El duderino_
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Activity: 3136
Merit: 15199
“They have no clue”
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March 13, 2019, 01:15:40 AM |
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via Imgflip Meme GeneratorTravelling price wise  Local and cheap Actualy that is what i like ......  (yesterday been to the chocolat Hills but still i prefer my own Hills) Starting to dislike 3850-3860 But better Then the last bottom price 
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jojo69
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Activity: 3612
Merit: 5256
diamond-handed zealot
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March 13, 2019, 01:22:21 AM |
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most distractiiing
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El duderino_
Legendary
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Activity: 3136
Merit: 15199
“They have no clue”
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March 13, 2019, 01:31:44 AM |
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most distractiiing
i’m a most distractive mot***F***er
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nanobtc
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March 13, 2019, 02:01:02 AM |
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Mic, I think jojo69 was talking about the passenger, not the boat.
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El duderino_
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Activity: 3136
Merit: 15199
“They have no clue”
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March 13, 2019, 02:08:00 AM |
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Mic, I think jojo69 was talking about the passenger, not the boat.
Mmmmm could be She distracts me as well from time to time 
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El duderino_
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Activity: 3136
Merit: 15199
“They have no clue”
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March 13, 2019, 02:10:32 AM |
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Padawan, hodlers!! Sideways, boredom leads the way. The force is with us!!
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xhomerx10
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Activity: 4466
Merit: 10710
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March 13, 2019, 02:18:13 AM |
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First post in here? Come more often and own an XhomerX HAT  Thanks, Buddy! I have been reading here for the lols, news, classic moments, and participating on voting. Just funny, we are only 110 voting here?  More lols to come.  Avatar-sized 
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BTCMILLIONAIRE
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March 13, 2019, 02:24:02 AM |
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... total household debt increased by $32 billion (0.2%) to $13.54 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2018
 Everyone is drowning in debt because people aren't being paid for what they produce. Time to tax the billionaires. Billionaires repeatedly put their money at stake for returns. "Everyone" else is staking their money on iPhones. So fuck off you filthy thief.
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xhomerx10
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Merit: 10710
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March 13, 2019, 02:25:32 AM |
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According to the 2014 / 15 crypto market schedule, the train is running on time.
 According to my vacation schedule, I'm running a little ahead of time. Choo! Choo!  Avatar-sized 
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BTCMILLIONAIRE
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March 13, 2019, 02:30:20 AM |
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According to HuffPost, on average people spend about $650 on Alcohol every month. That means if you cut your drinking habit by 50% and spent the money you saved on #Bitcoin, you could invest $325 or about .08 $BTC, at these prices, monthly. In 12.5 months, you’d have 1 BTC. 💡 https://twitter.com/mrmichaelnye/status/1105227653257314304?s=21But but what about me saturdayzzzz ?? Fucking filthy Billionaires are to blame for average people not building wealth. Tax them and corporations, that provide us with everything we use in our daily life, to death! 
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El duderino_
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Activity: 3136
Merit: 15199
“They have no clue”
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March 13, 2019, 02:34:29 AM |
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^^ Awesome workssss XhomerX Can’t merit them all but but they are very Nice How does one stay that creative 
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BTCMILLIONAIRE
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March 13, 2019, 02:36:16 AM |
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Bitcoin & Blockchain Adoption Will Be a Lot Faster Than The Internet Boom of 90’shttps://blockpublisher.com/bitcoin-blockchain-adoption-will-be-a-lot-faster-than-the-internet-boom-of-90s/-Jack Lu, founder of Wanchain, certainly thinks so: “We are at a similar stage as the internet boom back in the early 2000s. Right now the whole industry is trying to build real world applications with increased funding. I think a life changing disruption would be a lot faster than it was back in the internet world. The reason is blockchain deals with two type of things: data and assets, which is also a form of data. Since these things are already digitized or about to be digitized, blockchain will gain traction a lot faster.” ... “Majority of financial assets are already digitized as they are in some form of data, like in banks. Putting them on blockchain and building applications such as smart contracts and decentralized applications will be a lot faster this time around than the old days of internet that revolutionized pretty much every industry.” ... -Maxine Ryan, co-founder of world’s first cash-in, cash-out blockchain remittance platform Bitspark, pinpointed how the data storing capability of blockchain technology can be utilized. She said: “I think that there is definitely space for blockchain to be adopted in areas where the technology itself can be treated essentially like a database, and in every single infrastructure built in many different verticals, a database is needed.” ... “I think it’s unfortunate that when the market is hyped, it attracts bad actors. At such a time, the market can make irrational decisions. I believe that investors should have sufficient knowledge of the field and understand how to do due diligence before they invest.” ... “I always take internet as a history book. Initially, people termed internet a scam back when it came out. In the second stage, some use cases were proven that revolutionized everything and in the third stage, the internet was everywhere. Same will happen with blockchain technology. It will be incorporated in pretty much every computer, mobile phone and pretty much into everything that has digital data. People wouldn’t even think that there is blockchain technology working inside every device, just like people don’t think about the technology behind internet.” It probably wouldn't hurt to make a distinction between Bitcoin [as SoV, MoE, UoA] and general Bitcoin adoption. Blockchain will penetrate society very fast and make legacy finance vastly more efficient. The former however could either precede, move along, or lag behind in pace. Possibly quite substantially. My hunch is that it'll lag behind, because banks and governments will be flailing around and the average person needs daddy government to tell them it's all going to be okay.
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Syke
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Activity: 3878
Merit: 1193
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March 13, 2019, 02:49:10 AM |
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Billionaires repeatedly put their money at stake for returns. "Everyone" else is staking their money on iPhones. So fuck off you filthy thief.
Billionaires don't create wealth. They hire people to create wealth and then underpay them. That underpayment gap has become obscene.
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Biodom
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Activity: 4382
Merit: 5792
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March 13, 2019, 02:57:21 AM |
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Want to share this for everyone. This is really good for risk management. snipped images
Concept is OK, but % wise I would never use these numbers as they are skewed toward less quality. I only invest in what interests me.
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GreatArkansas
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Bitcoin Fixes It
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March 13, 2019, 03:01:18 AM |
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Want to share this for everyone. This is really good for risk management. snipped images
Concept is OK, but % wise I would never use these numbers as they are skewed toward less quality. I only invest in what interests me. Yeah, the concept is really good, we all have different interests, but for me the allocated % for every part is really good for me.
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xhomerx10
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Activity: 4466
Merit: 10710
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March 13, 2019, 03:04:14 AM |
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^^ Awesome workssss XhomerX Can’t merit them all but but they are very Nice How does one stay that creative  Thanks Mr. MicG  I'm not sure but I think it might have something to do with the sleep deprivation I experience regularly while working night shift. I find myself in a dream state as soon as I close my eyes some days.
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Biodom
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March 13, 2019, 03:09:09 AM Last edit: March 13, 2019, 03:31:51 AM by Biodom |
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Billionaires repeatedly put their money at stake for returns. "Everyone" else is staking their money on iPhones. So fuck off you filthy thief.
Billionaires don't create wealth. They hire people to create wealth and then underpay them. That underpayment gap has become obscene. Smarter billionaires are starting to realize that they need non-pauperized public/middle class to sell the products to. This is how they make their money, mostly. If everyone is poor, except a small %, then there is no mass market. The question is how to get from here to there. A peaceful small redistribution (not 70% of course, could be 1%) is much much better (as a principle, not in practice) than something worse, although I have NO trust in any politician and don't see anyone with enough 'balls" to pull this off. The alternative is much darker, and I am not talking about riots, but a possibility of Homo sapiens subspecies emerging, "Citadels", etc. A split between super- and sub-humans. Once it is partially genetic, there would be no passage back. I am currently reading the third Harari's book (21 lessons for the 21st century), which touches on these topics and this book is much better than the second one (first was good too).
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nanobtc
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March 13, 2019, 03:17:05 AM |
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[snip] Thanks Mr. MicG  I'm not sure but I think it might have something to do with the sleep deprivation I experience regularly while working night shift. I find myself in a dream state as soon as I close my eyes some days. Up to a point, sometimes sleep deprivation can be it's own reward. Or at least that's what we said when I was young...
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BTCMILLIONAIRE
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March 13, 2019, 03:32:57 AM |
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we have the power to make the world what we want it to be and we should use that power.
Tell us why you are better off because the dodo and the passenger pigeon are extinct. Actually on second thought, don’t. Tell us why it makes you worse off. Except you can't. As usual. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiversity_lossEven though permanent global species loss is a more dramatic phenomenon than regional changes in species composition, even minor changes from a healthy stable state can have dramatic influence on the food web and the food chain insofar as reductions in only one species can adversely affect the entire chain (coextinction), leading to an overall reduction in biodiversity, possible alternative stable states of an ecosystem notwithstanding. Ecological effects of biodiversity are usually counteracted by its loss. Reduced biodiversity in particular leads to reduced ecosystem services and eventually poses an immediate danger for food security, also for humankind.[1] In your own words, twat. This is about you personally as per your own play. While I've already mentioned that I don't personally like a potential loss of biodiversity, it's not necessarily a bad thing. It could provide humans with new challenges that could allow us to achieve new highs that we wouldn't have seen otherwise by tackling those. Just to name one spin on how the loss of biodiversity could be a good, rather than a bad thing. Eden's garden type situations and decadence have lead to the fall of many civilizations, and mediocrity, laziness and lack of willpower, which all could be contributing to the increase in depression rates, have lead to the fall of previous civilizations. In history it has always been great pain that created great things. This could be a natural phenomenon, just like the cycle of Bitcorns going up and down, just like climate going from hot to cold, hardship and prosperity could also be coming in periods. Of course, if that was indeed the case, then there is nothing that should stop us from realizing the impeding hardship sooner and combating it before it takes place. But if we want to effectively do so we need to stop pretending as if there were right and wrong paths. There are goals and ways to achieve them, and not everybody will agree on the solution, never mind the goal.
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