Ethereum ETF Fund flows were negative last week.
This can sometimes serve as a warning for impending weakness in Bitcoin, since ETH behaves riskier than Bitcoin and is often more sensitive to market and economic uncertainty.
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This can sometimes serve as a warning for impending weakness in Bitcoin, since ETH behaves riskier than Bitcoin and is often more sensitive to market and economic uncertainty.
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I was inside my house, music on, and I heard the boom clearly; enough to get my attention. Amazing that the explosion was an hour's drive away from me.
Houston meteor
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Houston meteor
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Iran sends IRGC ground forces commander Mohammad Karami to western Iran near the Kurdish province as they prepare for a possible ground invasion by Kurdish forces
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Sorry Joe, you got it wrong.
Netanyahu's brother wasn't killed in an Iranian missile strike, and the "AI videos" of Netanyahu have also been debunked.
The posts claiming a missile struck Netanyahu's family home actually show a house fire in New Jersey and the 9/11 attack.
As for the coffee that didn't spill when he tilted the cup, that's due to the milk froth, which has different properties to a liquid.
We all love a good conspiracy theory though.
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Netanyahu's brother wasn't killed in an Iranian missile strike, and the "AI videos" of Netanyahu have also been debunked.
The posts claiming a missile struck Netanyahu's family home actually show a house fire in New Jersey and the 9/11 attack.
As for the coffee that didn't spill when he tilted the cup, that's due to the milk froth, which has different properties to a liquid.
We all love a good conspiracy theory though.
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BREAKING: Trump is deploying ICE at US airports to assist TSA agents beginning on Monday
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The worst part of JT's DUI ordeal?
When the cop doesn't know who Justin Timberlake is
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When the cop doesn't know who Justin Timberlake is
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JUST IN: Russia says the killing of Iranian leaders "will not go without consequences."
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Japanese politician, who opposed Nowruz celebration in Japan, was punched on the face by a Kurdish guy. Claims the assaulter is the member of anti-Turkey organization, PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party)
Like, was it a "punch"?? More like a slap...
Why is he lying down?
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Like, was it a "punch"?? More like a slap...
Why is he lying down?
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Ships in the Strait of Hormuz have turned off their engines and are waiting for permission to pass.
It's got to be the world's worst traffic jam to be stuck in
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It's got to be the world's worst traffic jam to be stuck in
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The government shutdown has caused complete chaos in Atlanta's airport, with passengers waiting hours to leave after collecting luggage.
At the same time, Trump is debating the possibility of using ICE agents to fill in for the TSA.
I'm sure that will go well
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At the same time, Trump is debating the possibility of using ICE agents to fill in for the TSA.
I'm sure that will go well
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β‘2π1
Gas prices in the US have moved up to $3.94/gallon, their highest level since August 2022. The 34% spike over the last month ($2.93/gallon to $3.94/gallon) is the biggest we've seen in the past 30 years
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BEIRUT: THE WORLDβS MOST DANGEROUS βWHOβS IN CHARGE?β EXPERIMENT
For years, Lebanon sold itself a comforting fiction: You can have a government with Hezbollah running alongside it.
Two systems. One country. No problem. Except, there's a big problem.
Because when missiles start flying, Israel doesnβt target βconstitutional gray areas.β It targets what it sees: weapons, networks, infrastructure, often embedded right in the middle of civilian life.
So neighborhoods empty. Civilians scatter. And nobodyβs really in charge when it matters.
At the core of this mess is a contradiction Lebanon has been politely ignoring for decades: You cannot have a state monopoly on force⦠and also not have one.
The solution isnβt some grand philosophical breakthrough, itβs painfully obvious. Which is exactly what Lebanese MP and PM candidate Fouad Makhzoumi lays out:
Step one: declare Beirut a weapons-free city.
Not a βplease consider disarming at your convenienceβ memo. A real line. A real deadline. A real policy.
Because without that, everything else is pointless.
Step two: actually deploy the army. Everywhere.
Yes, everywhere. Even the places that come with political sensitivities, historical baggage, and the unspoken rule of βletβs not poke that bear.β
A capital isnβt a patchwork quilt. Itβs not βstate-controlled with exceptions.β Itβs either governedβ¦ or it isnβt, and right now, it isnβt.
Step three: make security visible.
Checkpoints. Patrols. Neighborhood posts.
Not to turn Beirut into a bunker, but to remind people there is, in fact, a state somewhere in this equation. Because at the moment, its presence can feel more theoretical than real.
Step four: take the weapons.
Yes, actually take them.
Because Lebanon has perfected a unique governance model: laws that exist, violations that are obvious, and enforcement that mysteriously never shows up.
A law you donβt enforce isnβt a law, itβs a suggestion. And armed groups donβt tend to follow suggestions.
Finally, step five: govern like you mean it.
Security isnβt just guns and checkpoints. Itβs systems. Oversight. Basic things, like knowing who is renting what, where, and why, so your capital doesnβt double as an unregulated militia zone.
Which brings us to the part everyone tiptoes around: Hezbollah.
Lebanonβs favorite βletβs not get into that right nowβ topic. Exceptβ¦ itβs always βright now.β
Hezbollah is not a side detail. It is the detail. A political party, a military force, and a regional actor, all rolled into one, operating inside a country that is supposed to have its own army.
And for years, the strategy has been to avoid the issue and hope it somehow resolves itself. It hasnβt. It escalated.
Because hereβs the uncomfortable truth: Avoiding confrontation doesnβt prevent it, it just schedules it for laterβ¦ with interest.
The answer isnβt reckless internal conflict. Lebanon has had enough of those.
But it also isnβt pretending this dual-power setup is sustainable while the region burns around it.
The only viable path is a structured, time-bound transition where one principle finally wins: The state controls the guns.
Not sometimes. Not selectively. Not negotiably.
Completely.
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For years, Lebanon sold itself a comforting fiction: You can have a government with Hezbollah running alongside it.
Two systems. One country. No problem. Except, there's a big problem.
Because when missiles start flying, Israel doesnβt target βconstitutional gray areas.β It targets what it sees: weapons, networks, infrastructure, often embedded right in the middle of civilian life.
So neighborhoods empty. Civilians scatter. And nobodyβs really in charge when it matters.
At the core of this mess is a contradiction Lebanon has been politely ignoring for decades: You cannot have a state monopoly on force⦠and also not have one.
The solution isnβt some grand philosophical breakthrough, itβs painfully obvious. Which is exactly what Lebanese MP and PM candidate Fouad Makhzoumi lays out:
Step one: declare Beirut a weapons-free city.
Not a βplease consider disarming at your convenienceβ memo. A real line. A real deadline. A real policy.
Because without that, everything else is pointless.
Step two: actually deploy the army. Everywhere.
Yes, everywhere. Even the places that come with political sensitivities, historical baggage, and the unspoken rule of βletβs not poke that bear.β
A capital isnβt a patchwork quilt. Itβs not βstate-controlled with exceptions.β Itβs either governedβ¦ or it isnβt, and right now, it isnβt.
Step three: make security visible.
Checkpoints. Patrols. Neighborhood posts.
Not to turn Beirut into a bunker, but to remind people there is, in fact, a state somewhere in this equation. Because at the moment, its presence can feel more theoretical than real.
Step four: take the weapons.
Yes, actually take them.
Because Lebanon has perfected a unique governance model: laws that exist, violations that are obvious, and enforcement that mysteriously never shows up.
A law you donβt enforce isnβt a law, itβs a suggestion. And armed groups donβt tend to follow suggestions.
Finally, step five: govern like you mean it.
Security isnβt just guns and checkpoints. Itβs systems. Oversight. Basic things, like knowing who is renting what, where, and why, so your capital doesnβt double as an unregulated militia zone.
Which brings us to the part everyone tiptoes around: Hezbollah.
Lebanonβs favorite βletβs not get into that right nowβ topic. Exceptβ¦ itβs always βright now.β
Hezbollah is not a side detail. It is the detail. A political party, a military force, and a regional actor, all rolled into one, operating inside a country that is supposed to have its own army.
And for years, the strategy has been to avoid the issue and hope it somehow resolves itself. It hasnβt. It escalated.
Because hereβs the uncomfortable truth: Avoiding confrontation doesnβt prevent it, it just schedules it for laterβ¦ with interest.
The answer isnβt reckless internal conflict. Lebanon has had enough of those.
But it also isnβt pretending this dual-power setup is sustainable while the region burns around it.
The only viable path is a structured, time-bound transition where one principle finally wins: The state controls the guns.
Not sometimes. Not selectively. Not negotiably.
Completely.
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π2
Everyone thinks the trenches are dead right now, but the data says otherwise.
Today (03/22/2026) weβre at 1,985,319 traders.
Thatβs a ~93.7% drop. Almost everyone left and we still had two 9 figure runners in 2026, which is considered the worst year so far.
If this comes back up, the next phase is going to be even bigger than before.
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Today (03/22/2026) weβre at 1,985,319 traders.
Thatβs a ~93.7% drop. Almost everyone left and we still had two 9 figure runners in 2026, which is considered the worst year so far.
If this comes back up, the next phase is going to be even bigger than before.
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π1
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A pilot paid tribute to fallen troops by flying hundreds of miles in a flight pattern that creates the image of tombstones and a salute
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JUST IN: Germany demands Iran reopen the Strait of Hormuz, warning global oil supplies are at risk
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