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Replying to @CrossRiverVine
He should fix basic infrastructure across the states. Our primary Healthcare, schools, and roads across the state are in total ruins. The state is economically grounded
Except raising the cgt is just about the stupidest most destructive economically illiterate idea ever Is it still really that necessary to please the likes of Rayner?
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HDD: ms tmtb pounding the table 1. HDD pricing checks continue to strengthen. Industry contacts are pointing to CY27 nearline HDD pricing reaching ~$25–30/TB, with incremental demand being sold at 25% premiums to contracted pricing. Non-hyperscaler customers are already paying $30 /TB in the spot market. 2. The key driver is that hyperscalers still have no economically viable alternative to HDDs for cold storage, while the TCO advantage of HDD vs. NAND is widening. As a result, the market could see 30% YoY HDD price increases in 2027. 3. Checks suggest Seagate is not aggressively locking customers into LTAs because management believes supply-demand dynamics give them pricing power. That is incrementally positive for future earnings leverage. 4. If HDD pricing reaches ~$30/TB by CY28 (vs. Street assumptions still below $20/TB), earnings power could be materially higher: $WDC: potential for $70 EPS $STX: potential for ~$100 EPS 5.Structural thesis remains intact: unlike compute, storage demand compounds over time because every AI-generated token/output must be stored. Even if AI compute spending eventually moderates, storage spending can continue growing independently. The report views HDDs and NAND as two of the most attractive AI infrastructure segments today, with HDD stocks potentially having more near-term upside as investors adjust to improving pricing data points.
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Angie 🇪🇺🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇺🇦 🏳️‍🌈 🟦🧡 retweeted
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Replying to @Angie_RejoinEU
Yes, on balance Iran could emerge stronger than pre-war. Economically: Sanctions relief, oil export waivers, frozen asset releases and a $300B US partners rehab plan would end years of isolation and deliver a major revival. On the Strait: Pre-war was free international transit with no tolls. Iran’s interpretation of the draft — Iranian management plus “service fees” — would give it more formal leverage than before, which ISW flags as a potential strategic win. The deal ends the war and blocks new nukes, but the ambiguities on Hormuz and implementation could tilt the post-war reality in Tehran’s favor if accepted. Official text pending.
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007 BondAge Report. *Horrific Nightmare of Global Debt Crisis, AI & Robots *Capitalistic competition leads to nations using AI run like corporations? *Efficient Balance Budget Nations, make Socialism economically feasible? Universal Basic Income? *Human Freedom vs Machines?
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I must admit, I have no idea what point you are trying to make. English has been my primary language throughout my life, and it has never prevented me from succeeding in business. Whether I was negotiating with Japanese businessmen in Hawaii, Cuban partners in Miami, or Chinese counterparts in Orlando—handling container shipments of goods—or in any other dealings over the years, everyone involved spoke English as either their native language or a strong second language. It appears you are claiming that fluency in multiple languages is essential for success. My own experience shows that is not the case. Your comments also seem to suggest that people who speak only English are somehow inferior to those who are bilingual or multilingual. I suspect you are overstating the value of multilingualism to make up for shortcomings in other skills or qualifications. The United States continues to lead the world economically, and English is our primary language. A stronger argument would simply point out the obvious disadvantage faced by those who do not speak English, rather than implying any weakness on the part of American citizens whose primary language is English.
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For example, sunset the tax break in 2 years with an exception for anyone who has an existing MOU and implement a new tax on compute or raise the electric utility consumption tax. Instead we are fighting over something mathematically and economically ignorant.
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Terry Gould🇺🇸🦅 retweeted
I am more and more convinced that - even though Trump's piss-poor polling to date is largely economically related (about gas prices and kitchen table issues), THE thing that WILL bring him down, that even MAGA is beginning to see and deplore, is his CORRUPTION. And in that vein, he's going to be sorry he decided to f*ck with Newsom on investigative BS, because Newsom don't play and he knows how to get a narrative across eloquently, and he WILL advance the TRUTHFUL representation that Trump is maximally corrupt, like nothing we've ever seen before, nor will again.
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ShankaranPillai retweeted
Pakistani economist Dr Quaiser Bengali admits Pakistan is bankrupt economically. It has no money for education, infrastructure, industry. It is only dependent on loans from IMF Pakistanion the day is not far when you all will beg in streets 🤣 🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Replying to @John_J_C_Moss
I’m not sure we should apply market theory to ordinary non-economic family interactions. If we do, then I think the evidential base for banning U16 social media use would need to be a lot stronger than vibes plus “every parent knows” plus “look at that poor child whose murderers bullied them on social media”. If social media use by children were economically driven we’d find much lower rates of issues being faced by children in the lowest income families with one or more parents at home and having the time to monitor SM usage if they could afford a smartphone for their kids at all.
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Replying to @polishmanium @Acyn
We completely decimated their military and wiped out their strategic command. It will take them 10 years to rebuild. They are also on their knees economically after losing a staggering 500 million every day for over a month. All the incentives are conditional and be cut off instantaneously. Israel is poised to finish them off at the slightest provocation. Why are people rushing to make fools of themselves?
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Replying to @JessicaTarlov
All in an effort to keep Iran from having a nuclear weapon because you know they’d use it. What would you prefer?? A mushroom cloud where Israel once stood?? A nuclear Iran holding the world economically hostage???
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Replying to @guyfelicella
And countries don't run on who wins a popularity contest. Trump will be gone in two years. We will still be in a recession and the US will likely start pulling out of NATO which leaves Canada economically weak and without defense. Adults negotiate not change teams.
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The UK will rejoin the EU. It's just a matter of when. Maybe in parts. Northern Ireland first (by unification with the more prosperous than even Northern Ireland - best part of the UK to invest in - Ireland) with England last, with its British empire wholly gone, tail between its legs. The diminished, economically shrunken, England will ironically become a nett benefciary to the booming former countries behind their Iron Curtain. The always growing price of the UK skulking away behind its Gammon Curtain for far too long. .. hoping for greater deregulated AI riches that exploded in its face many years previously.
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Looking at my reply now, it makes zero sense in context of your current tweet, so either you edited the tweet after I replied or I accidentally tapped the wrong tweet to reply to. S/o mentioned something abt how "working class ppl" are better off economically w/o reproducing.
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i clowned on tunisia too but like I hate seeing the west making fun of us when we're economically struggling post colonial country in the global south and our president literally refused to give the national team funds to get the coach/manager they wanted before the cup started
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Replying to @aziznahar_
If I'm not mistaken around 50% of all Bangladeshis in Britain live in London (many in social housing). Their relative under performance (economically, culturally etc) is staggering in light of that.
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Replying to @japan_nobunaga
Not in Western states terms, but for us it's a twenty minute ride to the nearest hospital or grocery store. Population density is low enough that running transit systems isn't economically feasible. 100 years ago there were trains, but that was more for moving goods than people.
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An emerald mine can only take you so far dumbass Economically illiterate lol
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/𐭬𐭩𐭫𐭮𐭯𐭩/مهرسپه/سرباز هنگ جاوید retweeted
At the same time the U.S. had a naval blockade to try and choke the Iranian regime economically, Trump allowed Qatar to pay off Iran to the tune of billions of dollars to allow Qatari ships to pass. Qatar owns Trump and Vance. $100 Billion spent on the Iranian conflict. Another $25 Billion in "frozen" assets. And another $300 Billion for "reconstruction." While re-opening a Straight that was never closed before the war. Not to mention we lost 13 brave Americans. And the Iranian people lost over 40,000 revolutionaries, mostly young adults. This is "winning?" Trump could have been a generational foreign policy president but he decided to be Obama 2.0.
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