Raxin

Status:
Joined: November 13, 2015
Last Seen: 1 year
user id: 394062
Location: West Coast, North America, Earth, Sol System, Milky Way, our local galactic cluster, my Hubble radius, the unknowable
Gender: M
My quotes are original.
I'm still trying to eff the ineffable.
My Witty Comics: http://www.wittycomics.com/users/Raxin
 

Quotes by Raxin

Which one(s) are you?
1)      Hypno-disk
2)      Rogue pet
3)      Secret observer
4)      Master or mistress manipulator
5)      Gold-digging ho
6)      Pimp
7)      Daddy’s little girl
8)      Momma’s boy
9)      Free thinker
10)   Hive-mind drone
11)   Toy truck operator
12)   Wannabe playboy
13)   Pretending to be confused
14)   Comfort seeker
15)   Will never have enough
16)   Addicted to addiction
17)   Living life through a blobject
18)   Fastest thumbs in the West
19)   Forever in the sandbox mindset
20)   Fashionista burnout
21)   Minion maker
22)   Plain as a pigeon
23)   Ugly hot
24)   Waiting to see
25)   Outlier
26)   Special exemption
27)   Learns the rules to know what to break
28)   Willfully ignorant of all responsible topics
29)   Flower growing in a dump
30)   Meme generator
31)   New parent
32)   Motherless child
33)   Missing your grandparents
34)   Water bug
35)   Tree hugger
36)   Assault turtle
37)   Crazy cat lady
38)   Would rather be fishing
39)   Half of an uncoupled couple
My Venus Flytrap is growing a flower.
Isn't that a conflict of interest?
Glossary:

Wikipedia-speak = what you end up with when tens of people collaborate on (battle over) a sentence for fifteen years (and growing). 

Considering the inconceivably large numbers of variables, the probability that any particular state of the universe should derive in the next moment from the current state is so prohibitively small as to be impossible, and yet the universe continuously displays new states.
On the “Brexit” news and the stock market:

The thing about bad news is that it’s only bad because people expect everyone else to think its bad, so they sell in anticipation of that, which makes it true.

The Brexit-referendum news didn’t “destroy 3 trillion dollars” (as I heard some shallow talk show hosts parrot on AM radio this morning). Speculators sold shares because they predicted that other speculators would sell shares, which drove down share prices, just as they had predicted.

The real valuations of the companies that those are shares of did not change. Speculators are typically willing to pay more for a share of stock than its real valuation because they predict that some other speculator will be willing to pay slightly more. The only thing that happened after the Brexit news is that the extra margin that speculators were willing to pay for shares of companies temporarily shrank. You can be sure that if any stock prices fell sufficiently to reach their real valuation, the speculators would gobble them up, because they know that after the news blows over, the trading prices of those stocks will rise again to much higher than the real valuation. The speculators temporarily destroyed their own trillions by selling in anticipation of other speculators selling, but they will recreate those trillions by buying in anticipation of other speculators buying after the news blows over.

Those “trillions” were not actually lost. Those trillions were never really there to begin with. Those trillions represent only the extra amount that speculators are willing to pay for shares of companies in excess of the real valuation for the purpose of buying from and selling to other speculators. Those are virtual trillions made entirely of, and supported only by, the hunches of speculators.

Speculation is a game of anticipating the flock.

Warren Buffet doesn’t participate in the speculation game. He’s a value investor. He figures out what a share of a company should be worth before he even looks at the most recent stock price.

Most traders are not value investors. Most traders are price speculators. They buy or sell shares of a stock depending if they think other speculators will be willing to pay a higher or lower price in the future. Speculating is a game of anticipating the movements of the flock and trying to make those moves earlier than most of the rest of the flock. The flock moves quickly but not instantaneously. Half of the birds will always be faster than the other half of the birds.

The trick to making money as a speculator is being in the faster half of the flock. It’s that simple. 

Wish me luck.

Now that I think I understand speculation, I will try to anticipate the flock earlier in the future and trim off my own little slice of those virtual trillions, while everyone else is trying to get their slice off of me.
That’s right: P*ss me the f*ck off, and see what happens, monkey f*cker. I might call myself a pacifist, but that only means I won’t execute a first strike. It doesn’t mean I won’t execute holy retribution on anyone stupid enough to violate my airspace, including your ridiculous personage. Back the f*ck up right now, or risk retaliation from every intelligent cell in my body—and that doesn’t even include my friends who are just drooling to back me up against someone of your ilk.
People with skills and talent are more valuable than people with money, which is why people with money try as hard as they can to convince everyone else that having money is a virtue. They try to convince the people with skills and talent that skills and talent are minor to worthless so that the people with money can hire them to do their bidding and make the people with skills and talent feel grateful for the opportunity to get paid.

People with skills and talent need to wake up and realize that they don’t need someone else to give them money. Skills and talent are the real source of wealth and prosperity. Skills and talent are what make the world go ‘round.

Money is almost nothing, almost worthless. It doesn’t really exist. It only exists as long as we all agree that it exists for the practical purpose of trading, as a convenient substitute for bartering. Money is incapable of making anything happen except as a means of motivating people with skills and talent to use their skills and talent to make something happen for the benefit of people with money. In a world containing only people with money and no talent or skills, nothing would ever happen, no matter how much money there were.

Skills and talent are real. They exist. They have true value, which is why you can barter your skills for other people’s skills. Skills and talent can make things happen equally well in an environment of billions of dollars or no dollars. Skills and talent are completely independent of money. In a world containing only people with skills and talent and no money, many amazing things would be accomplished, without the involvement, interference, or influence of money.
Anyone who wants to use your skills and talent but doesn’t have any skills or talent of their own to barter in exchange for yours had better give you lots and lots of money for the privilege. It is they who need you, not vice versa.

If the crumbs are moving, they're not crumbs.


I gift you all jewels still underground as beautiful in their original state as you are in yours.


Riddle:
“What happens when you go to war with nature?”

Answer:
“You lose.” 
 

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