acts.
Iago destroyed people as sport. Not for gain, for the pleasure of watching the wreckage. “I am not what I am” is his mission statement. When Trump casually posts about bombing a civilization back to the Stone Age, or throws his own most devoted followers under the bus for failures that are entirely his, that’s Iago energy. Pure, recreational destruction.
Macbeth climbed over bodies to reach the top. But Shakespeare gave Macbeth a conscience, the daggers, the ghost, the sleeplessness. Trump is Macbeth without the haunting. The bodies are there. The sleeplessness isn’t.
Lear demanded loyalty oaths and raged when the wrong people gave them. He surrounded himself with flatterers and called honesty betrayal. He humiliated the faithful and rewarded the sycophants, until the sycophants turned. Every MAGA loyalist who has been casually sacrificed on Truth Social knows exactly how Cordelia felt.
Falstaff gave us the blueprint for using buffoonery as political armour. “I’m just joking” as a force field. Bluster as strategy. The crowd loves the performance so much they forgive the con. Shakespeare eventually had Prince Hal reject Falstaff, the moment the crown got serious, the clown got banished. That reckoning hasn’t come yet.
And then there’s the collateral damage, which is where Trump genuinely breaks the Shakespearean model.
Shakespeare’s villains destroy people on the way to something. Richard needs enemies eliminated. Iago needs Othello ruined. The destruction is instrumental.
Trump’s collateral damage sees entire agencies hollowed out. Alliances of 80 years dissolved in an afternoon. Families separated at borders. Allies publicly humiliated. Economies destabilised by a 3am post. The destruction isn’t the means. Sometimes it just happens, because that’s the weather around him.
Shakespeare understood that great villains need one fatal flaw, the single crack that the tragedy pours through. Richard’s paranoia. Macbeth’s conscience. Iago’s obsession. Each man was brought down by the very engine that drove him.
Trump has all the flaws and none of the consequences.
That’s not a Shakespearean villain.
That’s something Shakespeare never wrote, because he wouldn’t have believed the audience would accept it.
And neither should we.
A villain who combines every archetype, operates at the scale of a superpower, and keeps getting more acts.
The play doesn’t end.
That’s the most terrifying line Shakespeare never wrote.
Absolute Cinema 🔥
Trump: "We need $2 billion a day to reopen the Strait of Hormuz"
US Senator: "But it was already open before the war? So what was the point of whole war?"
This will remain EPIC 🔥