@BoltsJolts I PRAY U RIGHT. I hate my sport becoming Americanized. Hydration breaks??? Fk that. Just another way to run commercials. For the record, when u delay or do subs in injury time the refs will add more time. Thats why its past 97th.
@ZaStocks@FreedomTradesx The draw downs on these names were so large u can’t have it both ways. Can’t hold long-term and sell losers. They would all have been stomped out with any rational Stop loss.
Based on the reports that came out today, the $300 billion is not U.S. taxpayer money. The current framework describes it as a private investment and development fund, not a U.S. government payment, grant, or reparations package. More than half of the commitments are reportedly already lined up from private investors and entities outside the U.S. government.
A few key points:
* No U.S. taxpayer funds are currently described as going into the $300 billion fund. Reuters reported it would be financed by private capital from companies and investors in the U.S., Gulf states, Asia, South America, and Africa.
* Administration officials, including Vice President JD Vance, have said the fund would largely be backed by Gulf countries such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar, not by the U.S. Treasury.
* The money is intended to flow through investment projects—energy, refineries, airports, logistics, manufacturing, steel, and infrastructure—not as a giant check handed to the Iranian government.
* The framework is reportedly conditional. Iran would have to comply with the agreement’s terms before gaining access to the investments.
As for Friday: we’re still waiting for the full text. A formal signing and public release are expected Friday, and there are still unanswered questions about:
* Who administers the fund
* How investments are approved
* Whether American companies can participate
* What specific conditions Iran must meet
* Whether Congress gets any role in oversight
So if someone tells you, “Trump is giving Iran $300 billion of taxpayer money,” the reporting available today does not support that claim. The reporting so far describes a conditional investment fund backed primarily by private and Gulf-state capital, not a direct U.S. government payment.