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Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 16334. (Read 26656920 times)

legendary
Activity: 3388
Merit: 3514
born once atheist
wait satoshi wants us to pull down our pants Huh
https://youtu.be/SMgzzF6XmEc
Simon Dixon was at the 'Shape the Future' Conference in Hong Kong where Craig Wright shares his thoughts on Bitcoin Cash. Simon Dixon pushes for a direct answer on nChain and whether Craig will be working on Bitcoin or Bitcoin Cash as well as some questions related to Blockstream and bChain investors.

I really don't see how anyone can seriously take this guy to be Satoshi

He's a steaming pile of ass.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIvqn87iAz8

good lord!
well after watching , I 2nd that...and then some.
douchebaggery at its finest I might add...
legendary
Activity: 3780
Merit: 5429
Now that Bitcoin has become a multi-billion dollar industry, does it really surprise anyone that con men would come out of the woodwork to try and get a piece of the action?

It doesn't to me. A successful industry like Bitcoin based on belief, principles, and emotion will attract con men like flies to honey. Con men like CSW, Ver, Wu, McAfee... those Neo&Bee guys... that PayCoin idiot... countless others. The OneCoin swindlers. Now these ICO company con men. The list goes on and on.

But the fact that they believe that they can con and swindle the economic majority is just appalling and condescending. Core Bitcoin supporters are not stupid. Far from it.

Of course, I believe some of these idiots are secretly being paid to try and derail Bitcoin and subvert the economic majority. There's just no way that someone like Ver or Wu could believe that what they are constantly doing with all the forks is going to 'unite' anyone. Instead of uniting behind one Bitcoin effort, they spend every waking moment determined to bring it down or subdivide it.
legendary
Activity: 1279
Merit: 1018
wait satoshi wants us to pull down our pants Huh
https://youtu.be/SMgzzF6XmEc
Simon Dixon was at the 'Shape the Future' Conference in Hong Kong where Craig Wright shares his thoughts on Bitcoin Cash. Simon Dixon pushes for a direct answer on nChain and whether Craig will be working on Bitcoin or Bitcoin Cash as well as some questions related to Blockstream and bChain investors.

I really don't see how anyone can seriously take this guy to be Satoshi

He's a steaming pile of ass.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIvqn87iAz8

Attention seeking whore. He is a great ambassador for bitcoin. The sooner he is outed the better
legendary
Activity: 1260
Merit: 1116
wait satoshi wants us to pull down our pants Huh
https://youtu.be/SMgzzF6XmEc
Simon Dixon was at the 'Shape the Future' Conference in Hong Kong where Craig Wright shares his thoughts on Bitcoin Cash. Simon Dixon pushes for a direct answer on nChain and whether Craig will be working on Bitcoin or Bitcoin Cash as well as some questions related to Blockstream and bChain investors.

I really don't see how anyone can seriously take this guy to be Satoshi

He's a steaming pile of ass.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIvqn87iAz8
legendary
Activity: 3780
Merit: 5429
because not all bitcoins are available to a sell.

For all we know, most of those coins could be going directly from miners to OTC investors.

Or just being held by miners.

Or being bought and held by exchange owners because they are running fractional reserves and need to shore up with their customers before they shut down.

Who knows?  Huh
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1012
because not all bitcoins are available to a sell.
newbie
Activity: 24
Merit: 0
Personally I'm a little surprised that the price isn't lower than it is in China. The amount of buyers should be a lot lower now than a month ago and being that the miners are dumping 50 mill worth of bitcoins every week, I don't understand how the price is sustained  Huh
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1538
yes


Nope, no '2013 bubble' yet.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1012
RogVer FUD his split of SegWit2X : http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-09-20/bitcoin-jesus-says-another-network-split-coming-november

Quote
“There’s probably going to be another split between bitcoin legacy and SegWit2X version of bitcoin but that just gives me more coins that I can sell for the Bitcoin Cash version,” Ver said in an interview on Bloomberg Television at a conference organized by Bitkan in Hong Kong.

legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1012
Last video game I played was Ms Pacman.  Cheesy (Although it was only a few weeks ago.)

me too, with my bitcoins, i have bid a complet retropie collection system.
i always love R-Type & Yoshi Island.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-9moKpfjfY&list=PL_ik_t59tpUxdncwMtsFNjIxfiMipQLla
hero member
Activity: 1011
Merit: 721
Decentralize everything
wait satoshi wants us to pull down our pants Huh
https://youtu.be/SMgzzF6XmEc
Simon Dixon was at the 'Shape the Future' Conference in Hong Kong where Craig Wright shares his thoughts on Bitcoin Cash. Simon Dixon pushes for a direct answer on nChain and whether Craig will be working on Bitcoin or Bitcoin Cash as well as some questions related to Blockstream and bChain investors.

I really don't see how anyone can seriously take this guy to be Satoshi
legendary
Activity: 2688
Merit: 2470
$120000 in 2024 Confirmed
The push by govt organizations for more immigrants literally everywhere in the world is pretty simple.

Existing citizens are working less (and paying less taxes), and thus having less babies. And that long term trajectory doesn't sit well with the welfare states of the world that are getting deeper and deeper into debt.

Simply put, they desperately need more tax payers coming into the system to not only replace the ones dying off, but to breed new ones. Thus opening up the borders.

Remember, the welfare state is one giant Ponzi scam, that requires ever more scam suckers coming in. When that stops, the whole thing collapses.
The problem of course being that the immigrants turned out to be a net drain on the economy[citation needed], not even counting all the social problems and increases in violent crime and rape. But they always double down on bad ideas.

https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/economic-impact-of-immigration-in-the-us
Quote
Over the long haul, they discovered, the presence of immigrants significantly benefits the economy. Areas with more historical immigration now have higher incomes, lower poverty and unemployment, and greater levels of educational attainment and urbanization.

The magnitude of the results was striking: if a county that experienced no immigration during this period had instead experienced median levels of immigration, residents today would have a 20 percent higher per capita income.

In Sweden there was i tipping point in the 80's. Before that, immigration was a net plus, after, a net minus. The reason being that the immigrants after the 80's are mostly uneducated and can't find suitable jobs.
what the fuck .how does that relate to the fucking Bitcoin price movement Huh
legendary
Activity: 2282
Merit: 1767
Cлaвa Укpaїнi!
The push by govt organizations for more immigrants literally everywhere in the world is pretty simple.

Existing citizens are working less (and paying less taxes), and thus having less babies. And that long term trajectory doesn't sit well with the welfare states of the world that are getting deeper and deeper into debt.

Simply put, they desperately need more tax payers coming into the system to not only replace the ones dying off, but to breed new ones. Thus opening up the borders.

Remember, the welfare state is one giant Ponzi scam, that requires ever more scam suckers coming in. When that stops, the whole thing collapses.
The problem of course being that the immigrants turned out to be a net drain on the economy[citation needed], not even counting all the social problems and increases in violent crime and rape. But they always double down on bad ideas.

https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/economic-impact-of-immigration-in-the-us
Quote
Over the long haul, they discovered, the presence of immigrants significantly benefits the economy. Areas with more historical immigration now have higher incomes, lower poverty and unemployment, and greater levels of educational attainment and urbanization.

The magnitude of the results was striking: if a county that experienced no immigration during this period had instead experienced median levels of immigration, residents today would have a 20 percent higher per capita income.

In Sweden there was i tipping point in the 80's. Before that, immigration was a net plus, after, a net minus. The reason being that the immigrants after the 80's are mostly uneducated and can't find suitable jobs.
legendary
Activity: 1652
Merit: 4393
Be a bank
wait satoshi wants us to pull down our pants Huh
https://youtu.be/SMgzzF6XmEc
Simon Dixon was at the 'Shape the Future' Conference in Hong Kong where Craig Wright shares his thoughts on Bitcoin Cash. Simon Dixon pushes for a direct answer on nChain and whether Craig will be working on Bitcoin or Bitcoin Cash as well as some questions related to Blockstream and bChain investors.
legendary
Activity: 1652
Merit: 4393
Be a bank
Buried deep in here https://www.sec.gov/news/public-statement/statement-clayton-2017-09-20
we woz hacked / we enabled insider trading / we haz beliefs

legendary
Activity: 2282
Merit: 1767
Cлaвa Укpaїнi!
What do you mean "Recognition is subjective"? Do you mean that where a westerner see a square someone else sees a circle?
No, but where a westerner sees green, someone might see some kind of blue.

Where a westerner sees "straight, left, right, straight", someone might see different paths depending on the physical orientation of the page when it gets presented to them. All reference axes are relative to an absolute point on their island (a mountain), so they don't have relative words like "left" or "right" ("up" and "down" they do).

Imagine a westerner dealing with IQ tests prepared by someone in one such population.

There is much more cultural background to perception than we are aware of.

I agree on that.
But none of that applies to the pattern recognition used in IQ tests.
legendary
Activity: 2282
Merit: 1767
Cлaвa Укpaїнi!
Who the hell is Milo?
A gay jew on the right who likes to trigger people.


Google Milo Yiannopoulos and you shall find.
legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1002

https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/economic-impact-of-immigration-in-the-us
Quote
Over the long haul, they discovered, the presence of immigrants significantly benefits the economy. Areas with more historical immigration now have higher incomes, lower poverty and unemployment, and greater levels of educational attainment and urbanization.

The magnitude of the results was striking: if a county that experienced no immigration during this period had instead experienced median levels of immigration, residents today would have a 20 percent higher per capita income.

A study from the Kellogg School? Heh, they could be just a little biased  Wink Grin

"Kellogg offers full-time, part-time, and executive programs, and partners with schools in China, France/Singapore, India, Spain, Hong Kong, Israel, Germany, Canada, and Thailand. In addition to the Kellogg School campuses in Evanston, Chicago, and Miami, the Kellogg School partners with institutions in Asia, Europe, South America, Australia, the Middle East and Canada.

Kellogg students have the opportunity to study abroad in fall or winter of their second year on six continents. The exchange partner schools offer the opportunity to learn about business from a different perspective, experience another culture, and network with students, faculty, and professionals from around the world. The International Exchange Program at the Kellogg School was started in 1980 with a vision to promote a cultural interchange of ideas and provide a greater understanding of cross-cultural trade and business practices. Since that time, more than 1,000 Kellogg School students have participated in the Exchange Program with schools from over 20 countries, including Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Denmark, France, Germany, Japan, Hong Kong, India, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Scotland, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Thailand, and U.K."


So I can't trust any college that has an exchange student program?  Roll Eyes

Still waiting for a citation for Ibian's claim that
Quote
immigrants turned out to be a net drain on the economy
legendary
Activity: 3598
Merit: 2386
Viva Ut Vivas
So BTC distribution problem might not be as bad as it seems.  For what it's worth.

also

1. At least the top 1% holders were brave early adopters that took great risk and therefore should be rewarded

2. At least the top 1% holders can't just whip up more btc like the Fed and indirectly hand it to themselves

3. The masses will always find themselves at the bottom of wealth distribution because they can't invest and hodl (long term vision vs. short term). The masses are focused on borrow and spend mentality.

4. Bitcoin shares and distributes the wealth WAAAAYYY more than something like a company IPO

People going from average amount of money to a millionaire are more likely to sell off a good chunk of their bitcoins when they become millionaires. No dude making $50k holding 10,000 bitcoins is going to just keep holding those bitcoins when the price hits $100. He'll sell a large amount. Even though today he would be a lot richer. He may keep some, but I think there will be a lot of wealthy early adopters but not so much a dozen or so super-wealthy early adopters like in the oil industry or computer industry.
legendary
Activity: 3780
Merit: 5429

https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/economic-impact-of-immigration-in-the-us
Quote
Over the long haul, they discovered, the presence of immigrants significantly benefits the economy. Areas with more historical immigration now have higher incomes, lower poverty and unemployment, and greater levels of educational attainment and urbanization.

The magnitude of the results was striking: if a county that experienced no immigration during this period had instead experienced median levels of immigration, residents today would have a 20 percent higher per capita income.

A study from the Kellogg School? Heh, they could be just a little biased  Wink Grin

"Kellogg offers full-time, part-time, and executive programs, and partners with schools in China, France/Singapore, India, Spain, Hong Kong, Israel, Germany, Canada, and Thailand. In addition to the Kellogg School campuses in Evanston, Chicago, and Miami, the Kellogg School partners with institutions in Asia, Europe, South America, Australia, the Middle East and Canada.

Kellogg students have the opportunity to study abroad in fall or winter of their second year on six continents. The exchange partner schools offer the opportunity to learn about business from a different perspective, experience another culture, and network with students, faculty, and professionals from around the world. The International Exchange Program at the Kellogg School was started in 1980 with a vision to promote a cultural interchange of ideas and provide a greater understanding of cross-cultural trade and business practices. Since that time, more than 1,000 Kellogg School students have participated in the Exchange Program with schools from over 20 countries, including Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Chile, China, Costa Rica, Denmark, France, Germany, Japan, Hong Kong, India, Israel, Italy, Mexico, Scotland, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Thailand, and U.K."
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