BREAKING: Claude can now run Stock Market research like a top consulting firm (for free).
Here are 10 Claude prompts that replace $100K/year stock analysts (Save for later)
How to fuck system....
-Buy Borrow Die-
Buy rising stocks/real estate.
Borrow against them taxfree. Die heirs pay zero tax on gains.
-Never Sell-
Hold assets forever.
Live on loans, not sales. Banks fund rich guys cheap.
-Layer LLCs & Trusts-
Put everything in stacked entities.
Lawsuits hit only outer layer.
-Offshore Trusts-
Set up in Cayman/Nevis/Cook Islands.
Hide from creditors/taxman. Still control via trustees.
-Corporate Perks-
Run expenses through company.
Cars, travel, phones. deduct as business. Live rich pre-tax.
-Legal War-
Hire top lawyers. File endless motions/delays
Opponent runs out of money first and settles cheap
-Donate Stock-
Give appreciated shares to your foundation.
Deduct full value. Skip capital gains tax.
-Golden Visa-
Buy residency/passport in low-tax country.
Shift when taxes hurt.
-Low Salary-
Keep paycheck tiny.
Pull cash via loans/dividends. Pay almost no income tax.
-Real Estate Refinance-
Own rentals. Claim depreciation.
Refinance. pull tax-free cash. Repeat.
-Fund Politicians-
Donate to PACs/campaigns.
Get rules bent your way.
-Depreciation Hack-
Buy buildings/gear. Claim paper losses yearly.
Real value grows while taxes drop.
-Entity Stacking-
Layer LLCs/holding companies.
Change ownership on paper before trouble.
What rich families really educate their boys on:
-never look expensive look unbothered.
-don't explain yourself, power never over-explains.
-keep assets boring and pleasures private.
-learn which laws matter and which ones are for poor people only.
-never fall in love before you understand leverage.
-your surname opens doors. Don't embarrass it.
-cash is for emergencies. Credit is for opportunities.
-friends are categorized: useful, neutral, entertainment.
-if something is loud, emotional, or viral, its already a bad deal.
-always know who actually owns the room. It's rarely the loudest person.
-don't argue with broke people about money. Don't argue with emotional people about logic.
-learn taxes before you learn multiplication tables properly.
-you don't work hard forever. You work hard early to stop later.
-never let pleasure habits become visible patterns.
-reputation is currency. One scandal costs more than ten failures.
-silence is safer than honesty in most rooms.
-if you can't control your sleep, hunger, lust, or temper, you can't control money.
-marry someone who improves your bloodline, not your mood.
-keep one legal problem away from disaster at all times.
-always have an exit plan. For jobs, cities, county, relationships, even friendships.
Just rules whispered, not posted.
Many chronic interrupters aren't being rude—they might be quick thinkers whose minds jump to conclusions, connections, or responses before the speaker finishes.
Their internal processing speed outpaces the ~150-200 words per minute of typical conversation.
In 1929, a man named Roger Babson predicted the crash that would destroy the American economy.
Wall Street laughed at him. 47 days later, they lost everything.
Babson wasn't lucky. He identified a 5-stage pattern that appears before every major financial collapse.
The same pattern showed up before 1987. Before 2000. Before 2008.
And right now, 4 of those 5 stages are flashing red
There is one market indicator with an unusually strong track record: The Federal Reserve monitors it closely and Wall Street tracks it constantly, yet it is rarely explained in mainstream coverage and almost never taught outside specialist finance courses.
At its core, the yield curve compares short-term and long-term government bond yields. When short-term rates rise above long-term rates, the curve inverts — a signal that investors expect weaker growth ahead.
https://t.co/uWZfatY9bs via @Share_Talk
🚨 China Is Turning America’s Silver Weapon Back on the Dollar 🚨
In this video, my cousin Asian Guy breaks down a story most people have never been taught. It starts with the 1934 Silver Purchase Act, why the United States weaponized silver in the first place, and how American banks inadvertently helped drain silver out of China. He walks through the economic devastation that followed, deflation, credit collapses, and mass business failures, and how China was ultimately forced into a historic currency reform in 1935 that reshaped its financial future. From there, he connects the past to the present, explaining today’s silver supply and demand realities, why industrial use like solar panels and electric vehicles is quietly tightening the market, and how BRICS nations are accelerating de-dollarization while central banks hoard gold. Finally, he ties it all together with current market dynamics and what these signals may be warning us about as silver once again becomes a geopolitical and monetary weapon.