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About human nature.
In ancient China, tomb raiding was usually done by father and son together; the father and son would go tomb raiding, and finally crawl out of the tomb.
Does everyone know who should be the first to crawl out?
Should it be the father first, or the son first?
For thousands of years, the rules of tomb raiding, lessons learned from blood and tears, have formed such a custom: the father must crawl out first, then the son.
Because if the son crawls out first, he is very likely to push his father down and keep the treasure for himself, but if the father crawls out, gene
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This is truly impressive. Wang Jianlin might not even be able to earn a small profit as quickly as him now.
Jasonleo, the top trader on the real trading profit list in the crypto circle, who made $15 million in 7 days, shares a very interesting strategy.
In such a difficult market, from early April until now, he took a long position of over $67,000 once and a short position of over $71,600 once.
With just these two short-term trades, he earned over $15 million.
With heavy positions and precise entry points, how does this top-tier method of catching the top and bottom work?
Miner Brot
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It used to be MBTI, and now there's SBTI. Has anyone considered the feelings of people with choice paralysis...
A set of questions can take a whole day to complete, and they simply can't choose 😂
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Making big money is not about frequent trading, but about patiently waiting.
— Charlie Munger
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Can a “super individual” work hard and get rich? Someone has come up with a schedule—just follow it and you can earn 100,000 yuan a month, though you probably won’t be able to keep it up for long.
At 6 a.m., head out to sell breakfast, selling until 9 a.m.
At 9:30 a.m., go to work, working until 6 p.m.
At 6:30 p.m., go sell dinner, selling until 9 p.m.
At 9:30 p.m., start selling barbecue, selling until the early morning hours.
At midnight, start driving for a chauffeur service, driving until 2 a.m.
At 2 a.m., go work as a sanitation worker, sweeping until 4 a.m.
At 4:30 a.m., st
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My consistent trading rules are:
First, cut losses quickly.
Second, hold on to profitable positions as much as possible.
Third, always keep positions light.
Fourth, stick to the rules once they are set.
Fifth, also know when to be flexible.
— Ed Seykota
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In 1977, Buffett summarized for the first time the criteria he follows when selecting quality companies in his letter to shareholders.
These standards have been used ever since, with only four core principles.
Within his circle of competence, he understands the business.
The company has a long-term competitive advantage, able to withstand competition and maintain its defenses.
The management team is capable and honest, aligned with shareholders' interests.
The price must not be too outrageous; it should be bought at a reasonable or even cheap valuation.
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There’s a terrifying curse in Hong Kong’s stock market—the Ding Xie Effect.
Legend has it that this man in the picture can knock the stock market off course just with his face.
This meme actually goes way back. In 1992, Tony Cheng played a wild, obsessive-compulsive maniac named Ding Xie in *The Gre at Age*—and his character is all about making big money from short-selling during bear markets.
As a result, during the show’s broadcast, the Hang Seng Index really did plunge by 13%.
Most terrifying of all is that since this started, whenever TV stations air dramas starring Tony Cheng, the
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Investors lose more money by preventing a pullback, or by trying to anticipate it in advance,
than the pullback itself often causes.
—— Peter Lynch
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A human civilization will be destroyed tonight and can never be brought back. I don't want this to happen, but it is highly likely to occur.
However, since we have now achieved a complete and thorough regime change, allowing different, smarter, and less radical ideas to prevail, perhaps some revolutionary and very positive things will happen.
We will find out the answer tonight.
This will be one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the world.
Decades of extortion, corruption, and death over 47 years will finally come to an end. May God bless the great people
BTC-3,47%
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Currently, the Pentagon Pizza Index is at level 4, down a bit from the previous two days.
The Pizza Index is a popular folk indicator because Americans often consider pizza as overtime fast food.
So, during sensitive times, as long as pizza shops near the Pentagon suddenly get busy late at night, people start to speculate whether they are holding all-night meetings to plan big events again.
This is somewhat accurate—before the outbreak of the Iraq War in 2003, pizza orders around the Pentagon surged by over 300%, and the Pizza Index rose to level 1.
During the US-Iran standoff in Febru
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Who are the people on U.S. paper currency?
I've always assumed that the figures printed on the bills are American presidents. But thinking more carefully, Benjamin Franklin on the $100 bill isn't actually a president.
U.S. law doesn't require that presidents be depicted on the currency; it only sets a basic criterion that the person must be deceased. The specific choice of who appears is decided by the Secretary of the Treasury.
Just took a quick look at the figures on the dollar bills for fun.
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One-person company, few-person company, launching new products—just copy him directly. Doing so can really make money.
This person is Umberto. He created an app that isn't fully finished yet. On its first day online, using the LTD model, he sold $120k USD within 24 hours.
But what's most impressive isn't just how good his product is, or that he made $120k in a day, but the steps he took to make this money-making app. They're actually very copyable, not only allowing you to get cash upfront but also creating ongoing cash flow.
His process is: validate first, warm up first, sell first, get paid
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The liquidity-sweeping short model is really very useful—be sure to check this out, especially now when the market is not doing well.
You don’t have to use it, but if you come across it, never go long again—at the very least, this can help you lose a lot less money.
There are two types of models: one is Omor’s market maker OTC model, suitable for high-liquidity, popular assets, and the other is Kris’s all-day pullback model, suitable for shorting small-cap assets.
The video will tell you everything:
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1st Place, *Principles* Author: Ray Dalio
Ray Dalio is the founder of Bridgewater Associates. Through his long-term experience in investing, management, and organizational practice, he has gradually developed his own set of principles. He believes that principles are the foundation for individuals to find themselves and achieve continuous growth in a complex world.
This book is divided into Life Principles and Work Principles. The core content focuses on how to improve decision-making quality in a complex and ever-changing reality by establishing rules, reviewing mistakes, and optimizing j
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2nd Place, "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind" by Yuval Noah Harari
Yuval Noah Harari is a professor of history at the Hebrew University and one of the most prominent emerging historians worldwide.
This book is written in accessible language with a fresh perspective. It avoids complex dates and place names but covers major events in human rise, involving biology, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, art, literature, ethics, and many other fields.
What’s most interesting is that the author examines individuals within the context of human development, discussing topics such as happine
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3rd Place, "The First Lesson for Managers" by Andy Grove
Andy Grove was a core leader at Intel and an important figure in modern management practices.
This book focuses on the daily work of managers, systematically discussing issues such as meetings, decision-making, performance, training, organizational design, and management leverage.
Grove shares over twenty years of management experience, proposing high-leverage management methods to help managers significantly improve management efficiency and achieve maximum management output.
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GateUser-8bdcfa67:
HODL tight 💪
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4th Place, "The Infinite Game" Author: Michael Dell
Michael Dell is the founder of Dell Inc. This book chronicles his entire journey from startup, expansion, to privatization transformation.
The book focuses on company control, capital operations, strategic transformation, and leadership decisions, showcasing the real choices made by a major tech company at critical junctures.
It also includes anecdotes about Dell's interactions with Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and others, revealing many previously undisclosed business war secrets. Highly recommended.
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5th Place, "Atlas Shrugged" by Ayn Rand
Ayn Rand is one of the most influential philosophical writers of the 20th century, and this book is the second best-selling book in American history after the Bible.
This is a novel set against the backdrop of a gradually disintegrating American society, where core producers such as entrepreneurs, engineers, and inventors are disappearing one after another, and the railway, industrial, and financial systems are gradually collapsing.
Through a collapse of economy and order, the author focuses on discussing the relationships between creators, power,
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