I started my YouTube channel from a hotel room in June 2019 after presenting my postdoc research at a physics conference in Oregon.
At the time, my only goal was to help people navigate the cryptoverse and avoid some of the mistakes I made as a younger investor.
I remember being genuinely excited when the channel reached its first 100 subscribers. It felt hard to imagine that many people would be interested in hearing my thoughts on markets.
Over the years, there have been plenty of successes, but also many mistakes that forced me to reassess my assumptions and become a more disciplined investor.
The truth is that this journey would not have been possible without all of you. Whether you've been here since the beginning or just recently found the channel, thank you for giving me the opportunity to do what I love every day.
Today, the channel reached 1 million subscribers.
I'm incredibly grateful for that, and I don't take it for granted.
Thank you for being part of the journey.
Since Trump..
Ebola is back.
Whooping cough is back.
Measles is back.
Inflation is back.
Screw worm is back.
High gas prices is back.
Low wages is back.
Bigotry is back.
Hate is back.
Blatant lying is back.
Corruption is back.
I just want life under a sane president back..
@RickD_GK All of a sudden the Trump administration cuts funding everywhere and takes away the regulations put in place to keep us safe and people are wondering why? He's getting paid to. And mfs voted for this bs talking about "make America great again"thanks jackasses
This is really stupid, and it’s not getting enough attention.
The Trump administration is pulling a working $368 million ocean monitoring system out of the water, equipment taxpayers already bought, built, and sank into the deep ocean.
And they are doing it right when the oceans are behaving in ways that alarm the scientists who study them.
Record-breaking temperatures.
A system of Atlantic currents that may be lurching toward collapse.
The response?
Yank out the instruments and walk away.
That is not budgeting. That is smashing the gauges while the engine is on fire and calling it efficiency.
For what? The Trump administration dressed it up as a “nimbler approach” and “smart lifecycle management,” which is fancy nonsense for “we shut it off and hoped nobody would ask why.” There is no return-on-investment analysis. They cannot show taxpayers save a dime, because the gear is already paid for and the science it produces protects real money and real lives.
The kicker: the same people killing the monitors want to mine the deep sea for minerals. So they are destroying the only tools that could measure what that mining does. That is not an accident.
That is the point. You cannot see the damage if you break the instruments first.
https://t.co/MzE4AW1QBv
Republican anti-science culture wars are bringing back flesh-eating maggots, previously controlled childhood diseases, and carcinogens in drinking water.
Is America great again yet?
🚨A similar backfiring happened in the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service(APHIS) of the USDA.
20% of the staff were made redundant in 2025 in APHIS by DOGE.
And now USDA’s APHIS has been dealing with a recurring bedbug infestation at its George Washington Carver Center offices in Beltsville, Maryland, since mid-May 2026.
Employees were twice sent home for fumigation, but the bugs reportedly returned after personal belongings were left behind.
Following a third incident, staff were told to either use leave time or report in person despite complaints about chemical fumes.
Being an American now is just waking up and being told how much more money the president and his billionaire buddies are stealing, then being expected to act like it’s a normal fucking day.
These are all programs that Trump has cut funding for and I’m curious where all this money went! Why aren’t we asking questions. Why isn’t Congress asking questions! 🤬
@giveashitnature Well I picked a lot of them up and added to my garden beds to add natural organic matter under the extra soil I topped it off with for a healthier little ecosystem in there
Shout out to everyone who didn't rake their leaves last fall.
The queen bumblebees, firefly larvae, moth pupae, and ground beetles in your yard overwinter in leaf litter. The pollinators you're seeing this summer are the generation that survived because you let the yard be messy.
The unraked yard is the productive one.
Americans are all starting to realize they are actually tax slaves. Americans pay taxes so Israelis can continue funding their genocides. It’s all about chaos, death, and destruction so these psychopaths can divide and conquer us all.
One of the most heroic things I've seen recently is one little town in northern Michigan that kept a bird from going extinct.
The town is Mio, population of about 1800. The bird is the Kirtland's warbler, a small gray-and-yellow songbird that breeds in exactly one kind of habitat, mostly in a single corner of Michigan.
In 1974, the entire global population dropped to 167 singing males. The bird was one of the first species listed under the original 1966 Endangered Species Preservation Act, and it looked like the species was going to be extinct within a generation.
The problem was the habitat. Kirtland's warblers need fire-disturbed jack pine. Their entire breeding range is one specific successional stage of a fire-adapted forest. Decades of fire suppression had let the jack pine grow up past the age the birds could use. The birds had nowhere left to nest.
Mio became the staging point for the recovery. They built a forest management program: clear-cut, replant, burn, repeat. About 76,000 hectares are now managed on roughly six-year rotations to keep a continuous supply of young pine in the bird's preferred age range.
The work has paid off with the total population estimated at over 4,500 birds. The Kirtland's warbler was removed from the endangered species list in 2019, a rare full delisting.
The bird still requires active management. If the work stopped, the jack pine would age out within 20 years and the species would collapse again.
It feels like Earth was designed perfectly for us, rain falling from the sky, food growing from the ground, yet somehow we’ve built a world where people need good credit scores, multiple jobs, and 40-hour workweeks just to survive