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Uzi

@UziCryptoo61,579 subscribers

PHD in Finance & Crypto | @flipgg_ Partner | Alpha: https://t.co/tg86ADl6xR

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Why did no one tell me credit card debt just dies with you? My uncle died with $52K across 6 credit cards. My aunt called each one and said “He’s dead. He can’t pay.” Every single one said “We’re sorry for your loss. We’ll close the account.” $52,000. Gone. Unsecured debt cannot be passed to the family. They just never tell you this.

Why did no one tell me credit card debt just dies with you? My uncle died with $52K across 6 credit cards. My aunt called each one and said “He’s dead. He can’t pay.” Every single one said “We’re sorry for your loss. We’ll close the account.” $52,000. Gone. Unsecured debt cannot be passed to the family. They just never tell you this.

3,521,483 views

Everyone shouts "Tax the Rich"... but look at the facts. A $150k earner pays around $30,600 in federal tax. A $25k earner pays about $1,200. It takes 25 people on $25k to contribute what one person on $150k does. So why drive high earners out of the U.S. when they already shoulder most of the burden? The problem isn't how much tax is collected. The problem is how much the government wastes. Stop blaming the rich. Start holding the government to account.

Everyone shouts "Tax the Rich"... but look at the facts. A $150k earner pays around $30,600 in federal tax. A $25k earner pays about $1,200. It takes 25 people on $25k to contribute what one person on $150k does. So why drive high earners out of the U.S. when they already shoulder most of the burden? The problem isn't how much tax is collected. The problem is how much the government wastes. Stop blaming the rich. Start holding the government to account.

684,491 views

My dad called me today “Hey, i’m struggling to pay my property tax for this year. It went up almost $1500 to $8188 for the year versus $6600 for last year. I’m confused, i thought taxes were not to increase for two years. Did yours go up as well? This really sucks! They are trying to drive us out of the state.” My dad is 76 and lives on social security. He’s lived in the same house since 1993. It’s been paid off for two decades. Yet he owes $8k in property taxes, or the state of Texas will take his home. This is criminal

My dad called me today “Hey, i’m struggling to pay my property tax for this year. It went up almost $1500 to $8188 for the year versus $6600 for last year. I’m confused, i thought taxes were not to increase for two years. Did yours go up as well? This really sucks! They are trying to drive us out of the state.” My dad is 76 and lives on social security. He’s lived in the same house since 1993. It’s been paid off for two decades. Yet he owes $8k in property taxes, or the state of Texas will take his home. This is criminal

2,514,523 views

HR: Congrats, you’re selected. What was your previous salary? Candidate: $350 per day. HR: That’s $9,000 a month. Our budget is only $7,500. Candidate: Sorry, what was the question? HR: What was your previous salary? Candidate: Oh sorry, I thought you said calorie. I eat 6,000 a day, I’m bulking. Salary was $5,500 a month. Glad I fall within your budget. HR: …silence Candidate: I’ll be expecting the $7,500 offer letter then.

HR: Congrats, you’re selected. What was your previous salary? Candidate: $350 per day. HR: That’s $9,000 a month. Our budget is only $7,500. Candidate: Sorry, what was the question? HR: What was your previous salary? Candidate: Oh sorry, I thought you said calorie. I eat 6,000 a day, I’m bulking. Salary was $5,500 a month. Glad I fall within your budget. HR: …silence Candidate: I’ll be expecting the $7,500 offer letter then.

2,447,523 views

Food trucks used to sell you 3 of the best tacos you've had in your life for $5 cash only and then people with Masters degrees started buying them and now it's 3 of the worst tacos you've had in your life for $18.50 plus a recommended 20% tip

Food trucks used to sell you 3 of the best tacos you've had in your life for $5 cash only and then people with Masters degrees started buying them and now it's 3 of the worst tacos you've had in your life for $18.50 plus a recommended 20% tip

1,513,129 views

When I worked at Sears in the early 90's, the people there built entire lives off those jobs. The guy running appliances had three kids, coached little league every weekend, and retired after 32 years with a pension. One of the women in customer service bought her first house working full-time there, and the older guy in hardware took the same vacation to the Ozarks every summer because he could actually afford to unplug for a week. The managers knew everybody by name, the Christmas bonuses actually meant something, and the store was packed every holiday season because business was booming. Nobody thought they were "stuck" working retail - it was honest work that paid enough to live with dignity. Somewhere along the way, corporations started making record profits while the people keeping the place running could barely afford rent. When exactly did a steady full-time job stop being enough to build a normal life?

When I worked at Sears in the early 90's, the people there built entire lives off those jobs. The guy running appliances had three kids, coached little league every weekend, and retired after 32 years with a pension. One of the women in customer service bought her first house working full-time there, and the older guy in hardware took the same vacation to the Ozarks every summer because he could actually afford to unplug for a week. The managers knew everybody by name, the Christmas bonuses actually meant something, and the store was packed every holiday season because business was booming. Nobody thought they were "stuck" working retail - it was honest work that paid enough to live with dignity. Somewhere along the way, corporations started making record profits while the people keeping the place running could barely afford rent. When exactly did a steady full-time job stop being enough to build a normal life?

367,643 views

Everyone who moved to Texas for the no income tax thing. I need you to sit down. Your HOA fees, Your toll roads, your electricity bills in summer, your flood insurance, your property tax. California robbed you with a receipt. Texas robbed you with a smile.

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Everyone who moved to Texas for the no income tax thing. I need you to sit down. Your HOA fees, Your toll roads, your electricity bills in summer, your flood insurance, your property tax. California robbed you with a receipt. Texas robbed you with a smile.

435,654 views

Property taxes help fund schools, roads, emergency services, and local infrastructure. That part of the system matters and most people understand why those taxes exist. But the conversation changes when an 85 year old retiree on a fixed income is paying $15,000 a year just to stay in a home they already paid off decades ago. Property taxes are tied to rising home values. As neighborhoods become more expensive, assessments increase and tax bills rise with them. The problem is that homeowners do not need to sell their property, earn more income, or receive any actual cash for those bills to go up. A couple who bought a modest home in the late 1980s may now live in a property worth several times what they originally paid. On paper, they look wealthier. In reality, they may still be relying entirely on Social Security or retirement savings that have not kept pace with rising costs. That creates a situation where people can become “house rich but cash poor.” They technically own valuable property, but the monthly tax burden can become impossible to manage. Many states do offer relief programs for seniors, including homestead exemptions, tax freezes, and income based credits. But these programs are often difficult to access, limited by strict qualifications, or reduced when budgets tighten. The people who need the help most are often the least likely to successfully navigate the system. It is possible to support property taxes as a way to fund essential public services while also recognizing that the system needs reform for older homeowners living on fixed incomes. Those ideas can exist together. You can’t expect someone who’s 67, or 72, or 85 to keep paying the government $10,000-15,000 every year just to live in their own paid off house. If you defend this system you’re brainwashed. Nowhere else costs this much only here.

Property taxes help fund schools, roads, emergency services, and local infrastructure. That part of the system matters and most people understand why those taxes exist. But the conversation changes when an 85 year old retiree on a fixed income is paying $15,000 a year just to stay in a home they already paid off decades ago. Property taxes are tied to rising home values. As neighborhoods become more expensive, assessments increase and tax bills rise with them. The problem is that homeowners do not need to sell their property, earn more income, or receive any actual cash for those bills to go up. A couple who bought a modest home in the late 1980s may now live in a property worth several times what they originally paid. On paper, they look wealthier. In reality, they may still be relying entirely on Social Security or retirement savings that have not kept pace with rising costs. That creates a situation where people can become “house rich but cash poor.” They technically own valuable property, but the monthly tax burden can become impossible to manage. Many states do offer relief programs for seniors, including homestead exemptions, tax freezes, and income based credits. But these programs are often difficult to access, limited by strict qualifications, or reduced when budgets tighten. The people who need the help most are often the least likely to successfully navigate the system. It is possible to support property taxes as a way to fund essential public services while also recognizing that the system needs reform for older homeowners living on fixed incomes. Those ideas can exist together. You can’t expect someone who’s 67, or 72, or 85 to keep paying the government $10,000-15,000 every year just to live in their own paid off house. If you defend this system you’re brainwashed. Nowhere else costs this much only here.

28,391 views

When I worked at Macy's back in the 80's, people who worked there raised families on what they made. It was their career. I remember the guy in electronics retired after 30 years, and my boss in the cash office did the same. The guys who worked in the suit department did very well for themselves. Despite that, the store profited greatly every year, and we were given a beautiful Christmas party in appreciation. What changed in this country? When did it become nearly impossible to support oneself at a job that didn't require a degree or technical school?

When I worked at Macy's back in the 80's, people who worked there raised families on what they made. It was their career. I remember the guy in electronics retired after 30 years, and my boss in the cash office did the same. The guys who worked in the suit department did very well for themselves. Despite that, the store profited greatly every year, and we were given a beautiful Christmas party in appreciation. What changed in this country? When did it become nearly impossible to support oneself at a job that didn't require a degree or technical school?

34,108 views

Remember when this OnlyFans creator and streamer Amouranth shared her crypto wallet with $20M in Bitcoin to public. a group of intruders targeted her home She was held at gunpoint for her money. Luckily, she got out safe but they stole every penny. Flexing Crypto can ruin your life

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Remember when this OnlyFans creator and streamer Amouranth shared her crypto wallet with $20M in Bitcoin to public. a group of intruders targeted her home She was held at gunpoint for her money. Luckily, she got out safe but they stole every penny. Flexing Crypto can ruin your life

176,362 views

Creator Capital Markets Streamers are: • Eating their own 💩 • Faking their “soon” death then rug • drinking their own piss And now this Great job guys, crypto looks good here🤝🏾

Creator Capital Markets Streamers are: • Eating their own 💩 • Faking their “soon” death then rug • drinking their own piss And now this Great job guys, crypto looks good here🤝🏾

297,546 views

A buddy from college reached out Got laid off as a manager at Goldman Sachs Made $280k & can’t land a new job His mortgage is over $6k/month Said he runs out of money in 3 months Has a wife & 2 young kids He’s usually cocky but sounded scared You never think it’ll happen to you 😔

A buddy from college reached out Got laid off as a manager at Goldman Sachs Made $280k & can’t land a new job His mortgage is over $6k/month Said he runs out of money in 3 months Has a wife & 2 young kids He’s usually cocky but sounded scared You never think it’ll happen to you 😔

67,170 views

This high school dropout with sub 70 IQ made millions grifting innocent people. Dude can’t speak basic English and clearly was in special Education. He made millions as a crypto meme coin guru. This is not a serious industry

This high school dropout with sub 70 IQ made millions grifting innocent people. Dude can’t speak basic English and clearly was in special Education. He made millions as a crypto meme coin guru. This is not a serious industry

13,635 views

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This man won $315 million on Christmas Day and said it was the worst thing that ever happened to him Jack Whittaker was already worth $17 million when he stopped at a West Virginia grocery store on Christmas Eve 2002 for a breakfast sandwich He wasn’t even a regular lottery player He bought $100 in Powerball tickets on impulse That night he won $314 million, the largest single ticket jackpot in American history at the time He took the lump sum: $113 million after taxes One week later he walked into a strip club and slapped $50,000 cash on the bar Three months later thieves broke into his car while it was parked at the same strip club and stole a briefcase with $245,000 in cash inside He filed 400 legal claims and lawsuits in the first five years He was sued by Caesars Casino for bouncing a $1.5 million check He was charged with DUI twice He gave his 17 year old granddaughter Brandi $2,000 a week and four cars In September 2004 her boyfriend was found dead in Whittaker’s home from a drug overdose Three months later Brandi’s body was found wrapped in a plastic tarpaulin behind a junked van She was 17 No one was ever charged His daughter died of cancer in 2009 His wife divorced him after 42 years His house burned down in 2016 He died in 2020 with almost nothing left His last public statement: “I’m only going to be remembered as the lunatic who won the lottery” He had said all along he wished he’d torn up the ticket The ticket cost $100. Everything else cost him everything.

Uzi

620,927 views • 1 month ago

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A retired couple found a mathematical loophole in the lottery in 3 minutes and won $26,000,000 over 9 years Jerry Selbee ran a convenience store in Evart, Michigan, population 1,900, for 17 years When he retired, he walked back into his old store one afternoon and picked up a brochure for a new lottery game called Winfall He read it standing in the aisle In under 3 minutes he spotted something nobody else had noticed When the jackpot hit $5 million without a winner, the entire pot “rolled down” to smaller prizes Jerry calculated that if he spent $1,100 he’d mathematically guarantee a $1,900 return He bought $3,600 in tickets on the first rolldown Won $6,300 Then bet $8,000 and nearly doubled it again He told his wife Marge They set up a corporation called GS Investment Strategies Invited their kids, grandkids, and neighbours to buy $500 shares Drove 900 miles to Massachusetts every 6 weeks to buy hundreds of thousands of tickets when the rolldown was announced Sorted them for hours in a motel room They kept 60 plastic tubs of losing tickets in their barn, $18 million worth, in case of an audit The floor nearly gave out, they did this for 9 years The state of Massachusetts made $120 million off the same loophole Jerry and Marge made $26 million in gross profit The state eventually shut the game down Jerry and Marge spent their winnings paying for 6 kids, 14 grandkids, and 10 great-grandchildren’s education A retired couple from a town of 1,900 people found a loophole in the state lottery in 3 minutes that the state’s own mathematicians missed for 9 years

Uzi

85,850 views • 8 days ago

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This 16 year old built a $300 million company on Wall Street that was entirely made up Barry Minkow grew up watching his parents struggle to pay bills in a small house in California He decided at 15 that poverty was never happening to him again So he started a carpet cleaning business out of his parents garage with borrowed equipment and zero experience But the money wasn’t coming in fast enough So he started lying First small lies to get loans from local banks Then bigger lies to get bigger loans Then he discovered something dangerous The more confident and polished he looked, the more people just handed him money without asking questions By 16 he had fake invoices, fake contracts, fake client lists He invented entire corporations that existed only on paper as customers of his business Banks saw the revenue and kept lending Investors saw the growth and kept buying Wall Street saw the numbers and took him public on the stock exchange at 21 ZZZZ Best, his carpet cleaning company was valued at over $300 million He was on the cover of magazines being called the next great American entrepreneur The entire thing was an empty warehouse and a photocopier When it collapsed the banks lost $26 million and investors lost everything Barry went to prison for 25 years But here’s the twist He came out, became a pastor, and then turned FBI informant exposing fraud cases worth billions The FBI hired the exact same brain that fooled Wall Street to protect Wall Street Some people are just built different

Uzi

175,616 views • 2 months ago