Hitting the timeline of passing the Clarity Act into law by July 4 would require finding an ethics solution both Republicans and Democrats can live with, addressing issues in the Ag text, merging the bills, securing 60 votes, and passing it through both the Senate and House in just two weeks.
Logistically impossible.
Brad Garlinghouse isn't holding back. 🚨 The Ripple CEO just went on Fox Business to call out Jamie Dimon’s pushback on crypto regulation as an "intentional misrepresentation."
“$13 TRILLION in legacy volume, 0% on-chain... yet. 👀”
"Stablecoins are the ChatGPT moment of finance." 💥
He revealed Ripple Treasury handled a massive $13 TRILLION in legacy payments last year and explained why that multi-trillion dollar gap is the ultimate crypto opportunity.
The tides have officially changed. 👇
For every 20,000 blacks, 306 violent crimes are committed annually against a whites.
For every 20,000 whites, 7 violent crimes are committed annually against blacks.
Black criminals are released because of their skin color.
White citizens are punished because of theirs.
@ChartNerdTA Keeping your sister in my prayers that she is completely healed and come back home fully recovered. And praying for supernatural strength to you and your family in this challenging time. 🙏🏼
🚨The BIGGEST THREAT in the WORLD is NATO.
🚨The Ukraine - Russian War Was Provoked!
🚨Putin is Correct about NATO & Ukraine.
🚨Prof. Jeffrey Sachs completely exposes Washington for orchestrating the illegal 2014 coup in Ukraine.
🚨The US intentionally overthrew a neutral sovereign government solely to force NATO expansion and provoke a disastrous war.
Whale With $24.79M Profit Record Opens Massive Longs on ETH, BTC, DOGE
The wallet, identified as 0x152e, opened longs on 4,601 $ETH worth $9.82M, 118.2 $BTC worth $9.11M, and 19.47M $DOGE worth $2.04M, per lookonchain.
Limit orders are also sitting in place to add further to the BTC and ETH positions.
The same wallet holds $6.14M in $ZEC spot and $5.48M in $HYPE spot, both in profit.
It is time someone finally exposes the truth about Leonard Leo!
Pay attention to his Physiognomy. That never lies.
Leonard Leo spent years and millions building Ken Paxton into a national conservative force, and the second Paxton decides to run for Senate as a true MAGA candidate, Leo pulls the plug and sits on his billion-dollar war chest. That tells you everything you need to know. Stay far away from this guy 😡
Honestly, there is no tip for this.
And that is the most important thing I can tell you.
Not because the answer is hard to find, but because the question itself is the wrong question.
“How do I protect 2R and still not destroy my RR in this trade” is a question built on looking at one single trade.
As long as you are asking it that way, there is no answer that will ever satisfy you.
Take profit early and you will suffer because it ran further.
Wait and give it back and you will suffer because you could have taken 2R.
Both hurt, because both come from placing value on the outcome of this one trade.
Look closely at the words you used.
Round trip.
Give back.
Those words assume the 2R was already yours.
It was not.
Until price reaches your TP, you are not holding a profit you might lose.
You are holding a position that has not finished doing what your system was designed to do.
The pain you feel is not the market moving.
It is you deciding that an unrealized number already belonged to you.
Your job is not to optimize this one trade.
Your job is to execute a tested system with consistency across a large sample size, so the law of large numbers can pull out its edge.
Whether you exit at 2R or hold to 4R is not a decision you make in the moment.
Your tested system should have answered it before the trade.
Yes, looking back at one trade, you will think “if only I had held” or “if only I had taken it at 2R.”
That thought will always appear when you look at a single trade in isolation.
That is not the problem.
The problem is stopping there.
The only question that matters is this.
If you repeat the exact same action again and again over a large sample size, which action is the one that leaves profit in your hand at the end.
Not in this trade.
Across all of them.
That is the only viewpoint a rule can be built from.
A rule is not built from how to protect 2R in this one trade.
A rule is built from what remains profitable when one fixed action is repeated over a large sample size.
You are trying to build a rule from the wrong viewpoint, and that is why no tip will ever fit.
So the real thing to fix is not your exit timing.
It is the process that creates trust in your exit rule.
Go back to testing.
Define the complete exit rule clearly.
Test the complete system with that exit rule over a large sample size.
Then choose the version that has positive expectancy and execute that version exactly.
That is what removes this problem.
Not a tip during the trade.
A tested rule that you have already experienced through a large sample size before the trade.
She was bullied for being "different." Now her IQ is higher than Einstein's.
Meet Adhara Pérez Sánchez. 11 years old. From a low-income neighbourhood in Tláhauc, Mexico City.
And quietly outsmarting two of the greatest minds in history.
Her score? 162. Einstein and Hawking both clocked 160.
Diagnosed with autism at age three after her speech regressed, Adhara spent her early years getting picked on at school for being "different." The same brain her classmates mocked had already memorised the entire periodic table and taught itself algebra. Her mum thought she was just bored.
She wasn't bored. She was operating on another level entirely.
By five, she'd finished elementary school. One year later, she had middle school AND high school in the rearview mirror.
Then depression hit. A therapist sent her to the Center for Attention to Talent, where her sky-high IQ was finally discovered. A visit to a doctor's office decorated with Stephen Hawking artwork lit the fuse. The doctor explained who Hawking was, what he did, how he spoke to the universe through a machine.
That was it. Space had her.
Adhara already holds a bachelor's degree in systems engineering from CNCI University. Right now she's deep into a master's in mathematics at the Technological University of Mexico.
The endgame? NASA. Mars. The stars she was practically named after.
She's also chasing her G-tests, the gateway to flying with an agency linked to NASA. If everything lines up, she could be the first autistic person ever to fly a mission, around age 17.
The kid they bullied is heading to space.
Source: IBTimes UK (via Marie Claire Mexico)
What you lack is not discipline.
It is trust.
You believe that the win or loss in front of you is what truly matters.
Even if you know probability as knowledge, and even if you know the data of your strategy.
That is why your emotions work faithfully in line with what you believe.
Then reasons to justify those emotions are automatically created.
And you are simply repeating actions that feel correct according to those reasons.
For probabilistic thinking to become more than knowledge, and to become deep understanding and trust, knowing the data is not enough.
You need to experience it again and again through your own hands, and build trust there.
If, through testing and practice, you truly believed from the bottom of your heart that repeatedly executing behavior with confirmed positive expectancy ultimately leads to success, and if you truly believed that deviating from it prevents that edge from being expressed, you would no longer even think about breaking your rules.
“WHY DOES LIFE HURT SO MUCH?”
A man asked the Buddha with eyes heavy with life.
The Buddha looked at him quietly—not to answer immediately, but to understand.
Then he said,
“You are holding on to things that are meant to pass.”
The man frowned. “Holding on to what?”
The Buddha gently pointed to a nearby river.
“Look at that water,” he said.
“Yesterday’s river is gone.
This moment’s river is already moving.
If you try to hold it in your hands… it slips away.
And yet, you suffer—not because the river flows,
but because you wish it would stay.”
The man was silent.
The Buddha continued—
“You cling to people…
expecting them to remain the same.
But people change, just like seasons.”
“You cling to moments…
wanting joy to last forever.
But even the most beautiful sunset fades into night.”
“You cling to expectations…
how life should be,
instead of seeing how it is.”
The man lowered his head.
“But why does it hurt so deeply?” he asked again.
The Buddha picked up a small pebble and held it tightly.
“If I hold this lightly,” he said,
“there is no pain.”
Then he clenched his fist hard.
“But if I grip it tightly… it begins to hurt.”
He looked at the man and said,
“The pain is not from the stone.
It is from the tightness of your grip.”
The man’s eyes softened.
“So what should I do?” he whispered.
The Buddha smiled.
“Learn to hold everything with an open hand.”
“Love people… but don’t try to own them.
Enjoy moments… but don’t demand they stay.
Have hopes… but don’t let them become chains.”
“Let things come.
Let things go.
And remain present with what is.”
The man sat there for a long time,
watching the river flow.
For the first time,
he didn’t try to stop it.
And in that moment—
a small, quiet peace found him.
Because peace begins
the moment you stop gripping
what is already gone.
✨🙌🏾💫