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Mar 29
Is this a Global Reset in Motion? What should traders do?

In this environment, success does not come from prediction but from readiness—the ability to react quickly, to harvest liquidity when markets dislocate and deploy capital when conditions realign.

OR

One can sideline and get ready once a new earnings cycle begins. The companies will guide you towards the upcoming structural environment.

Timestamp: 2026-03-28 | 14:12

There are periods in history when the world appears to move, yet nothing truly advances. Conversations take place, but they do not resolve anything. Conflicts continue, but they do not escalate decisively. Markets fluctuate, but do not commit to direction.

To the casual observer, this may look like indecision or randomness. In reality, it is something far more structured. It is a phase of compression—a condition where pressure accumulates beneath the surface, waiting for a release that has not yet been triggered.

We are currently living inside that compression.

Across the geopolitical landscape, the dominant tone is one of restrained tension. Nations are engaged, but not concluding. Alliances are shifting, but not formally realigning. There is a sense that decisions are being deferred rather than avoided, as though the system itself is holding back from making irreversible moves. Financial markets reflect this same hesitation. Price action lacks conviction, trends fail to extend, and liquidity flows in and out without anchoring into sustained positioning. Participants are active, but are not committed.

This environment is deceptive. It creates the illusion that risks are diminishing, when in fact they are being stored. Like a tightly wound spring, the system is absorbing energy. The longer this phase persists, the greater the eventual release tends to be.

What makes the current moment particularly significant is that this compression has a defined endpoint. Around the middle of April, specifically in the window between the 14th and the 17th, the underlying structure of the system shifts. This is not a gradual transition. It is a phase change—an abrupt movement from passive accumulation into active expression. The forces that have been building quietly begin to operate simultaneously, and when they do, the system no longer behaves in a linear or predictable manner.

At that point, leadership decisions, public sentiment, financial liquidity, and disruptive forces all converge in timing. Each of these elements plays a distinct role. Leadership defines direction, sentiment amplifies reaction, liquidity determines the scale of movement, and disruption introduces unpredictability. Individually, they influence outcomes. Together, they create ignition.

This is why the coming period cannot be understood through conventional labels like bullish or bearish. It is not primarily about direction. It is about transition. Specifically, the transition from a state in which instability is hidden to one in which it becomes visible and actionable.
In geopolitical terms, this transition tends to manifest as decisive movement. The current preference for negotiation and delay gives way to action. Developments that seemed unlikely or distant can emerge suddenly, not because they were unanticipated, but because they were unresolved for too long. A single decision, announcement, or event can shift expectations across regions almost instantly. The system, which previously absorbed tension, begins to release it.

This release often takes the form of what can best be described as shock events. These are not necessarily large-scale disruptions in isolation, but they are impactful because of their timing and interconnectedness. A cyber incident, an infrastructure failure, or an energy-related disruption can propagate rapidly through global systems, influencing markets, policy responses, and sentiment simultaneously. In such environments, cause and effect compress into a much shorter timeframe. Reactions follow events almost immediately, and secondary consequences emerge before primary ones are fully understood.
Financial markets respond to this shift in character. During compression, markets oscillate within uncertainty, unable to commit. During ignition, they reprice. This repricing is rarely smooth. It occurs in bursts, often driven by external catalysts rather than internal technical structures. Moves that would typically unfold over extended periods can occur within days, sometimes within hours. The defining characteristic is not the direction of the move, but the speed and magnitude with which it develops.

Energy markets are particularly sensitive to this dynamic. They operate on forward expectations of supply and disruption, making them highly responsive to geopolitical shifts. In the coming window, even the perception of instability may be sufficient to drive sharp upward repricing. These moves are often exaggerated initially, as markets rush to incorporate new risk, before stabilizing once clarity begins to emerge. This creates an environment where opportunity and volatility coexist, each amplifying the other.
Read 9 tweets
Mar 29
Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, "Language, Judaism, Torah

The importance of understanding in Hebrew

I am going to state this as clearly as possible.
1)
Trying to understand Torah, trying to interpret Torah, through the lens of any other language, through translations, and without an understanding of history and how history impacted the Jewish people throughout time, is categorically a mistake.
2)
Translations can be an aid. Reading the interpretations of others, if one considers when they wrote and the conditions under which they lived, can be an aid, but only Torah in the original Hebrew language, with an understanding of how Hebrew works and its metaphoric richness,
3)
Read 21 tweets
Mar 29
🚨BREAKING: AI can now teach business strategy like Harvard MBA professors (for free).

Here are 12 insane Claude prompts that replace $150,000 MBA degrees

(Save this before disappearing).🔖 Image
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1. The Harvard Business School Case Study Analyzer "You are a professor at Harvard Business School who teaches the legendary case study method — the same approach that trained the CEOs of JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Nike, and Bloomberg to think through complex business problems systematically. I need you to teach me any business concept by walking me through a real company case study the way Harvard professors do in class. Teach:
- Company background: the real company, its industry, and the strategic situation it faced - The central dilemma: the specific decision the CEO had to make with no obvious right answer - Stakeholder map: who was affected by this decision and what each stakeholder wanted - Data analysis: the key financial and market data that informed the decision - Option generation: the 3-4 realistic paths the company could have taken with pros and cons for each
Read 25 tweets
Mar 29
🚨 𝗕𝗥𝗘𝗔𝗞𝗜𝗡𝗚: You can now build a full website with Claude in just hours — not weeks.

Here are 10 powerful prompts that can help you create a website that looks worth $5,000+ 💻✨
⚡ Save this now — before everyone starts using it! Image
1. Plan the full website

Prompt:

“Help me plan a website for a [business type] in [industry/location]. My target audience is [audience]. The main goal is [sales/leads/bookings/portfolio]. Suggest the best pages, what each page should include, and a simple site structure.”

Use this to create the full website roadmap before writing or coding.
2. Create the homepage structure

Prompt:

“Create a homepage structure for a [business type] website. Include a hero section, trust section, services section, testimonials, FAQ, and CTA. The tone should be [friendly/professional/modern]. Explain what content should go in each section.”

This helps when you know you need a homepage but do not know how to arrange it.
Read 11 tweets
Mar 29
They literally just discovered MICROSCOPIC SYRINGES in 80% of healthy human guts. 💉

Published 2 days ago.

Salmonella has them.
Shigella has them.
E. coli has them.

Your microbiome does too.

Scientists mapped 1,000+ effector-host protein interactions delivered this way.

Nature Microbiology, 2026.

The difference between Salmonella and your “healthy” bacteria isn’t the weapon.

It’s what gets loaded into it.

And what gets loaded depends on one thing:

The environment you’ve created for them.

Leaky barrier. Endotoxins in circulation. Chronic inflammation sending distress signals your bacteria can read.

Belly fat that won’t move. Brain fog. Exhaustion that sleep doesn’t fix.

That’s not just dysfunction — that’s a signal to your bacteria about what kind of host they’re living in.

The question isn’t whether your gut bacteria are injecting your cells.

They are.

The question is what they’re injecting — and whether your gut is giving them reason to load something hostile.

🧵 THREADImage
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Still carrying belly fat despite eating clean?

Inflammation your doctor can’t explain?

An immune system that feels permanently switched on?

You cut the processed food.

You eat clean.

You do everything right.

At some point you stopped expecting an explanation.

You just manage it now.

The fat doesn’t move. The inflammation doesn’t quiet. The energy doesn’t come back.

The wrong bacteria’s effectors target two things specifically.
NF-κB — your master inflammation switch.

Cytokine secretion — which sets your baseline immune response.

When the wrong bacteria have the floor they load the wrong proteins.

NF-κB stays activated.

Chronic low-grade inflammation becomes your baseline.

Insulin resistance follows.

Visceral fat accumulates — and locks in.

Crohn’s patients show significantly higher concentrations of these effectors in their gut.

This isn’t a calorie problem.

This is a bacterial instruction problem.

Your inflammatory baseline isn’t a fixed trait.

It’s being rewritten every day by bacteria injecting the wrong proteins through a barrier that was never meant to let them through.
So the question becomes: what’s determining which bacteria have the floor?

Gut barrier integrity.

When occludin, claudin, and ZO-1 are intact, the composition of what reaches your epithelial cells is controlled.

When the barrier breaks down, you lose that filter.

Wrong bacteria. Wrong effectors. Wrong inflammatory signal.

The bacteria injecting into your cells right now are determined by what your barrier lets through.

BPC-157 is a 15-amino-acid peptide your body already produces in your stomach lining.

It directly upregulates all three tight junction proteins.

PMID: 25415472

I’ve been using oral BPC-157 since July.

The first thing that shifted was bloating — then digestion started working the way it’s supposed to.

Not a supplement masking a symptom.

A peptide rebuilding the structure that determines which bacteria have the floor.

This is the oral BPC-157 I’ve used since July. ↓
Read 4 tweets
Mar 29
In this 8th Debunk of the Day, we’ll discuss complaints about US financing of NATO, in particular how the US allegedly pays for European defense, leading to calls for a US withdrawal from the Alliance — which would only make it easier for Putin to invade more countries.

1/7 A flight of French and Polish Rafale and F-16 fighter jets above a NATO flag during the opening of the exhibition “Powerful because we are united”, dedicated to the 19th anniversary of Lithuania’s 2004 accession to NATO (OTD 22 years ago), in the bastion of the Vilnius defensive wall on March 29, 2023 (OTD 3 years ago) in Vilnius, Lithuania. (Photo by Oleg Nikishin/Getty Images)
NATO by itself costs peanuts. In fact, the core of NATO is a principle, an agreement, that ideally costs nothing. The main cost is defense spending, which the US is eagerly doing anyway: Trump has just announced a 50% increase in military spending for his “Department of War”.
2/7 Trump aides struggle with how to spend $500 billion more on military, Washington Post https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/02/21/trump-hegseth-budget-military/
Trump calls for US military spending to rise more than 50% to $1.5tn https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy59kxl2xwzo
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To sow division and thereby weaken the Alliance, vatniks deliberately mix up different figures, such as contributions to the NATO common budget, with defense spending. And US military spending has been huge by the sheer fact that the US is the world’s largest economy.

3/7 Newsweek falsely claiming that the US pays 68% of NATO’s budget. The real number is 15%.

Elon Musk falsely claiming that the US pays for 2/3 of European defense. In another post he claimed it was 1/4. Both made-up numbers.  https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1870903805845598428 https://x.com/i/birdwatch/t/1870903805845598428
NATO has annual budgets and programs worth around EUR 4.6 billion in 2025 (representing 0.3% of total Allied defence spending), and up to EUR 5.3 billion in 2026. The US share for 2026-2027 is 15% of that: 0.8 billion.  Source: Funding NATO https://www.nato.int/en/what-we-do/introduction-to-nato/funding-nato
Read 7 tweets
Mar 29
🚨 BREAKING: The psychologists studying peak human performance say 99% of people treat their lives like a trap.

They chase status instead of their Ikigai. They burn out in a cycle of endless work. And they say your daily routines are embarrassingly misaligned.

Here are 9 Claude prompts built on the Ikigai framework that turn an exhausting life into a deeply fulfilling obsession:Image
1. The Status-Trap Diagnostic

Before finding Ikigai, you have to identify where you are faking it.

Prompt: "Act as a peak performance psychologist. I am going to list out my top 5 daily tasks, my current job title, and the 3 things I spend the most money on. I want you to brutally analyze this list and tell me where I am optimizing for 'social status' rather than personal fulfillment or deep work. Give me a 'Status Trap Score' from 1-100 and point out the specific areas where I am leaking energy to impress others."
2. The Passion/Energy Audit (What you love)

Passion is what gives you energy rather than drains it.

Prompt: "I need to find the 'What I Love' pillar of my Ikigai. Ask me a series of 5 deep, unconventional questions, one at a time, designed to bypass my professional conditioning and uncover the tasks, topics, or problems that put me into a flow state. Do not give me generic career advice. Focus purely on psychological energy triggers."
Read 11 tweets
Mar 29
Still to this day, a month after the start of the « excursion », nobody seems to understand how exactly this Israeli devised war is not the one Israel/US thought they will be fighting.

The initial month demonstrates that this is morphing into something bigger and longer.

1/11
The premise was a dictatorship that had been weakened by years of harsh sanctions, with a worthless currency, rampant inflation and economic discontent. So the calculus was decapitation strikes, engineered uprising, Kurdish attacks, false flags along Azeri border,…

2/11
All this should have lead to a regime collapse, chaos and a new puppet regime that would sell-out the crude, sign the Abraham Accord and indulge in some well deserved corruption and grift while oppressing the Iranians all the same. Only it didn’t work-out that way.

3/11
Read 11 tweets
Mar 29
Yes, Islamism is the problem. Yes, it’s our fault — Israel and the USA.

Here is a thread about how Hamas came to power and what the parallels are between that situation and the USA enabling Al-Qaeda & ISIS. /1 Image
The idea often described as the “Frankenstein strategy” in geopolitics refers to a recurring and dangerous pattern: states attempt to use radical movements—whether religious or nationalist—as tools against their rivals, only to later face those same forces as serious threats. /2
This phenomenon, commonly known as “blowback,” reflects the unintended long-term consequences of short-term tactical decisions. /3 Image
Read 17 tweets
Mar 29
This🧵says leftists are "completely rattled" by #Dhurandhar and Dharmics must "sustain this momentum".

Let us take that claim seriously. Because when you look at what this momentum actually is and what it requires to sustain, the argument exposes itself. 1/14
First, the "rattled" framing. Critics called #Dhurandhar well-made & ideologically dishonest at the same time. That is not being rattled. That is how film criticism works. Calling criticism "rattled" is a way of saying: disagreement itself is proof that we are winning. That is not an argument. That is a closed loop. 2/14
The "rattled" framing also needs this to be true: that people who question a film's facts are doing so out of fear, not out of, say, the film having manufactured facts.

Dhurandhar connects Lyari gang wars to Indian terror attacks. Analysts say this connection does not exist. Pointing that out is not fear. It is journalism. 3/14
Read 15 tweets
Mar 29
🌍 WHO CONTROLS THE SEEDS? (FOLLOW THE MONEY — PART 1)

Seeds are not neutral. They carry knowledge, adaptation, and — in today’s world — economic power. The question is not only how we grow plants, but who decides which varieties survive, who controls the foundation of our food, Image
and who profits from it.

Today, a large share of seeds comes from the hands of a small number of global corporations — and this is no coincidence. It is a strategic, highly profitable, and strongly consolidated market, where knowledge and ownership are transformed into power.
💰 Consolidation of Power

In recent decades, small local seed banks and breeders have lost market influence; acquisitions and mergers have strengthened the position of large players. The market has become concentrated: a few corporations control seed production, genetic
Read 23 tweets
Mar 29
1/ The world is facing a 'ticking time bomb' from its supply of oil, according to a briefing note from JP Morgan. Physical scarcity of oil is about to unfold across the globe, spreading sequentially through April from east to west, causing major economic disruption worldwide. ⬇️ Image
2/ The blocking of the Strait of Hormuz has reduced traffic through the strait by 97%, cutting off most of the Persian Gulf oil and gas supply from tanker shipment. The reduction in the supply of oil is twice as large as seen in any previous oil crisis, according to the IEA.
3/ This has not yet resulted in physical shortages of oil – although shortages have already been seen, for instance in Australia, this has been due to excessive demand caused by panic buying rather than an interruption in supply. That is about to change.
Read 25 tweets

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