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NanoKhuma 1 point ago +3 / -2

"scarcest digital commodity'

Lol, lmao even. All well and good until they fork BTC for an unlimited coin count with only trusted nodes by JPM, BOA, and the like to "give the little guy a fair shake."

And before you say "but I won't use the fork I'll just use the REAL BTC!" how do you plan on paying income, property, or car registration taxes if they only take their FedCoin?

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NanoKhuma 6 points ago +6 / -0

Statue of limitations doesn't apply for crimes against humanity.

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NanoKhuma 7 points ago +7 / -0

No one wants to be the first, doesn't mean there won't be more to follow once the first finally stands up.

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NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

If you want to argue historicality China is going to blow up under the weight of it's debt, and then fracture into a bunch of warlord states again.

0
NanoKhuma 0 points ago +1 / -1

Gotta understand prime rate =/= central bank rate. Like the web article says: "The China Loan Prime Rate (LPR) is the lending rate provided by commercial banks to their highest quality customers".

Interest rates to government entities in the form of bonds are always lower than the prime rates for business and individuals. Plus, you can't compare base yields between China and the US directly like that, China has been notorious for loose monetary policy to purposely undermine the US for decades now, not just with the recent moves to BRICS.

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NanoKhuma 6 points ago +6 / -0

A proper win for silver will not be a temporary squeeze on the price and back to normal, it will be restoration to it's historical value as money, around 1:15-17 of a gold oz.

Slight aside, look up the Coinage Act of 1873, before that was passed, silver standard was the norm, not gold standard.

1
NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

Of course it is, taking out cholesterol from your brain causes it to not recover from normal damage via metabolic processes. Like taking oil from an engine and being suprised it rips itself apart.

0
NanoKhuma 0 points ago +2 / -2

I 100% agree with what you said regarding the 3rd temple, and I'm heavily in the opinion that Israel in it's current state is not the Israel that we will see come end times, but things change when the current nation-state is sending military actors to rile things up domestically even further.

Not to say I'm taking this post at face value, but it's something to keep aware of, whether it's Israeli, European, or otherwise. Foreign interference in our domestic politics should always be a no go, no matter who.

2
NanoKhuma 2 points ago +2 / -0

Even if you assume that vaccines are 100% effective, that in and of itself is grounds for not needing vaccines. Think, if everyone who had a vaccine will never catch or transmit the disease, how will your daughter get a/the disease if 90+% of the population is vaccinated with the 100% effective vaccine? And if the vaccine isn't 100% effective, then it is a game of odds if your daughter is even protected in the first place.

1
NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

So not wanting to be the latest guy for a ride on the town bicycle is "low T" behavior?

4
NanoKhuma 4 points ago +4 / -0

Do be aware that under the current tax code, the price difference between the stock price and the sum of the cost basis and strike price is counted as income tax.

So if you bought and exercised a warrant today, ~54 dollars for DJT minus the combined 21.50 for 1 DJTWW plus 11.50 for the strike price would be ~21 dollars counted for the sake of income tax.

2
NanoKhuma 2 points ago +2 / -0

"paper"

Paper is the reason we are in this mess in the first place. If we can get rid of IOUs by Big Fed, and swap it out for a less than great Bitcoin, I still call that a win because that's stripping the power of money printing.

I am no fan of Bitcoin, not in it's current state, however endless money printing vastly, greatly outranks any issues with Bitcoin I have currently. End the endless.

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NanoKhuma 3 points ago +3 / -0

I mean, it kinda would. Opening up the mind to lower forms of thoughts is going to open up to all forms of spiritual interferance, both 'demonic' and 'holy'. It's like opening up the city gates to let in an entourage of people, versus vetting people in one at a time. Lot of trust that the bad won't come in with the good.

1
NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

Depends, most of the US' federal budget came from tariffs in and out of the country, and excise tax on alcohol, which paid for things like military.

Schools wise, most funding came privately, since public funded education didn't really exist.

Roads, streets, parks, ect came from a combination of the affluent and the States paying for contruction between high importance areas, which people also happened to live near. It was very rarely strictly a governmental venture pre-Progressive era.

Even in States with sales tax or income tax, added all together the overall tax rate was never near what we have today, with an effective tax rate of 40-50%, factored all together.

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deleted 1 point ago +1 / -0
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NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

Implying that roads aren't selectively built and maintained for the benefit of politicians, using big Unions known for corruption and overrunning on both money and time

OK retard

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NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

This largely wasn't the case pre-Progressive era, and yet somehow all those things existed.

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NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

That implies that taxes aren't taken via the end of a gun barrel.

Besides, •Military: Bloated and wasteful •Schools: Bloated and wasteful •Roads and streets: Bloated, wasteful, and corrupt •Parks: Probably the least overtly wasteful of your examples, but let's not pretend open spaces for people to relax is somehow strictly a governmental problem to solve. •Among other things: This right here qualifies for the vast majority of the budget, and is by far and away the most disgusting and corrupt uses of our tax dollars.

If you were to stop all the bloated, wasted, corrupt spending, you could very easily get by on a small fraction of the cash.

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NanoKhuma 6 points ago +6 / -0

Probably institute a "rainbow" standard with gold and silver, propose a constitutional ban on central banking and income taxation, and pay some level of restitution on previous personal ownership of US dollars, up to some nominal value.

Last one is the tricky part, because you can't just bankrupt the govt out of the gate by paying out the entirety of stockpiles of gold/silver, but it also can't be so little as to be a token gesture to the citizenship.

1
NanoKhuma 1 point ago +1 / -0

BTC, as in the actual listed security, really hasn't been in much of a healthy spot for many years. Between the recent push for "spot ETFs" (In the vain of SLV, where they use the underlying to control price movements), the intentional stagnation of L1 chain scaling (See Blockstream and their patented Lightning network), the increasing usage of chain analytics to scrub "bad actors" from the chain, and the push for smart contracts and the smart money paradigm (A way to force how and to whom you can spend your money), BTC is in a precarious spot that leaves the Satoshi vision of trustless, free, internet cash further in the dust.

This is not to say in the future, that all can't be fixed or rectified, but in it's current state I'm heavily of the opinion that BTC is a cabal captured asset. However, this isn't me saying that all crypto is bad and always bad, just that we need to be wary of the total circumstances of the market.

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