7 years ago this Pokemon card was $30.
Today it sold for $19,841.08.
If you put that $30 into stocks you’d have $73.20. Into Bitcoin you’d have $375.90.
Buying Pokemon cards is a better investment than anything else.
Pay attention or stay poor forever.
I don’t understand why @billymooreAPBD gets so much hate. He comes across as a proper sound and genuine fella.
He’s been through hell and back and made some crazy mistakes. That’s no secret.
But I think it’s sad when people hold his past against him.
Keep going Billy lad!
Bonnie Blue has hired her own mother to help clean up at her “exclusive events”. When asked how she feels about her daughter’s career, she says she’s proud of her because her success allows them to go on expensive holidays 💀
THE UK HAS GONE COMPLETELY MAD ~ You're trying to withdraw a small amount of money from your account at the bank, and they won't let you!
Put yourself in his shoes! You have £11,000 in the bank, and they won't let you withdraw £2,500 of it unless you tell them what you're spending it on—to get her approval.
He's trying to buy a scooter for his son, and they're demanding evidence he's using the money for that purpose.
🏦 Santander bank in London
NEW: Internet users raise over $1.2M for an 88-year-old US Army veteran to help him retire after his pension was wiped out.
Ed Bambas lost his wife 7 years ago and is now working 40 hours a week to make ends meet.
Bambas retired from General Motors in 1999, expecting to have a stable pension.
When GM went bankrupt in 2009, Bambas and nearly 20,000 others at GM subsidiary Delphi Corporation lost their pensions and retirement benefits.
"The thing that hurt me the most was when my wife was really sick," Bambas said to influencer Sam Weidenhofer.
"And when they took the pension, they also took the healthcare coverage and all but $10,000 of my life insurance."
"So I sold my house, sold the property I had, and we made it through."
When his wife passed away in 2018, Bambas says he had to "re-establish" himself and decided to go back to work.
"I'm fortunate God gave me enough body to be strong enough to stand there for eight, eight-and-a-half hours a day," Bambas said to local news outlet WXYZ.
Weidenhofer says he heard about Bambas from a follower and set out to find him in Michigan.
After finding him and sharing his story on TikTok, online users helped raise over $1.2M for him.
God bless him and all those who donated.
Video: itssozer / tt.
🚨BREAKING: British veteran breaks down live on TV over state of the country:
"Rows and rows of white tombs for what? A country of today? No, I'm sorry. The sacrifice wasn't worth the result.
I fought for freedom, and it's darn-sight worse now than when I fought."