@StaafJackie@BernieSanders Correct. And even the poverty slice in the upper pyramid is much better off in general than all of the extreme poverty majority under socialism.
You envious, sniveling failure of a human being. You clearly can't see the enormous value and wealth he has created for the country. All you see is that he doesn't agree with your politics. And you think this justifies your attempts to steal and control what he has created.
You are scum.
@RepSaraJacobs You are an ignorant cretin sowing resentment while ignoring the agregate picture which is crystal clear: Elon has contributed vastly more taxes and created more wealth for more Americans than just about anyone else.
Complain about something else. This is not a problem.
Congratulations @ElonMusk.
Thanks to SpaceX's IPO, he's the first Trillionaire.
He didn't TAKE money from anyone. He CREATED wealth.
He launched satellites that connect even the poorest, most remote parts of the world.
Our world needs more MAKERS like Musk; fewer TAKERS like:
I find it hard to understand why people who point out divisiveness that is already there, are considered more trouble than the people who created divisiveness in the first place
I just want to protect my daughters.
I want them to walk through the city dressed how they want, laughing, with their friends. Like girls in Japan have for a thousand years.
I want to die knowing my granddaughters will still be safe in a park.
That's it. That's the whole project.
In Japan, a stabbing scene works differently. Let me describe it without pride.
A koban officer reaching a knife incident has one trained reflex: secure the blade, secure the bleeding.
Who insulted whom is a question for detectives, tomorrow, at the station.
The wounded man is not yet a suspect or a victim. He is a casualty.
We have our own police failures — plenty of them.
But I cannot imagine a Japanese officer telling a dying man "don't think you've been stabbed, mate" because the other party raised a social accusation first.
Not because our officers are better people.
Because nobody trained them to rank grievances at a crime scene.
Training is a choice.
Who made Britain's?
The most shocking thing from a Japanese perspective is not the crimes themselves.
It is that British people are being turned into second-class citizens in their own homeland — and they are still expected to stay polite about it.
Grooming gang victims were ignored for years.
Now, after another attempted beheading, the same pattern: downplay the attacker, crack down on anyone who gets angry.
You have elections. You have a military. You have history.
Yet your leaders continue importing the exact people who are destroying your safety, and most of you still say nothing.
In Japan, this would be considered an invasion. And we would respond accordingly.
Britain, you are running out of time to remember what it means to defend your own.
I had to read this three times before I could believe it was real.
Rotherham. A small town in northern England.
For sixteen years, at least 1,400 children — some as young as eleven — were raped, gang-raped, and trafficked between cities by organized groups of men.
Eleven years old.
Petrol was poured on them so they would stay quiet.
Their families were threatened with death.
Photos were taken and used as blackmail.
The police knew.
The council knew.
The social workers knew.
For sixteen years, not one of them moved.
Why?
Because officers were afraid of being called racist if they acted on what they were seeing.
That was the whole reason.
While children were being sold, adults were protecting their own reputations.
That is the moment something in you breaks.
And here is the part that makes it worse.
The TV networks did not report it. The papers did not chase it.
When the journalist Andrew Norfolk finally broke the story, even he thought maybe 150 girls had been hurt.
The real number was 1,400.
He was staggered.
This should have been the biggest story of the decade. It was not.
The networks looked away. The advertisers preferred safer topics.
The cover-up did not end when the report was published — it continued in the silence of every newsroom that refused to chase it.
Then Elon Musk bought X.
The advertisers fled.
The press declared the platform finished.
X almost did not survive.
But it did.
And on X, the names of those towns started trending.
Rotherham.
Telford.
Rochdale.
Oldham.
Towns the country had been told to forget.
Britain understands itself differently today.
Not because the politicians confessed.
Not because the broadcasters apologized.
Because one platform refused to let it stay buried.
X almost did not survive.
1,400 children almost stayed forgotten.
That is worth saying out loud.
So basically, you've been paid to say a great many things about BTC that you don't understand.
Worse, you've applauded something that is profoundly negative for it the moment anyone bothers to think past the slogan.
The issue is governance.
Who controls the protocol? Who changes the rules? Who coordinates policy? Who benefits from those changes?
BTC’s great trick was pretending governance vanished because everyone agreed not to look at it.
A marvellous political theory, really: close your eyes, clap for commodities, and hope the law gets bored.
Imagine a world where the plastic in your wallet is a relic, a piece of history like a rotary phone or a damn horse-drawn carriage. No more debit cards, no more credit games. With BSV, stablecoins, and the systems built on top of them, the whole rotten foundation of credit-based systems crumbles. Debit cards? They’re just credit wrapped in a prettier lie.
And what happens then? The 50% profit margins that Mastercard and Visa suck out of the system vanish like smoke. Gone. Their empire of fees and exploitation falls apart. That’s why they’re fighting, clawing, trying to stop it. They don’t care about innovation, they care about survival. Their golden calf gets slaughtered when people realise they don’t need them anymore.
BSV isn’t just a payment system. It’s a wrecking ball aimed straight at the heart of their monopoly. No fees, no middlemen, no parasites taking a cut every time you buy a coffee.
That’s the future. And they know it. That’s why they’re scared.
💥NEW: Jillian Michaels: “I gotta be honest: it seems to me that Trump is the ONLY one standing between US and the COMPLETE loss of free and fair elections.”
“You know, I used to think that Trump was INSANE for suggesting that the 2020 election was stolen. And now, I’m just — I’m actually not so sure.”
“Because these ANIMALS in California are not just changing election law — they’re changing what elections actually ARE!”
🚨Breaking.
Carmelo Anthony was just sentenced to 35 years.
Now before everybody starts calling each other racist and before social media turns this into another black-versus-white circus, I have a question.
What if it was your son?
Not somebody else’s son.
Your son.
Your grandson.
Your nephew.
Would you still be standing outside with signs?
Would you still be posting hashtags?
Would you still be raising money for the person convicted of stabbing him?
Because that’s the part I cannot understand.
A family buried their child.
A jury heard the evidence.
A judge handed down 35 years.
And somehow half the country is talking about race instead of the victim.
So … I have questions.
I want to know how a person reportedly connected to hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations ends up with a public defender.
I want to know how the jury was selected.
I want to know why people seem more upset about the sentence than they are about the young man who never got to go home.
Most of all, I want to know why every tragedy in America gets immediately sorted into racial teams.
Because if justice only matters when the person looks like us, then it was never justice we were after in the first place.
Let’s talk about it.
#AStoneGroove #SilentMajoritySpeaks
You guys see that green check mark next to my post in this screenshot?
That's because I have the AuthSig Chrome Extension installed, and a BSV wallet running on my computer.
So my identity / signature are linked to that post on-chain and verifiable!
Stand behind YOUR words on the @BSVBlockchain:
https://t.co/4WysFTIQYa
Hello Mr. Platner,
Ratio.
That's it. That's the whole rebuttal.
You are someone who, by the virtue of his Reddit posts, manages to be simultaneously a filthy-literal-Communist and anti-Semite. That in itself is an egregious sin, because literal, card-carrying Communists are fundamentally at odds with America's norms.
But if that weren't enough, you have voluminous Reddit posts defending the Nazi Totenkopf symbol. You clearly knew the tattoo you got and you defended it publicly. There's no either/or way about it.
Scum attracts scum. Which is why you can comfortably swim in both literal-Communist and literal-antisemitic far-right circles.
I am no fan of Sue Collins. But the fact you are running against her, that you have even the smallest chance of defeating her --
you, as someone who is a self-admitted Communist, someone who has Nazi sympathies -- not to mention all the horrific, personal-life stuff --
You are the worst candidate in history, right AND left. You are the authoritarian evil that every "democracy" group speaks about, yet they will hypocritically not say a word against because they believe that being anti-Trump is more important than allying with Communists or Nazis.
You are not "populist." On the contrary:
You are the perfected example of how liberal democracy has rotted so far that they'd rather stay silent about you, hoping you'll win against the most moderate Republican in the Senate, than to hand Trump the possibility of retaining the Senate.
Here is a man that those in power and money wants you not to believe as being Satoshi. And yet, he studies, builds, writes, and continues to educate the world on #Bitcoin (#BSV), and have it tested and have it reviewed. Who in those candidates of Satoshi's are doing this? Nobody. Just him. Because he IS the real #Satoshi.
“There is no greater indictment of judges than the fact that honest men are afraid to go into court, while criminals swagger out through its revolving doors.”
— Thomas Sowell
I know. It is generally me.
I have a whole paid troll army.
There is an industry worth about $25 million US dollars a year dedicated to attacking me and funding detractors. Literally.
You do not spend $25 million US a year unless you regard someone as a serious threat.
People keep trying to explain it away with theories about vocabulary, writing style, response times, or whatever the fashionable excuse happens to be this week.
The simpler explanation is that there are organisations that have spent years and millions of dollars trying to discredit me.
Nobody spends that sort of money because they are unconcerned.
Nobody allocates that sort of budget because they think someone is irrelevant.
You spend that sort of money because you believe the person matters.