Joined January 2021
178 Photos and videos
Ed Patisso retweeted
California gave ONE nonprofit $1 BILLION. To put solar panels on poor people's roofs. You know how much solar they actually installed? $72 million. That's it. So where the FUCK is the other $928 MILLION? I'll tell you exactly where. The same nonprofit that WROTE the law that gave them the money ALSO got the contract to run "community outreach." Same guy runs the nonprofit AND the program. Chris Walker. Two paychecks. Look it up. And their SISTER organization — same building, same staff, same donors — is a 501(c)(4) that endorses Democrat candidates and runs door-knocking operations in the EXACT SAME NEIGHBORHOODS. Connect the dots, idiot. You pay $7.50 a gallon for gas. Cap-and-trade takes a cut at the pump. That money flows to "climate justice nonprofits." Those nonprofits funnel it into Democrat get-out-the-vote machines. You. Are. Funding. The. People. Who. Are. Robbing. You. Every time you fill up your fucking tank, you're paying for a Democrat campaign volunteer to knock on a stranger's door and tell them how amazing Gavin Newsom is. $928 MILLION. GONE. And not one journalist in this state asked a single question until @jennyraeca and CAL DOGE pulled the receipts. You think this is the only one? There's a hundred more like it. This is how California works now. This is how a "blue state" stays blue when only 48% of the voters are Democrats. Wake the fuck up. @patrickbetdavid @VincentOshana @FoxNews @WallStreetApes @CalDOGEgov @elonmusk @libsoftiktok We're standing in front of the building right now. youtube.com/@raminrealtalk
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Ed Patisso retweeted
mother’s day is every day
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Ed Patisso retweeted
Spencer should win for these ads alone!

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Ed Patisso retweeted
Watching Tucker Carlson debate himself for two minutes is quite shocking! WTF happened to this guy in the last few months?
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It's always a good time to buy, if you buy right.
I’ve spent a decade telling people to do what I do: "Buy and Hold." Now I've decided to list my entire real estate portfolio for sale and walk away. It started slow. The bills, the maintenance, the tax increases... but the final straw was when I tried to develop an ADU to do exactly what the city of LA claims it wants investors like me to do: Create more housing. You'd think they'd make it easier, but after two delayed inspections, a sewer pipe replacement that needed 75 days advance notice, and a city-owned tree that became my responsibility, I'd had enough. The identity of being a real-estate guy is very hard to walk away from, trust me. For a long time, I stayed just because real estate was my "thing." It’s how I started. It’s what I’m known for. It led to every good thing in my life. But that blinded me to the fact that just because something served me in the past, it doesn't mean things haven't changed in the present. The reality of 2026 finally stripped the emotion away. My LA rentals are netting about 4-5% after the constant background noise of taxes, insurance spikes, and repairs. Meanwhile, a risk-free Treasury pays 5%. The trade-off just doesn't make sense any more. I’m reallocating to a liquid portfolio that actually lets me focus on the work I love. I published a deep dive on my Substack about the ADU nightmare that broke my patience, the exact numbers behind the exit, and where I’m moving the money next to buy back my sanity. I'll drop the link here in a bit.
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The Medallion Fund (Jim Simons’ Renaissance Technologies) didn’t just outperform Buffett, Soros, and Dalio: it crushed the best fund managers in history with ~66% average annual returns and generated over $100B in gains. Even better: Renaissance has been aggressively loading up on $MSTR (recent 13F filings show they’ve built a massive position worth well over $100M with huge increases throughout 2025). This interview is pure gold — way more valuable than a $200K MBA if you want to understand systematic, math-driven investing. Bookmark watch the full hour. 🔥 x.com/jaynitx/status/2043240…

Apr 12
This 1 hour interview with the mathematician who outperformed Buffett, Soros, and Dalio, generated $100B , avg. 66% returns will teach you more about investing than a $200K MBA. Bookmark this & give it 1 hour, no matter what. It’ll be the most productive thing you do this week.
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Ed Patisso retweeted
"Strategy is a ponzi scheme!!" Saylor’s savage reply:
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Ed Patisso retweeted
I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country
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Ed Patisso retweeted
This Thursday, March 19, 2026 we welcome @BritishHodl, @knutsvanholm, @BradleyDuke_ of @Bitwise, @HunterAlbright of @SALTLending, @CJ_Bitcoin of @Strategy, @_Adrian of @tnorth, @evanhorowitz of $FMHS and @Z06Z07 of @tnorth to The Bitcoin Treasuries Digital Conference! Join Us! Link to register below.
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“BTC IS THE MAIN CURRENCY USED BY AI AGENTS”
JUST IN: YAHOO FINANCE ANALYSTS JUST SAID LIVE THAT NEARLY 70% OF AI CLAUDE BOTS ARE CHOOSING #BITCOIN OVER THE U.S. DOLLAR “BTC IS THE MAIN CURRENCY USED BY AI AGENTS” THE FUTURE IS HERE 🚀
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Ed Patisso retweeted
JUST IN: 🇮🇷 Iranians are buying Bitcoin and mass withdrawing it into self-custody amid the war. Bitcoin is the flight to safety 🙌
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"Bitcoin may be more like digital territory protected by energy. If you control energy and computing power, you help protect the network. Countries might compete for that power the same way they compete for oil, weapons, or technology."
Bitcoin isn’t just Internet Money It might actually be a new kind of power - like a digital weapon or shield that countries can use to protect themselves online. In a Age of AI Agents - we're going to need an effective digital shield! The author of a new paper: "Beyond Money, Hedge, and Energy: Evaluating Bitcoin as Power Projection Technology" evaluates Jason Lowery's 2023 "SOFTWAR" theory that said Bitcoin should be understood as a way to project physical power into cyberspace. Normally, computers run on “rules” and software. But Bitcoin works differently. It uses huge amounts of real electricity and energy to secure its network. That means attacking Bitcoin isn’t just about hacking code - you would have to spend massive amounts of real-world energy and money to overpower it. The paper tests whether that theory was right by looking at what happened between 2023 and 2026. Here’s what actually happened: 1) The United States created a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (basically treating Bitcoin like a national resource, similar to oil). 2) Countries like Bhutan secretly mined Bitcoin using hydroelectric power. 3) Over 145 public companies added Bitcoin to their balance sheets. 4) Huge investment funds (like BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF) bought tens of billions of dollars worth. 5) Global Bitcoin mining power (called “hash rate”) hit record highs - even while the price dropped. That’s important. The price of Bitcoin fell about 46% during this time. But governments and big institutions were buying more of it anyway. According to the paper, that suggests they may see Bitcoin as something strategic - not just an investment. The paper says older ways of thinking about Bitcoin don’t explain this behavior: It’s not just money. It’s not just a speculative investment. It’s not just bad for the environment. It’s not just a tech experiment. Instead, the author says Bitcoin may be more like digital territory protected by energy. If you control energy and computing power, you help protect the network. Countries might compete for that power the same way they compete for oil, weapons, or technology. The paper checked nine predictions made in 2023 about what would happen if Bitcoin really was a “power projection technology.” Five of those predictions already came true. One partly happened. Three haven’t happened yet.
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The story of Aaron Murphy @MURPHSLIFE really is powerful: hitting absolute rock bottom through addiction, debt, and a near-death experience (including an overdose and out-of-body moment), then surrendering to God and being transformed into someone building real, lasting hope for thousands in El Salvador. It's the kind of redemption arc that hits deep because it's not abstract; it's tangible villages, farms, dignity, and families escaping cycles of poverty. x.com/efenigson/status/20020…

Replying to @efenigson
Watch/listen on: → YouTube: bit.ly/48Kf3rk → Fountain: bit.ly/3Y0tWQ9 → Rumble: bit.ly/4p7rBh7 → Spotify: bit.ly/45j121r → My Blog: bit.ly/4qmy0q3linktr.ee/yourethevoice → Support my work: bit.ly/zap_efrat
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Ed Patisso retweeted
The first place we hint at the idea of Digital Nations, the 21st century's inversion of the 20th century's unions/collectivism developed in response to the last major technological revolution.
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Excited to have @TimKotzman at my office today to talk about the Bitcoin Treasury space. Tim's about to record the next episode of @REstandardPod with @PunterJeff @kenny_alves @ChrisDrz
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After 25 years investing in real estate, one truth has remained constant: the industry is deeply fragmented and slow to adopt technology. I built Copartnr to solve this. Copartnr is where real estate professionals can bring a deal, define the partnership structure they need, and connect with the right people to turn that opportunity into reality. Copartnr makes that easier — so more deals get done, more investors succeed, and more real estate dreams become real.
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Im just gonna be a reply guy since nobody sees my tweets anymore. H/t to @Jamesashields for the idea.
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Most people argue about outcomes. The real leverage is understanding incentives.
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