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🚨 WOW. Trump’s financial disclosure forms reportedly show he bought between $1 MILLION and $5 MILLION in Dell stock earlier this year. Then THIS WEEK… the Pentagon awarded Dell a contract worth MORE THAN $9 BILLION. Read that again slowly.

371,087 views • 1 month ago •via X (Twitter)

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Sold 32 coins. Bought 1,550. 48 times more, at a 15% discount, into the crash the market blamed on the sale. Strategy disclosed today that while everyone panicked over its $2.5 million Bitcoin sale, it was quietly buying the dip that panic created. 1,550 Bitcoin for $101 million, at $65,332 a coin, far below the $77,135 it sold for and below its own cost basis. The bears called the sale the first crack, a forced liquidation, the start of the death spiral. The answer was a buy 48 times the size of the sale that scared them. This is the machine we described: a state-contingent allocator. Above its funding line, it turns market access into Bitcoin. The sale was the exception. The buy is the rule. It also closed the question the sale opened. The cash reserve behind the preferred dividends had thinned to $900 million, about six months of cover. He rebuilt it to $1 billion in the same week. But watch how, because that is the real story. He funded none of it with coins. He funded it with $181 million of freshly issued stock, then spent it on Bitcoin and the reserve. The coins were never the funding source. The equity is. That is the flywheel working exactly as built, and the cost of it surfacing at the same time. Every turn now runs on issuing shares, and the premium that once made each share buy more Bitcoin than it diluted has compressed hard. He bought low. He sold his own stock low to do it. So the question quietly turns. It was never whether Saylor sells his Bitcoin. He just proved again that he buys far more than he sells. It is what each turn of the engine now costs in dilution, and how long the market keeps paying a premium worth that cost. He bought the dip. The dip was partly his own making. And he paid for it in equity, not coins.

Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡

142,444 views • 1 month ago

This is such a brazen lie I had to listen twice because I could hardly believe my ears the first time around. Firstly, the MOU is $3.3 billion/year. And yes, that’s a huge difference. That .3 is literally $300 million dollars. And no, that’s not all. Not by a long shot. In Fiscal Year 2022, the US sent Israel: • $3.3 billion in security assistance. PLUS • $1 billion in emergency Iron Dome funding. • $500 million in missile defense cooperation. • $47.5 million for anti-tunneling technology. • $25 million to combat drone terrorism. PLUS • $4 million for U.S.-Israel healthcare • $1 million for U.S.-Israel agriculture • $6 million for U.S.-Israel energy • $2 million for U.S.-Israel homeland security • $2 million for U.S.-Israel international development cooperation. AND • $50 million for the Nita M. Lowey Middle East Partnership for Peace Act to foster economic cooperation and people-to-people peacebuilding programs between Israelis, Palestinians, and Americans. • $6 million for the Middle East Regional Cooperation program to facilitate research collaboration between Israel and other countries in the region. • $5 million for refugee resettlement in Israel. And of course, this was all BEFORE the war broke out. We have sent them *tens of billions* since October 7. You know, it’s one thing for Ted Cruz to not know the population of Iran (which I still find inexcusable but whatever). It’s a completely different thing for him to have no damn clue how much of OUR money he’s sending to Israel. And the thing is, I don’t believe him. I think he’s lying. I think he’s 100% aware of how much money we’re sending, he probably knows about all the hidden expenditures too- and he purposely chose to lie about it because he knows how immensely unpopular it is. That tells you everything you need to know about him.

Mel

18,649 views • 1 year ago