
Issue #1332: There is blood in the water
The United States federal government may be a lost cause, but many of us Americans have a lot left to give in terms of innovation, productivity and prosperity.
The United States federal government may be a lost cause, but many of us Americans have a lot left to give in terms of innovation, productivity and prosperity.
The idea that treasuries are "risk-free" stems from the brain dead Keynesian theory that debt is just "money we owe ourselves".
In the midst of all of the bank failures and the ensuing chaotic scramble by governments and central banks bitcoin has performed like a true risk-off asset.
Many books have been written about the disastrous effects imperial colonialism had on emerging markets in the 19th and 2oth centuries, but not many have been written about the shift from overt kinetic colonialism toward financial colonialism.
This is one of the most important episodes of TFTC ever recorded.
Konstantin Kisin is a comedian and co-host of the TRIGGERnometry podcast.
Essentially, the Fed's chaotic policy bakes in sudden cascading sells into the balance sheets of the banks.
Banks are failing left and right. Many want to pinpoint bitcoin and "crypto" or poor risk management practices by banks as the cause of the contagion event that is under way, but the core of the problem is the Federal Reserves.
The United States federal government may be a lost cause, but many of us Americans have a lot left to give in terms of innovation, productivity and prosperity.
The idea that treasuries are "risk-free" stems from the brain dead Keynesian theory that debt is just "money we owe ourselves".
In the midst of all of the bank failures and the ensuing chaotic scramble by governments and central banks bitcoin has performed like a true risk-off asset.
Many books have been written about the disastrous effects imperial colonialism had on emerging markets in the 19th and 2oth centuries, but not many have been written about the shift from overt kinetic colonialism toward financial colonialism.
This is one of the most important episodes of TFTC ever recorded.
Konstantin Kisin is a comedian and co-host of the TRIGGERnometry podcast.
Essentially, the Fed's chaotic policy bakes in sudden cascading sells into the balance sheets of the banks.
Banks are failing left and right. Many want to pinpoint bitcoin and "crypto" or poor risk management practices by banks as the cause of the contagion event that is under way, but the core of the problem is the Federal Reserves.
Lyn Alden explains why Jerome Powell's attempt to be the Volcker of his era is terribly misguided.
Kelly Lannan is a real estate developer with a passion for urban landscape design. He is the founder of Bitcoin Urbanism, a newsletter that explores the impact of bitcoin on human action in the built environment.
It's much worse than they're leading on and it's happening across the world right now.
In this rip Chase and Marty dive into the corrupted parts of our society and how sovereign individuals can begin taking back territory in the fight for virtue in the Digital Age.
This is a very dense rip that will help you better understand what it takes to mine bitcoin successfully.