• In Memory of Rebarcock.

    As we navigate life without Pat 'Rebarcock.' Flood, who passed on Sept 21, 2025, we continue to remember the profound impact he had on our community. His support was a cornerstone for our forum. We encourage you to visit the memorial thread to share your memories and condolences. In honor of Pat’s love for storytelling, please contribute to his ‘Rebarcock tells a story’ thread. Your stories will help keep his spirit alive among us.

Master Thread Dance Your Cares Away/Fraggle/Law Abiding Citizens

Master Threads

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I think one of the reasons they leave is from the old adage, be nice to people on the way up, because you'll meet them again on the way down. I imagine a lot of the folks leaving were twats to those people and now that their careers are waning, the don't want to face up to things


If that's Clooney's wife he is married to a dog butt ugly "woman".


You know if conservatives did this to anyone we'd get 30 years.

Saw someone advertising a laser type device that was so powerful it cut metal at 1000 feet. It was being sold over the internet to anyone as a self-defense weapon. You know it won't be used only for self-defense.
 
Like im 5. I do not understand the short thing.
GROK: What is Shorting Stocks?
Shorting stocks, also known as short selling, is a trading strategy where an investor bets that a stock's price will decline. Unlike traditional "long" investing (buying low and selling high), shorting involves selling high first and buying low later. It's essentially a way to profit from falling markets or overvalued companies. However, it's riskier than buying stocks outright because losses can be theoretically unlimited.How Short Selling Works: Step by Step
  1. Borrow the Shares: You borrow shares of a stock from a broker (who typically sources them from other investors' portfolios). You pay a borrowing fee for this.
  2. Sell the Borrowed Shares: Immediately sell those shares on the open market at the current price. The cash from this sale goes into your account.
  3. Wait for the Price to Drop: Monitor the stock, hoping its price falls due to poor earnings, bad news, or market downturns.
  4. Buy Back the Shares (Cover the Short): Once the price drops, buy the same number of shares back (at the lower price) and return them to the lender.
  5. Pocket the Profit: The difference between the sale price (high) and buyback price (low), minus fees and interest, is your profit.
If the price rises instead, you'll have to buy back at a higher price, resulting in a loss.Simple Example
  • You think XYZ stock (currently $100/share) is overvalued and will drop.
  • Borrow 100 shares and sell them for $10,000.
  • Price falls to $70/share after a week.
  • Buy back 100 shares for $7,000 and return them.
  • Profit: $10,000 - $7,000 = $3,000 (minus fees).
If it rises to $130, you'd lose $3,000 on the buyback.Key Risks and Considerations
  • Unlimited Losses: If the stock price skyrockets (e.g., due to a short squeeze like GameStop in 2021), you could lose far more than your initial investment.
  • Margin Requirements: Brokers require a margin account and may force you to cover (buy back) if losses mount, via a "margin call."
  • Dividends and Fees: You owe any dividends paid while shorting, plus borrowing costs.
  • Not for Beginners: It's advanced and often used by hedge funds. Retail investors face restrictions in some markets (e.g., U.S. "uptick rule" limits shorts during big drops).
Shorting helps markets by providing liquidity and correcting overvaluations, but it's speculative. Always consult a financial advisor before trying it!
 
Like im 5. I do not understand the short thing.
Very rough analogy.

You commit to sell something in the future based on the current price.

If the price goes down you make money. If the price goes up you lose money. If the price skyrockets you can lose a shit load.

Shorting has unlimited loss potential. That is unlike regular stock purchases where the max you can lose is your original investment.
 

17 MILLION Ounces DRAINED From SLV in 72 Hours - COMEX Now At BREAKING POINT! - Rafi Faber​

0:00 - Silver Market Update
1:10 - COMEX Silver Supply Analysis (1971-Present)
2:37 - Historical Comparisons: Silver Supply vs. Price
3:45 - The Unprecedented Doubling of Silver Supply Into COMEX
4:19 - ETF Demand and Silver Squeeze Impact
5:55 - 2011 vs. Silver Squeeze ETF Demand
6:44 - The Three Cylinders of Silver Demand
7:13 - Gold vs. US Real Estate Analysis
8:17 - Silver vs. US Real Estate Analysis
9:17 - UK Real Estate Analysis in Gold and Silver
10:00 - Daily Repo Volume Exceeding Available Reserves
10:37 - Final Thoughts
 
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