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sam1933

10/10/25 1:35 PM

#3728 RE: weedtrader420 #3726

Why do I feel like I'm reading something written by Dodger? Same handwriting, same thoughts, even the same "voice." It's like they're two in one.
Do you share a room and use the same computers? Or, more likely, are you just... the same person?
HBAR said
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weedtrader420

10/11/25 6:38 AM

#3755 RE: weedtrader420 #3726

You said it all before the crash
Bullish
Bullish
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sam1933

10/11/25 8:29 AM

#3759 RE: weedtrader420 #3726

Weed2.0, Your thoughts (as always) are complete absurdity!!!
It appears to be a confused mix of conspiracy thinking, political frustration,
and misunderstandings about economics, cryptocurrency, and gold markets.
The text is not logically connected, it is difficult to guess the meaning, but let's try to separate and clarify each part:

1. “President. Use crypto to get in. He forgot about us.”
There’s no factual basis for a U.S. president using crypto to gain office or campaign in that way; campaign finance laws make such claims improbable.

2. “He’s making so much money and so much money for other countries in gold.”
This suggests suspicion that the president profits personally and enriches other countries via gold markets. In reality, gold prices are determined globally through commodities exchanges—not through any president’s direct control. The accusation combines populist anger with misunderstanding of how national reserves and global trade function.

3. “China’s flooding us with gold they’re selling as they say they’re buying it.”
This contradicts itself. China has been reported to buy gold to diversify reserves, not flood markets with it. If China were selling large amounts, gold prices would typically drop; if they’re buying, prices rise. The statement incorrectly merges both claims.

4. “Imagine all the gold that China has and they keep selling it for high prices making them trillionaire’s.”
This exaggerates China’s gold reserves dramatically. Even at current holdings (around 2,300+ metric tons), China’s gold value is in the hundreds of billions, not trillions. The statement shows confusion between market manipulation theories and basic arithmetic.

5. “There’s mountains of gold it’s worthless, but yet they’re pumping it.”
This is contradictory. If gold were truly abundant and worthless, it couldn’t be “pumped” to higher prices.

6. “Trump should have his own coins and stable coins coming out for his family.”
There is No official “Trump stablecoin” project exists. It’s a misunderstanding of political branding efforts using blockchain for fundraising or collectibles.

7. “And they’ll be pumped already up just to sell them to us as they drop.”
This part ironically shows some understanding of market scams but applies them speculatively to a political figure.

8. “HBAR Will be here for a long time Before we make anything.”
You seems to believe that while HBAR has potential longevity, profits for retail holders will take a long time to materialize.
It’s the only semi-coherent, plausible statement in the text.



Overall, your thoughts combine political discontent, economic misinformation, and personal frustration with making money with cryptocurrency. This is the result of a lack of awareness, ignorance, but not a well-founded argument..



But hey, don't be shy; no one is perfect.