Here’s how I see $SPCX playing out from here:
$150 -> $225 -> $160
$160 -> $134 -> $117
$117 -> $85 -> $92
$92 -> $148 -> $270
Keep in mind: I’ve called every major market top and bottom for over 10 YEARS.
I was one of the only people who called the top in October, and I’ll do it again, that’s literally my job.
If you still haven’t followed me, you’ll regret it.
🚨 Anthropic just showed a 27-minute workshop on how to actually do prompts for Claude.
Taught by the people who built it.
Free. No registration. No paywall.
I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what they teach in the first 8 minutes.
Watch it and bookmark it now.
@JCorrill@MacBookProAR@krassenstein Meaning, invest millions or billions in new factories, pay American workers higher paid manufacturing jobs. Corporations wont eat that cost, they'll pass it to you. Meaning final product will be more expensive. So maybe you'll have more $ but your buying power will be smaller.
It’s hilarious how they spin that the new Pope is the first American Pope in its 2000 year history!
Could there have been one 1500 years ago?
A 1000 years ago?
500 years ago?
300 years ago?
How Hitler seized power:
1. Create a crisis.
2. Demonize opponents.
3. Declare a state of emergency.
4. Undermine elections.
5. Make the rule of law irrelevant.
6. Rule by decree.
If America falls it will be because of the people who didn’t pay attention.
The most overlooked tech revolution is happening in Europe right now.
While everyone obsesses over AI, Europe is quietly dominating ROBOTICS.
10 European robotics startups reshaping our physical world 🧵:
China has lived through a Century of Humiliation (mid-1800s to mid-1900s), when foreign powers dictated its trade, took its ports, and crippled its sovereignty. The modern Chinese state was built on the promise: “Never again will China be humiliated by the West.” So when Trump uses economic warfare, China doesn’t just see trade conflict — it sees an attempt to repeat history, which it will resist at all costs.
Trump is using 19th-century tools (tariffs, trade walls) in a 21st-century global economy - against a China that remembers the 19th century all too well.
Donald Trump's approach to trade — especially with China — is built around nationalist economic protectionism: higher tariffs, reshoring supply chains, and confronting what he sees as unfair Chinese practices. But this strategy isn’t happening in a vacuum; it’s colliding with deep historical memory and a very different world from the one that existed even 30 years ago. Let's refresh some history:
BREAKING: 🇺🇸 🇯🇵 🇨🇳 THE U.S. CANT NEGOTIATE!
This is insane.
Former Assistant Secretary of Defense Chas Freeman reveals the Trump admin couldn't explain to the Japanese negotiating team what they want:
"The Japanese said 'what is it that you want?' And the Americans COULD NOT explain what they wanted."
Freeman also noted "the United States broke virtually every agreement it agreed to in recent decades including the replacement for NAFTA, negotiated by Trump in his first term..."
Why would any country want to make a deal with Trump now? Freeman says China won’t:
"What is China's incentive to negotiate when the US has no stated objectives that make sense and no record of compliance with its own agreements? I think the Chinese have decided they will wait us out and see how Americans like Walmart and Amazon denuded of products."
So much for ‘Art of the deal’ 🤦🏻♂️
There is a simple reason why China is in the stronger position compared to the US in this trade war: It is much easier to create demand domestically in the short run than it is to rebuild the workshop of the world.
Mark Zuckerberg recently built a MASSIVE data center for META in Georgia
- There are residential homes just hundreds of yards away
- It uses so much water, residents no longer have water pressure in their homes
- Their sink water no longer works
- Their toilets don’t fill with water
- Their homes physically shake from the constant new construction
- The data centers use so much power they often go without power
- The small amount of water they do get to their homes is full of sentiment
“It's overwhelming because you really feel like you are up against this huge wall that you can't penetrate. There's nothing that you can do and they don't care.”