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>> No.20265894 [View]
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20265894

>>20265871
>The worst case of this is doctors given preferred treatments to people who pay more

people who pay more should get better healthcare.

>> No.16218728 [View]
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16218728

>>16218679
nah
If I really get the Natty Gas feeling I'll probably just buy UGAZ.
It's like CHK but with more upside (3x daily leverage) and less downside (it can't go bankrupt)
I'm still patient regarding natgas, I think it was a recent fakeout pump in October. Patient, patient, wait for near $2.00 to buy anything natgas-related

>>16218700
>his waifu is a production model, not an experimental
cmon man
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3eizAihoao

>> No.15619230 [View]
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15619230

>>15619189
unpredictable. It is gambling to make any big move towards or against oil price or oil companies.
I'd say be patient, and buy into value, but if things cool off the per-barrel price could be headed back down. but at any given time it could spike. you want to look for producers/refiners/etc. who are less susceptible to low prices but who can increase their earnings properly if we see higher prices.

>> No.14680658 [View]
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14680658

>>14680526
(cont'd)

>In 1968, Perot tapped Ken Langone, a 33-year-old Wall Street up-and-comer, to handle EDS' first public offering. The pair went on to become billionaires and lifelong best buddies.
>"Meeting Ross Perot was the single biggest event in my career," said Langone, who co-founded Home Depot in 1979. "I'm a better person because he was in my life."

>A couple of days before Christmas in 1969, Perot called Langone from Laos, where he was trying to fly gifts to American POWs held in camps in and around Hanoi, North Vietnam.
>Perot asked Langone to arrange an event for 98 children of POWs and MIAs returning with their mothers to John F. Kennedy International Airport. They'd gone to Paris at Perot's expense for a one-day trip to picket the North Vietnamese Embassy in the hopes of drawing public rebuke for mistreatment of their loved ones.
>"I put the phone down and thought to myself, 'My God, right in the middle of all this activity, he's thinking about the plight of these families and what he can do to alleviate the misfortune they're going through,' " Langone said.
>So Langone borrowed a Santa suit and passed out toys at the airport hotel on Christmas night.

>"That was the thoughtfulness of Ross Perot," Langone said. "He was an exceptional human being."
>In 1986, Perot received the Winston Churchill Award for epitomizing the spirit of Britain's most famous statesman. He was only the third American to receive the coveted medallion, honored for his efforts on behalf of American POWs in Vietnam in the 1960s and for organizing a strike team that rescued two of his EDS employees from an Iranian prison in 1979.

>Perot assembled the commando team of seven EDS employee volunteers, trained and led by Arthur "Bull" Simons, that freed Paul Chiapparone and Bill Gaylord from Tehran's Qasr Prison.
>Perot personally oversaw the mission, flying to Tehran during the planning phase and greeting the rescued employees and raiders when they arrived in Istanbul.

>> No.14122031 [View]
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14122031

>>14121970
BTC
;-)

>>14121712
do you watch the 'normal' stock market as well?
I just feel like I don't have enough time to do as much research as I want or trading no matter what, with my job and all my grown-up responsibilities
I can make progress and learn things, but times when I'm really beating out the indices are only when I get lots of time off work (like a couple weeks). and that's still just luck anyway
So I can't imagine having enough time to watch all the NYSE-listed things I want, and commodity markets, and international markets, and sectors, and then OTC stocks on top of that.
I .might. have enough time once I make enough to retire, at which point I'll want to be hiking and skiing all the time anyway :p

>> No.13671151 [View]
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13671151

>>13670816
Joblessness on purpose or on accident?
I don't know the most diplomatic way to say this, but when I read your posts (about investing or modes of economic interaction) it all feels very 'university sophomore' to me.
I really hope the stocks thing and the job thing works out for you.

But mostly, I read your posts and feel that you're overly concerned with being clever and being right. I want you to raise your sights and imagine an achievement beyond your current targets.
There is more to life than figuring out and discussing theories. Structures and patterns aren't worth the dedication you show them


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0WUypLOfeU

>>13671105
T
BABIES

>> No.13398799 [View]
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13398799

>>13398785
damn right I am

and don't you forget it !

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=klByHG-dKR4

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