Normally the poll option with the least votes gets it right. I'm hoping that's how it works for this poll, above $21k. Where is the bottom?
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$21,001-$22,000 1 (3.1%)
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^^^ Don't listen to proudhon. HODL like the spartans.
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I remember the crash to $3k in late 2019. Half a year later and it was over $12k.
The crash happened in December 2018 and it went on till April 2019. In that period Bitcoin was trading between the range of 3k to 4k. I am not expecting such a crash but Bitcoin can hit 20k. Yes, you're right. I'm short of sleep and making mistakes. There's nothing like a huge crash to keep you up all night.
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I remember the crash to $3k in late 2018. Half a year later and it was over $12k.
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OT: The loving green Dutch government has decided (in accordance to following EU emission regulation) enough with farming in The Netherlands. It is simply too polluting regardless of the fact that the food and milk generated has fed millions over the hundreds of years and was there before a single green policy and any form of Unity within Europe was ever thought of. Enough is enough with this disgusting practice of localised farming, we'd rather pay Billy HingPing Swing in the outskirts of Shanghai to do your job! "Fuck you farmers, and no, we don't thank you, just close shop, we'd rather import all this stuff and make it look like we are as clean as Elon Musk's bare ass." Sounds reasonable I guess. Especially since the conservative party was voted in again as the biggest party. The voters get exactly what they want with the green policies shoved down their throats. Inflation is just not high enough! https://www.dutchnews.nl/news/2022/06/farms-will-have-to-close-down-to-meet-nitrogen-targets-ministers-say/In this type of environment "what" happened on Jan 6th last year in the USA is completely understandable in my opinion. Hopefully the Dutch farmers will resist this complete and utter moronic nonsense. Couldn't they just tax farmers each time a cow farts or burps? That's what New Zealand's planning. https://www.bbc.com/news/business-61741352New Zealand has unveiled a plan to tax sheep and cattle burps in a bid to tackle one of the country's biggest sources of greenhouse gases.
It would make it the first nation to charge farmers for the methane emissions from the animals they keep. The plan also includes incentives for farmers who reduce emissions through feed additives Either that, or they could just add seaweed to their cows diet to stop them farting or burping. That's what Australia's considering. https://www.bbc.com/newsround/49368462A study in 2014 by Australia's national science agency, CSIRO, found that by adding the pink seaweed 'Asparagopsis' to a cow's food they could reduce the amount of methane gas produced when cow's burp and fart by a whopping 99%!
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This just in: price will be much lower tomorrow. Scientifically confirmed and guaranteed. That's all.
Was your May rally to $70k confirmed by math and bad science? I can't understand how you got it wrong. ...
I think we really could see $70k this month.
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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. 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.htmlThe 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.
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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. Tesco food makes Biltema food look cordon bleu.
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KFC Australia is swapping lettuce for cabbage. What's next, swapping chicken for soylent green? https://www.bbc.com/news/business-61714989On its website KFC Australia said: "Due to the recent floods in NSW [New South Wales] and QLD [Queensland] we're currently experiencing a lettuce shortage. So, we're using a lettuce and cabbage blend on all products containing lettuce until further notice." Surprised they are giving a reason that is localised rather than claiming 99% of all lettuces in Australia are normally imported from Ukraine. They've stopped giving a reason. Their site's been down since the cabbage swap hit the news. https://www.kfc.com.au/
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KFC Australia is swapping lettuce for cabbage. https://www.bbc.com/news/business-61714989On its website KFC Australia said: "Due to the recent floods in NSW [New South Wales] and QLD [Queensland] we're currently experiencing a lettuce shortage. So, we're using a lettuce and cabbage blend on all products containing lettuce until further notice." What's next, swapping chicken for soylent green? Is this stuff made from "high-energy plankton gathered from the oceans of the world"?
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Usually there is a dump @ 30k euro, any moment now.....
How did you guess? It's another bart.
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I think we really could see $70k this month.
What happened to your May rally to $70k? I can't believe you got it wrong.
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Somehow, most people are indifferent to getting no interest. It would have been an outrage in the 70-ies or 80-ies or even in the 90-ies, but somehow become acceptable. An anecdote: I opened my first online brokerage account in 1997. Do you know what was the interest on cash in my account? 4.75%, lol (with inflation at 2.3% back then and fed funds rate at 5.46%) Now-ZERO (or some infinitesimally small number with inflation at 6-8%). This does not make much sense.
Yes, i agree that 5-6% "bleed" in 12 mo is an uncharted territory. I also saw a chart that shows 16% year-to-year decrease in income.
Some banks have negative interest rates for big savers. "Paying" -1% is taking the piss. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-52772950Swiss banks UBS and Credit Suisse only impose negative rates on deposits of more than 2 million Swiss francs.
In Germany, where some banks impose charges on deposits of more than €100,000 (£90,000), some people have started stashing their money in vaults.
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At the airport, waiting for my luggage, FFS.
Did the queue to get to the plane take longer than the flight on the way there?
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