...that I can get imputed odds of nearly 40:1 against this happening by buying puts (at the lowest strike prices) with expirations dates mostly of 1/19/24, 6/21/24, and 1/17/25. Which I have.
(note: the benefit of puts, unlike short selling, is that your downside is capped at the loss of your initial investment)
My hope/expectation is that sometime in the next 13, 19, or 25 months, the evidence of willful, murderous fraud will cause the liability protections that Pfizer and Moderna enjoy to be utterly null and void, and that the potential/certain liabilities from the pending lawsuits will dwarf any assets of these companies (remember: while Pfizer has many products which they sell and distribute, Moderna is essentially just a company created solely to pump these deadly MRNA jabs into people).
And I can only promise that I'm not sharing this out of some cynical front-running scheme, as I won't be selling these before expiry. I only share because I want to dance on the graves of any demons who hold long positions in these death-dealing companies, and I want them to foot the bill for the party, and I want others to dance along side with.
If you don't know what a "put" is, ignore this message.
If you don't presently have money you can willingly part with, ignore this message.
If you think my fundamental logic is unsound, consider responding to warn off others.
You might be 1000% correct. And I hope you are.
My only issue is I expect a US dollar collapse before or while this is happening, so nominal gains may be high. But value of capital risked should be put into other assets like food, or other survival items.
Two great points (I only touched on the second by stating: don’t risk what you can’t lose):
The time-value of money has to be understood; the capital risked is 2022 dollars, and the return at expiration date would be 2024/2025 dollars. (edit: I was distracted when I wrote “time value of money”; “the debasement of the currency” is the more salient issue, and the one you correctly brought up)
Definitely don’t spend money that is needed for more pressing purposes, even while acknowledging that survival preparation is inherently speculative as well. I’ve spent a lot of money on survival prep that may not ever get used if there’s not a food emergency in the US. This activity is indeed very analogous to the risk/reward of a speculative investment, although I, too, would elevate preparing for “food insecurity” over financial positioning for the coming financial evisceration of companies complicity in the canal’s mass murders.