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Insider trading is rising. When a market transforms from an open discovery mechanism into a captured sandbox for the ruling elite, traditional price discovery breaks down entirely. The ruling elite is profiting from inside information. This is the ultimate manifestation of George Soros’s Theory of Reflexivity, specifically its "manipulative function." Investors don't just passively observe fundamentals; they change their behavior to match the new reality.
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The US is being held hostage by its own ally. This war was Israel’s idea from the beginning, and they are actively sabotaging the peace deal because a diplomatic resolution doesn't fit their agenda. ​The real disaster here is how this plays out strategically. Iran is economically cornered, but Israel just handed them a massive victory on a silver platter. Now, Tehran is emboldened to blame Washington for the collapse, framing the US as a weak superpower that can’t keep its word or manage its partners. The bottom line? Israel’s desperate delays are backfiring spectacularly—they aren't crushing Iran, they are making Tehran look strategically brilliant and unshakeable.
JUST IN: Trump said the deal would be signed today. Then Israel bombed Beirut, and Iran found a way to kill the deal without ever touching it. Here is the trap. Iran cannot walk away. Its oil exports have collapsed from 2.1 million barrels a day before the war to under 300,000 in May, a $5.8 billion hit in two months. A country bleeding that fast does not get to be the side that torches a peace deal. So Iran does not torch it. Instead it lets the proxy do the work. Israeli jets hit Hezbollah in Dahiyeh today, three dead, six wounded, hours after the White House put a signing on the calendar. Israel says it was answering Hezbollah fire and gave CENTCOM a heads-up first. Iran’s chief negotiator, parliament speaker Ghalibaf, needed one sentence: the strike proves Washington “lacks the will or the ability” to keep its word, so continuing “is not possible.” Watch the move, not the missiles. Iran did not blame Israel. It blamed America. Every Israeli strike becomes proof that Washington cannot control its own ally, which means the deal dies of American weakness, not Iranian sabotage. Tehran keeps its economy’s last lifeline, the sanctions relief it desperately needs, on the table for the next round, and walks away from this one with clean hands. Israel, which says it is not even a party to this deal and was not asked before the announcement, just has to keep doing what it already wanted to do. Trump’s whole hand rested on one bet: everyone wanted the deal more than he did. Israel just called it. You cannot sign a peace your closest ally is busy bombing.
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CryptoSmind retweeted
JUST IN: IRAN SEALED OFF TUNNELS TO ITS HIGHLY ENRICHED URANIUM & PLACED EXPLOSIVE MINES TO PREVENT THE US FROM TAKING IT - CNN
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CryptoSmind retweeted
On Wednesday, Anthropic told 50,000 contractors across 56 countries to start using Claude. On Friday, the United States government told Anthropic that no foreign national on earth was allowed to touch its two most powerful models. Same company. Same week. Read the two announcements back to back and you are watching the global AI economy and the national security state collide in real time. Here is what actually happened, stripped of the panic. The models are Fable 5 and Mythos 5, the most capable systems Anthropic has ever shipped, live for three days. At 5:21 on Friday evening, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick sent an export control directive citing national security. It barred access by any foreign national, inside or outside the United States, including Anthropic’s own foreign-national employees. Because a company cannot reliably sort its users by citizenship in real time, the only way to comply was to switch the models off for everyone, everywhere. The most advanced public AI on earth went dark worldwide because of a clause in a letter. The internet immediately decided this meant green-card holders, including a famous foreign-born researcher, were locked out of their own lab’s models. That part is almost certainly wrong, and the error matters. Under the same export law the directive draws on, a green-card holder is a US person, not a foreign national, and the deemed-export rule explicitly does not apply to permanent residents. The people actually swept up are visa holders. H-1Bs. The engineers on temporary status who hold up a huge share of every American AI lab. Now hold the two announcements together and the absurdity sharpens. The trigger, by Anthropic’s own account, was a single demonstration where the model was asked to read a codebase and fix its flaws, and it surfaced a handful of previously known, minor vulnerabilities. That is the capability. Finding bugs in code, the thing defenders do every day, the same kind of work a researcher used two weeks ago to catch a four-year-old hole in Zcash before it could be drained. Anthropic says the identical task runs on OpenAI’s GPT-5.5, which sits under no control at all. One lab’s model is pulled from the entire planet. A rival’s model, doing the same thing, stays online. This is the contradiction the United States has not resolved and is now living inside. It wants its champion labs to win the world, so it blesses a deal to push Claude to 50,000 workers across 56 countries. It wants those same models treated as munitions, so it bars every foreign national from the strongest ones. You cannot run an export regime built for physical weapons and classified blueprints on a product used by hundreds of millions of people in every country at once. The two goals are now openly at war, and a frontier model is the battlefield. Step back and the pattern is the one that keeps repeating. A zero-knowledge proof hid a four-year flaw. A clean audit hid a redemption gate. And an export rule written for missiles turns out to have no clean answer for who, inside a global company, is even allowed to use the software. The safest lab in AI shipped its most powerful model, signed its biggest global deal, and got that model switched off by its own government in the same week, over a bug-finding trick a competitor runs untouched. Anthropic calls it a misunderstanding and says it is working to restore access. As of now the models are dark, the contradiction is not, and the kill switch turned out to belong to the state.
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TOTAL IRANIAN VICTORY FAILED U.S GOALS BEFORE THE WAR ❌ Regime Change ❌ Remove all Enriched Uranium ❌ Dismantle all Nuclear Facilities ❌ Reduce Iran’s Ballistic Missiles ❌ Stop Iran’s Support of Resistance ❌ Take control of Iran’s Oil FAILED U.S GOALS DURING THE WAR ❌ Control Strait of Hormuz ❌ Invade Kharg Island ❌ Take Iran’s Nuclear Dust ❌ Implement a Base near Isfahan IRANIAN GAINS DUE TO WAR ✅ Unfreezing Assets ✅ Sanction Relief ✅ Israel Leave & Stop Bombing Lebanon ✅ Control over Strait of Hormuz ✅ U.S Leave Middle East
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China's rare-earths exports to Japan plumet by 80%. Nikkei Asia.
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CryptoSmind retweeted
Jun 13
JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei reportedly declined US government request to fix jailbreak in its Claude Mythos Fable 5 AI model. This led to the Trump administration "reluctantly" restricting foreign access.
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CryptoSmind retweeted
Andrej Karpathy (not a US citizen), the top AI scientist at Anthropic, is now barred from accessing Anthropic's top AI model. This is beyond stupid. _
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Ideas need open air to breathe, collide, and grow. Freedom. Freedom is the reason we have:👇 👉SpaceX 👉OpenAI 👉Anthropic 👉Others in free world.
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The power of Capitalism
🇺🇸🇲🇽 A man working as a welder at SpaceX for $28 an hour has just become a millionaire. Juan Hernandez, who came from Mexico, worked in SpaceX at $28 an hour. SpaceX gave him $10,000 in stock when he went full time in 2015, and he bought more with every paycheck for 10 years.
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The mentality in this post is another reason why people remain poor for ever.
Be brutally honest: Are you deeply outraged that, while hundreds of millions of Americans and I are struggling financially, @elonmusk has just now become the world's first trillionaire, with more wealth than he could spend in 1,000 lifetimes? Yes or no?
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👇👌💯🎯
None of your problems are because someone else is a trillionaire.
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CryptoSmind retweeted
SpaceX's 11% share price boost has made Elon Musk the world's first trillionaire, controlling two of the world's largest companies. ft.trib.al/wHPQ9gw
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Red Card on arrival. Omar Artan was subjected to an 11-hour immigration interview, detained, and ultimately deemed "inadmissible due to vetting concerns." He was put on a return flight to Turkey. Despite holding a valid tournament visa and a diplomatic passport to facilitate travel. A Red Card.
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Trump Says He Won’t Renew USMCA. USMCA is a treaty Trump negotiated in his first term that controls trade between the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.
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CryptoSmind retweeted
SpaceX created over 4,400 millionaires today, and many of them are regular working people. They are not executives or founders, they are welders, technicians, machinists, and launch crew, the people who showed up every day and built the rockets with their hands. Around 400 of them are sitting on stakes worth over $100 million each. For context, Google's IPO created roughly 1,000 millionaires. Facebook's created around the same. SpaceX is doing more than four times both of them in a single day. Juan Hernandez is one of them.
A man working as a welder at SpaceX for $28 an hour has just become a millionaire. Juan Hernandez, who came from Mexico, welded rockets for SpaceX at $28 an hour. SpaceX gave him $10,000 in stock when he went full time in 2015, and he bought more with every paycheck for 10 years. $SPCX is now trading at $167, making his shares worth over $1 million.
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CryptoSmind retweeted
BREAKING: 🇺🇸The average American is now closer to Jeff Bezos in net worth than Jeff Bezos is to Elon Musk, per MW
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The Death of 45-Minute Half? How Networks Are Commercializing World Cup 2026.👇
Fox vs. Telemundo: The Battle Over World Cup Water Breaks. The "Americanization" of the World Cup Is Here. Fans are furious after the opening matches of the 2026 World Cup, exposing a massive divide in how sports networks are treating FIFA’s new rules. Here is what is actually happening on your screen: 👉The New 10-Hour Ad Machine FIFA implemented mandatory, scheduled 3-minute hydration breaks per half (at the 22nd and 67th minutes) for all 104 matches. Crucially, these breaks happen regardless of local weather, temperature, or whether a stadium roof is closed and air-conditioned. Across the entire tournament, this "welfare" rule creates exactly 624 minutes of non-play time—injecting over 10 hours of brand-new, mid-game broadcasting inventory into soccer for the first time. 👉Fox Sports Botches the Execution During the opening Mexico vs. South Africa match, Fox Sports immediately capitalized, introducing the pauses as "powered by Powerade" and cutting to full-screen commercial blocks. In the second half, Fox completely ran afoul of FIFA's guidelines (which require networks to return 30 seconds before play resumes). Fox returned from the ad break so late that play had already resumed on the pitch, causing massive backlash from fans who missed live match action. 👉The Telemundo Contrast Meanwhile, Spanish-language broadcaster Telemundo proved you don't have to ruin the viewer's experience. Honoring a promise to "never leave the pitch once the clock starts," Telemundo stayed live on the field during the breaks, showing coaches talking to players and running match replays. To monetize, they used a side-by-side "double-box" to display on-screen branding without interrupting the live feed. THE BOTTOM LINE The "Four-Quarter" era of football has officially arrived in the West. While European broadcasters like the UK’s ITV are legally barred by regulators from running ads during these mid-half breaks, American networks are pulling out the corporate playbook. If opening weekend proved anything, it’s that "player safety" has quickly been transformed into a massive broadcasting windfall—and the traditional, uninterrupted flow of the beautiful game is the price viewers are paying.
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Fox vs. Telemundo: The Battle Over World Cup Water Breaks. The "Americanization" of the World Cup Is Here. Fans are furious after the opening matches of the 2026 World Cup, exposing a massive divide in how sports networks are treating FIFA’s new rules. Here is what is actually happening on your screen: 👉The New 10-Hour Ad Machine FIFA implemented mandatory, scheduled 3-minute hydration breaks per half (at the 22nd and 67th minutes) for all 104 matches. Crucially, these breaks happen regardless of local weather, temperature, or whether a stadium roof is closed and air-conditioned. Across the entire tournament, this "welfare" rule creates exactly 624 minutes of non-play time—injecting over 10 hours of brand-new, mid-game broadcasting inventory into soccer for the first time. 👉Fox Sports Botches the Execution During the opening Mexico vs. South Africa match, Fox Sports immediately capitalized, introducing the pauses as "powered by Powerade" and cutting to full-screen commercial blocks. In the second half, Fox completely ran afoul of FIFA's guidelines (which require networks to return 30 seconds before play resumes). Fox returned from the ad break so late that play had already resumed on the pitch, causing massive backlash from fans who missed live match action. 👉The Telemundo Contrast Meanwhile, Spanish-language broadcaster Telemundo proved you don't have to ruin the viewer's experience. Honoring a promise to "never leave the pitch once the clock starts," Telemundo stayed live on the field during the breaks, showing coaches talking to players and running match replays. To monetize, they used a side-by-side "double-box" to display on-screen branding without interrupting the live feed. THE BOTTOM LINE The "Four-Quarter" era of football has officially arrived in the West. While European broadcasters like the UK’s ITV are legally barred by regulators from running ads during these mid-half breaks, American networks are pulling out the corporate playbook. If opening weekend proved anything, it’s that "player safety" has quickly been transformed into a massive broadcasting windfall—and the traditional, uninterrupted flow of the beautiful game is the price viewers are paying.
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