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Question: How far will this leg take us?
$110K - 9 (8.3%)
$120K - 19 (17.6%)
$130K - 17 (15.7%)
$140K - 9 (8.3%)
$150K - 19 (17.6%)
$160K - 2 (1.9%)
$170K+ - 33 (30.6%)
Total Voters: 108

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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26836664 times)
This is a self-moderated topic. If you do not want to be moderated by the person who started this topic, create a new topic. (174 posts by 1 users with 9 merit deleted.)
goldkingcoiner
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December 08, 2018, 12:01:48 PM

Listen, you were the one that claimed it's plausible for a quantum fluctuation to disturb the Higg's field and suck the entire universe in, but you made no attempt to explain the mechanism behind said event.
If you really want to know about the Higgs mechanism or quantum fluctuations, you can easily google it or watch videos where they explain it in a simple fashion.

Oh please, you're just mad because you know your original statement is probably irrational unless you can prove the Higg's field is a uniform, connected lattice spanning the entire universe and 'disturbing' one part of it causes the entire thing to collapse in a domino effect, or that the field is even entirely uniform in the first place.  Adjusting one part of it isn't gonna do a whole lot if it's non-uniform by default, so I think your statement kind of requires it to be some ultra-fragile, uniform lattice where the whole thing implodes like Jenga blocks by moving a 'vertex'.

Try harder
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December 08, 2018, 12:02:54 PM
Merited by sirazimuth (1), ivomm (1), BobLawblaw (1), Kylapoiss (1)


4. yeah roach.... its making sense, i have the theory for his jewish hate as well that a girl has to be involved, i guess when he was in love first time it was on a jew girl.... what just happened there i don't know, but i think she crushed him brutal, any guys any thought what might have happened there ?



With that much hate towards females I think he has been rejected all his life. I think I even feel a bit sad for him, but just a bit.

.. and that bit is gone now too.

An idea for a movie script just came to me, inspired by probably real life events and situations of Roach. Perhaps someone with some writing talent could run with it, Im sure hollywood would love it and Shia Labeouf could really use a comeback role.

 Our antihero is a young Jewish boy nicknamed Roach. He goes to an all Jewish private school and falls in love with a young girl. After a brutal and humiliating rejection young Roach swears off women as retarded subhumans and begins to hate the Jews. Being a Jew himself is somewhat of a dilemma so he comes up with a theory that his evil parents stole him from a white family using typical Jewish tricks layed out in The Protocols. He then grows a bit older and finds his only solace in stacking silver and hanging out with the only group of people on Earth tolerant and kind enough to not ban him from their internet chat thread(Enter the Illustrious Wall Observer Bitcoiner Team with all the stars you know and love). Fast forward to the year 2022 set at the Wall Observer 100k party at Voodoo Lounge in Las Vegas. An older and even more bitter Roach, soul crushed by the crash of silver and all other PMs comes to the party via coin raised by our Wall Observer heroes. Everyone meets Roach and feels sorry for him and the poverty and sadness that he is living in and also quickly figures out that he is indeed Jewish. Everyone at the party except for Roach is very wealthy and they marvel at how someone could have been exposed to so much Bitcoin knowledge for so many years, but be so emotionally disturbed to not make the right choice and become a wealthy hodler. In a drunken stupor some Wall heroes decide to gather up some dust they had lying around and add it up into one trezor which they give to Roach. Roach is so overwhelmed at the generosity of people who he ranted at insanely for years that he vows then and there to be a better person. Now he has enough money to escape his Mcdonalds job and our antihero meets a Jewish girl on a online dating app. They fall in love and Roach dedicates his life to bringing peace and love to all the races and spreading the word of Bitcoin to precious metal bagholders. At the end of the movie will be a plot twist. Our antihero finds out his beautiful pregnant Jewish fiance was born a hermaphrodite. But that is a sequel and story for another day.
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December 08, 2018, 12:04:05 PM



Getting ready with some popcorns...

Last of the V8s
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December 08, 2018, 12:06:17 PM

The future. Cunningly disguised as
A thought experiment
I'd be running around trying to find out why the crash happened.
Did the tptb suicide a buncha 'core devs'? Did it get banned by the G20/Gxx? Did the miners really steal the segwits?
The sort of news that affects price in dollars, but doesn't touch Bitcoin itself?
Or is it something actually serious?
Not gonna elucidate on those possibilities.
If it wasn't serious, I'd fill my bags and answer newbie bleatings here and elsewhere.
pönde
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December 08, 2018, 12:08:35 PM



Getting ready with some popcorns...



So when that short close? Where is the source of it?
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December 08, 2018, 12:09:07 PM



Getting ready with some popcorns...



Yes there 'has to be' a relief rally for these shorts to buy themselves out.
But it doesn't have to be here.
Could be at 2.8, 1.3 etc
becoin
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December 08, 2018, 12:10:04 PM


Does the seller side has to have the bitcoins when the contract is made?

No. That's the whole idea behind "regulated" bitcoin markets. You don't need to have a single satoshi to sell thousands of bitcoins and suppress price. Seller doesn't sell bitcoins but bitcoin promissory notes. Bankers think that through bitcoin ETFs they will solve bitcoin supply "problem".
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December 08, 2018, 12:13:51 PM


Does the seller side has to have the bitcoins when the contract is made?

No. That's the whole idea behind "regulated" bitcoin markets. You don't need to have a single satoshi to sell thousands of bitcoins and suppress price.

Bankers think that bitcoin ETFs will solve bitcoin supply "problem".


When the contract expires seller has to anyway have to get the coins from somewhere to be able to sell them to the buyer?
becoin
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December 08, 2018, 12:18:48 PM


Does the seller side has to have the bitcoins when the contract is made?

No. That's the whole idea behind "regulated" bitcoin markets. You don't need to have a single satoshi to sell thousands of bitcoins and suppress price.

Bankers think that bitcoin ETFs will solve bitcoin supply "problem".


When the contract expires seller has to anyway have to get the coins from somewhere to be able to sell them to the buyer?

Nope. Actual delivery of bitcoins is forbidden. Just like in gold futures and ETFs. At the expiry date profit/loss is cleared through the seller's margin deposit which is in dollars. If the seller is systemically important bank and they did the wrong bet Fed will print new dollars and will give them to pay for their loss.
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December 08, 2018, 12:19:43 PM

Fast forward to the year 2022 set at the Wall Observer 100k party at Voodoo Lounge in Las Vegas. An older and even more bitter Roach, soul crushed by the crash of silver and all other PMs comes to the party via coin raised by our Wall Observer heroes.

You guys are completely delusional.  When the global debt bubble implodes, bitcoin is going to be completely worthless and unusable, and I'll be lucky if there's any economy still existing that I can spend physical metals in.  The currency might simply be martial law and Venezeula looter mobs.

The debt bubble implosion cannot be solved by inflation aka inflating away debts until they're servicable to kick the can down the road.  There are just too many broke ass people that don't even have assets for the PPT to rig the price upwards on, but those same people with no assets do have debts.  The only way you could even attempt to do such a thing is literally helicopter money - the govt just handing people money for no reason, but every nation from the US and China and so on would probably all have to do it.

Global coordinated helicopter money isn't plausible.  You could make the claim bitcoin is the first real world implementation of helicopter money and the govt could just rig the price upwards on that, except for the fact bitcoin almost instantly became centralized after release and controlled by Chinese mining cartels.  So rigging the price upwards on bitcoin does absolutely nothing since it only goes to 0.000000000001% of the population - Chinese miners and a couple random gamblers.  If bitcoin was a govt attempt at helicopter money, it failed miserably.
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December 08, 2018, 12:28:02 PM
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The future. Cunningly disguised as
A thought experiment
I'd be running around trying to find out why the crash happened.
Did the tptb suicide a buncha 'core devs'? Did it get banned by the G20/Gxx? Did the miners really steal the segwits?
The sort of news that affects price in dollars, but doesn't touch Bitcoin itself?
Or is it something actually serious?
Not gonna elucidate on those possibilities.
If it wasn't serious, I'd fill my bags and answer newbie bleatings here and elsewhere.

I have the fear that what we are observing is bitfinex exiting from their fractional-reserve scam, almost unnoticed.

Bitcoin was pumped really fast with really big volumes, and I think that the retail FOMO in 2017 was not a cause, but a consequence of such pump. The pump was sustained by finex's tethers, either if they were real or not.

I think there's a chance this is a well-executed "willy bot" pump and dump, markets are crazy but there are too much people buying and selling in panic without reason for this to be real.
pönde
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December 08, 2018, 12:30:05 PM


Does the seller side has to have the bitcoins when the contract is made?

No. That's the whole idea behind "regulated" bitcoin markets. You don't need to have a single satoshi to sell thousands of bitcoins and suppress price.

Bankers think that bitcoin ETFs will solve bitcoin supply "problem".


When the contract expires seller has to anyway have to get the coins from somewhere to be able to sell them to the buyer?

Nope. Actual delivery of bitcoins is forbidden. Just like in gold futures and ETFs. At the expiry date profit/loss is cleared through the seller's margin deposit which is in dollars. If the seller is systemically important bank and they did the wrong bet Fed will print new dollars and will give them to pay for their loss.


The buyer side was there to buy some bitcoins. If he will not have them, what will he have? The dollars?

The contract said for example buyer will buy three bitcoins for price 3500$ per one coin which is total 10500$. But the day price is 4500$ per bitcoin which is total 13500$. So the buyer will have 3000$ for bank account?
empowering
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December 08, 2018, 12:31:01 PM

empowering
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December 08, 2018, 12:32:21 PM

I want to break free

from this range
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December 08, 2018, 12:32:39 PM

Bored

becoin
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December 08, 2018, 12:38:42 PM


Does the seller side has to have the bitcoins when the contract is made?

No. That's the whole idea behind "regulated" bitcoin markets. You don't need to have a single satoshi to sell thousands of bitcoins and suppress price.

Bankers think that bitcoin ETFs will solve bitcoin supply "problem".


When the contract expires seller has to anyway have to get the coins from somewhere to be able to sell them to the buyer?

Nope. Actual delivery of bitcoins is forbidden. Just like in gold futures and ETFs. At the expiry date profit/loss is cleared through the seller's margin deposit which is in dollars. If the seller is systemically important bank and they did the wrong bet Fed will print new dollars and will give them to pay for their loss.


The buyer side was there to buy some bitcoins. If he will not have them, what will he have? The dollars?

The contract said for example buyer will buy three bitcoins for price 3500$ per one coin which is total 10500$. But the day price is 4500$ per bitcoin which is total 13500$. So the buyer will have 3000$ for bank account?

Yes, buyer will have $3000 credited to their margin deposit/bank account.

Regulated bitcoin markets are not for trading bitcoins but for bets on the future bitcoin price. Profit/loss resulting from those bets is paid in dollars. So, if you have unlimited access to the dollar printing press you can sell 21 million bitcoins without having a single satoshi.

empowering
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December 08, 2018, 12:42:27 PM

The future. Cunningly disguised as
A thought experiment
I'd be running around trying to find out why the crash happened.
Did the tptb suicide a buncha 'core devs'? Did it get banned by the G20/Gxx? Did the miners really steal the segwits?
The sort of news that affects price in dollars, but doesn't touch Bitcoin itself?
Or is it something actually serious?
Not gonna elucidate on those possibilities.
If it wasn't serious, I'd fill my bags and answer newbie bleatings here and elsewhere.







I am sure it will all be fine.


I enjoyed peoples answers though - thanks guys



realr0ach
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December 08, 2018, 12:43:22 PM

I have the fear that what we are observing is bitfinex exiting from their fractional-reserve scam, almost unnoticed.

Bitcoin was pumped really fast with really big volumes, and I think that the retail FOMO in 2017 was not a cause, but a consequence of such pump. The pump was sustained by finex's tethers, either if they were real or not.

I think there's a chance this is a well-executed "willy bot" pump and dump, markets are crazy but there are too much people buying and selling in panic without reason for this to be real.

Bitfinex is like the Goldman Sachs of cryptocurrency.  Whether it's fractional reserve, trading with customer funds, stealing customer funds, unplugging the exchange on purpose to try and liquidate margin positions, or printing infinite Tethers, I'm leaning more towards all of the above than one specific thing.

Just about nothing going on at that exchange has ever made sense.  Like the picture I posted earlier from eons ago when the price was around $1000.  The market wasn't even strong at $1000 fucking dollars.  It was weak as piss, and yet Bitfinex rigged it upwards on 0 volume.  To me, it looked like everything from $1k to $20k was probably fake and entirely orchestrated by that exchange:

becoin
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December 08, 2018, 12:47:19 PM

I have the fear that what we are observing is bitfinex exiting from their fractional-reserve scam, almost unnoticed.

Fed won't be so lucky exiting unnoticed from their own fractional-reserve scam.

realr0ach
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December 08, 2018, 01:03:07 PM

If you like your Jewish moneychanger, you can keep your Jewish moneychanger:

"(((Eric Weinstein))) is a mathematician and economist, and he is also the managing director at Thiel Capital."
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