Author

Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 3464. (Read 26712700 times)

legendary
Activity: 4354
Merit: 3614
what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?


The policy has outraged one mother who was told she had to pay the £20 after her and her son Sam, 10, and niece Toni, six, left two onion rings, a piece of prawn toast, and a spring roll on their plates.

methinks a LOT of food will wind up on the floor under the table and ground into mush.

alternately:   FOOD FIGHT!!!!!!

edit: death_wish beat me to it. food fights are the 2nd best use of food in my book.
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
legendary
Activity: 2282
Merit: 2057
A Bitcoiner chooses. A slave obeys.
Good morning WO. I see we are desperately in need of a new poll.

Any realistic TA which says we will see 40k soon?

Only my gut feeling is saying so….
Does that count as TA?

I will allow it.
legendary
Activity: 3794
Merit: 5474
Here's my DALL-E mini interpretation of "Biden Crazy Love Kisses"



You're welcome, internet.

Maybe I should NFT this shit.
member
Activity: 70
Merit: 320
Take profit in BTC. Account PnL in BTC. BTC=money.
WO food fight!

At least they aren't charging a penalty fee for uneaten food, yet.

Unlike this place.



https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2145387/Restaurant-fines-diners-Chinese-buffet-leaving-food-plates.html

I like that policy.

I better like the policy that those who waste food, should be thenceforth deprived of food.  The maddening torment of slow starvation shall teach them not to take food for granted.

When I become the centralized dictator of the universe, disgusting profligates who waste food shall suffer condign retribution.

Quote
The policy has outraged one mother who was told she had to pay the £20 after her and her son Sam, 10, and niece Toni, six, left two onion rings, a piece of prawn toast, and a spring roll on their plates.

She is a bad mother:  She raises profligate brats who waste food.  She should feel bad about herself, instead of whining.
legendary
Activity: 3794
Merit: 5474
Ever wonder why during a bull run all this deep pocket money comes rushing in and runs up the price sky-high, only to leave fresh crypto n00bs holding the bag once it all crashes?

Well let dumbass Jim Cramer enlighten you:

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/08/why-jim-cramer-invests-in-crypto.html

Quote
Owning crypto can also be a good short-term bet that takes advantage of the momentum from swings in its price, especially since there are many enthusiastic investors in the space who are willing to “buy high,” he says.

Translation: "Crypto can be a great short term momentum trade to pump and dump, because there are a LOT of dumb pleebs that come in and FOMO buy at the top!"  Roll Eyes

Don't be a victim next time: buy bitcoin now.
legendary
Activity: 2772
Merit: 2846
BREAKING! Happening right now! Me not eating att Biltema.



Well, I have to admit this looks a LOT yummier than your previous Biltema food pics.  Cool

Tesco food makes Biltema food look cordon bleu.




that is fucking gross.... someone paid money for that shit? smh

At least they aren't charging a penalty fee for uneaten food, yet.

Unlike this place.



https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2145387/Restaurant-fines-diners-Chinese-buffet-leaving-food-plates.html

Quote
The policy has outraged one mother who was told she had to pay the £20 after her and her son Sam, 10, and niece Toni, six, left two onion rings, a piece of prawn toast, and a spring roll on their plates.
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1441
BREAKING! Happening right now! Me not eating att Biltema.



Well, I have to admit this looks a LOT yummier than your previous Biltema food pics.  Cool

Tesco food makes Biltema food look cordon bleu.




that is fucking gross.... someone paid money for that shit? smh
legendary
Activity: 2772
Merit: 2846
BREAKING! Happening right now! Me not eating att Biltema.



Well, I have to admit this looks a LOT yummier than your previous Biltema food pics.  Cool

Tesco food makes Biltema food look cordon bleu.

legendary
Activity: 2478
Merit: 1220
Privacy Servers. Since 2009.
BREAKING! Happening right now! Me not eating att Biltema.



Well, I have to admit this looks a LOT yummier than your previous Biltema food pics.  Cool
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
hero member
Activity: 1204
Merit: 755
Homo Sapiens Bitcoinerthalensis
Hi there WO people & bots.
I was attracted earlier this morning here, after being officially two weeks into my five month summer holiday - when I decided to have a peep.
I had no intention of doing so, and I did have to skim through 100 pages or so, which took - well - the best part of the day.

Nice to see you boys and girls behaving yourselves.



Well, except that suchmoon bitch. Nobody has definitely hurt her in ways I cannot imagine.
I’ll speculate that it must be his hard … brain.

Anyway, more later, until then:

Hodl on
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1441
BREAKING! Happening right now! Me not eating att Biltema.



Looks better than the last meal you posted !!!
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 22
JUST IN: Texas state grid turned to bitcoin miners to stabilize power grid during heatwave – Fox News 👏..

Source: https://twitter.com/BitcoinMagazine/status/1534568528183009280
member
Activity: 70
Merit: 320
Take profit in BTC. Account PnL in BTC. BTC=money.
“Your size is not size.”

Your law is not law.

This is even worse than “Billionaires in my following, go ahead, see what happens”.

“U.S. government, go ahead, see what happens.”



Politicians really have basic problems in understanding Bitcoin - because who cares what they think - Satoshi didn't ask permission from anyone when he invented Bitcoin...

Some Bitcoiners really have basic problems in understanding the real world - because who cares what they think - governments don’t ask their permission before imposing laws and regulations that can add costs, destroy market value (or even whole markets), drive good things underground, and send good people to prison.

Any USG action has zero direct effect on me; thus, I am not speaking from any direct self-interest.  I am an anonymous cypherpunk physically located in an undisclosed jurisdiction.  I can and do say, “Your law is not law.”  >99% of Bitcoiners are not me, and not anything like me.  Also relevant:  I have never done KYC on a cryptocurrency exchange.  >99% of WO hatters are not me, and not anything like me.

I care about Bitcoin.  (Also, of course, anything that affects Bitcoin’s value affects me.)  Therefore, I care about this issue.



The ill-informed, ridiculously conceited nerd in the quoted tweet forgot to mention that when China banned Bitcoin mining, a large percentage of global hashrate physically moved its equipment from China to the U.S.  Chinese miners were working together with American mining companies to load ships with ASIC miners, move them to the other side of the world, and set them up in the U.S.  The Chinese government didn’t care:  They were not trying to target Bitcoin globally, but rather, to drive it out of their country.

I focus specifically on mining, because I doubt that the U.S. would ever ban Bitcoin outright.  With some historical exceptions (such as the 1934 gold ban you apparently don’t know about), that is not the American way.  The American way is customarily to use regulation, partial prohibition, and taxation to corrupt, distort, undermine, and control things deemed problematic by the USG.  The American way also often includes attempting to impose U.S. laws on the entire world.  In that aspect, the U.S. government is infinitely worse than the Chinese government.

The absurd IRS rules for applying capital gain taxes are one example of undermining Bitcoin—and whatever else her bill may say, I should duly thank Senator Lummis for attempting to bugpatch this with a partial, politically viable mitigation.  Never mind the tax itself:  The IRS rule about what constitutes a “taxable event” has severely inhibited mass-adoption and use of Bitcoin as money in the U.S.—one of the biggest and most influential markets in the world.  It has thus been a major factor in distorting Bitcoin worldwide.  It has held Bitcoin back.  It has damaged Bitcoin’s long-term value.  And some Bitcoiners are so blinkered by their own “neener-neener, your-size-is-not-size, government can’t stop us” nonsense that they don’t even see what the USG has already done to Bitcoin—not with legislation, not with a ban, but with some rulemaking by a taxation agency.

Tightening the KYC noose is one of the biggest long-term threats to Bitcoin.  It has been ongoing for years.  Governments are obviously a factor there!

Now, I foresee a multi-pronged carrot-and-stick attack to force Bitcoin to switch to POS.  A part of the “stick” is government regulation that drastically drives up the costs and hassles of mining (more likely), or maybe even an outright ban of POW mining (less likely).  The writing is on the wall.  In the U.S., which now hosts a terrific percentage of global hashrate, there are a few Federal legislators actively trying to prevent this:  Cruz, Lummis—anyone else?  Now, why are you sneering at them?

Regulatory attacks are another potential threat—a big one.  This post is already too long; and I need to analyze the Lummis bill carefully, before applauding her too much.  Let’s just say, on a general note, I am concerned about the potential that legislation may draw Bitcoin into a regulatory quagmire, while tossing Bitcoiners a bone with some obvious things such as exempting small purchases from capital gains tax.
legendary
Activity: 2380
Merit: 1823
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
legendary
Activity: 3808
Merit: 7912
BREAKING! Happening right now! Me not eating att Biltema.



 Vegetables?!  Are you on a health food diet now?

NB: Image size was over 2.5Mb so wouldn't display. I compressed it but did not alter the dimensions.
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