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criticizes for turning into ‘a GAMBLING PARLOR AKA LAS VEGAS CASINO'S'

AKA WORLD WIDE .

You see scum bag countries and Elite companies () can only exist if they create within BRAINS of the INNOCENT .

youtu.be/1KkZhuaRN4Q

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Founder of
Founder of

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!?

One of the huge upsides of social media is access to information and the ability for fraudulent activities to get exposed. What’s happened recently on Reddit is beautiful to see.

subreddit has now reached 5.1 million as of the making of this video and it’s going .

Let’s pretend the house down the street from you is worth $100,000. Imagine being able to borrow $140,000, go on tv and let everyone know that the neighborhood home values are tanking and everyone should sell, and then you profit when the house values drop. That’s market manipulation right?

I think what we’re seeing now with the GME saga is a byproduct of wealth inequality. This is a perfect storm of millions of Americans losing their jobs, small businesses getting shut down, and constantly seeing the ultra wealthy exponentially grow their wealth. Homeownership is becoming increasingly more difficult, the gap between the top 1% and the bottom 99% is growing, and people are becoming more aware of corruption by our political leaders.

And now we’re seeing complete corruption of the stock market right in front of our eyes.

Once Wall Street Bets found their own loophole, they exploited it, just like any rational investor would. Hedge fund managers I’m sure love promoting free market capitalism, but only when it works in their favor. We have to make sure all of the top dawgs at the table in this game can afford an extra yacht this year because 2020 was tough on everyone. That new 5,000 square foot house in the Hamptons doesn’t pay for itself, know what I mean?

Greed really works for the wealthy because that character trait gets you to the top, and when your greedy behavior backfires, you just phone up your friends over at Citadel and make sure you don’t lose your shirt. See when small retail investors take on risk, they have to eat the losses if the risky investment doesn’t pay off. But when you have a seat at the table of Corrupt policy makers, you can just use the phone-a-friend feature from ‘who wants to be a millionaire.’

Robinhood positioned itself as the good guys. The app that gave access to the small investors so that they can compete at the same table as the big guys. No more fees. No more brokers. Sign up with us and we’ll even give you a free stock. Don’t tell anyone that we’re going to use your data to hand over to the big hedge funds to use against you. As long as the customers don’t read that in the fine print terms & conditions, Robinhood will be safe.

youtu.be/3EpGK5SYyGg

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

The is a EXPLAINED

THE (s) ARE !

The is the most on the nature of —the people make from and .

Unlike other finance books, this book does not assume stocks are ownership instruments.

It investigates the ownership assumption and asks, “Why are if the owners never receive money from the companies they own?”

Most people don't that from buying and selling stocks come from other investors.

When one investor buys low and sells high, another investor is also buying high and needs to sell for even higher.

Companies like , , never pay their investors. Their investors' profits are dependent on the inflow of money from new investors, which by definition, is how a works.

History shows that the association between stocks and ownership came through dividends—a profit-sharing agreement between the shareholders and the businesses they owned, which is also why all stocks paid dividends before the 1900s. The idea of non-dividend stocks is a new concept that came about over the past century. At some point, the academics and regulators decided it was okay for companies to issue stocks and avoid paying their investors indefinitely. But their acceptance of this new form of ownership—Ponzi assets—was through tradition (and possibly corruption), but not with any research or logic.

The sad truth is, people in finance do not study history and don’t know the difference between a value that comes from the exchange of money (a cerebral idea) and the money that is being exchanged (a possessable item). The product of this ignorance is a system and culture that treats Ponzi assets as ownership just because they’re printed by a company. It doesn’t matter if the company makes money, losses money, pays nothing, or prints as many shares as they want. If a company prints it, it’s ownership. This kind of shoddy logic doesn’t work in other industries, but it is the norm in finance.

youtu.be/kJOWwfOQ3Sc

TastingTraffic LLC

Founder of (Search Engine Optimization)
Founder of (Real Time Bidding)
Founder of (High Frequency Trading)

Disclaimer: tastingtraffic.net and/or JustBlameWayne.com (Decentralized SOCIAL Network) and/or its owners [tastingtraffic.com] are not affiliates of this provider or referenced image used. This is NOT an endorsement OR Sponsored (Paid) Promotion/Reshare.

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