Capitalism

@capitalism

For those who love capitalism.
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Weeks posts
Follow (us) @capitalism for more! Scientists are now growing real human skin in labs… and attaching it directly to robots. Researchers recently developed living skin tissue that can bond to a robotic face, allowing humanoid machines to look more realistic than ever before. The skin isn’t plastic or silicone — it’s actual living cells that can stretch, heal, and move naturally with the robot underneath. Engineers say this breakthrough could help create robots that interact with humans more smoothly in healthcare, customer service, and everyday life. The line between biology and machines keeps getting thinner. What used to sound like science fiction is now happening in real labs, and the idea of robots that look almost human is no longer decades away — it’s already starting.
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1 month ago
At the peak of the TikTok era, Bryce Hall was making more money per month than most CEOs. Brand deals alone were reportedly paying him anywhere from $40K to $100K+ per post, and during the height of the influencer boom he said he was clearing well into six figures monthly from sponsorships, YouTube revenue, merch, and investments. People think social media money is fake until they realize some of these creators were making millions a year before turning 25. Bryce turned internet attention into real businesses, ownership stakes, and long-term income — proof that in the digital era, influence can be more valuable than a traditional career. Follow @capitalism for more!
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1 month ago
Goldman Sachs wasn’t built on hype — it was built on access, information, and leverage. From underwriting IPOs to advising governments and managing billions in assets, they’ve mastered one thing: staying close to the flow of money. When markets panic, they position. When markets boom, they distribute. Different cycle, same playbook. Love them or hate them, they’ve shaped modern finance for over a century. In a world chasing trends, Goldman focuses on power — capital allocation, relationships, and influence. On Wall Street, reputation is currency… and theirs compounds. Follow @capitalism (me) for more!
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2 months ago
From a kid teaching himself coding in South Africa to one of the most influential builders of the modern era, Elon Musk has constantly reinvented himself. From early days at PayPal to launching rockets with SpaceX and reshaping the auto industry through Tesla, his path has been defined by relentless risk, long-term thinking, and an obsession with the future. Musk’s evolution isn’t just about business — it’s about vision. From electric cars to Mars, AI to energy, he’s repeatedly bet on ideas most thought were impossible. Love him or doubt him, his story is a reminder that transformation comes from thinking bigger than the present and building for what’s next. Follow @capitalism (me) for more!
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2 months ago
Follow @capitalism (me) for more! Peter Thiel just made a move that has the entire crypto world talking. Reports say Peter Thiel exited his entire position in Ethereum, locking in massive gains after years of holding. When one of Silicon Valley’s sharpest long-term thinkers sells, markets don’t just notice… they react. Some see it as a signal, others see it as strategy. Thiel has always played a different game — early, calculated, and unemotional. Whether this was profit-taking, risk management, or a bigger macro bet, only time will tell. But one thing is certain: when giants move quietly, smart money pays attention.
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2 months ago
Follow @capitalism (me) for more! Elon Musk once warned that advanced AI could be like “conjuring a demon” — a force powerful enough that, if uncontrolled, humanity might struggle to contain it. His message wasn’t anti-technology, but a call for caution: when you build something smarter than yourself, you better understand the consequences. Power without safeguards is risk. The deeper point: every major leap in history comes with responsibility. AI could unlock abundance, cure diseases, and transform civilization — or create challenges we aren’t ready for. The future isn’t just about building faster and smarter, it’s about building wisely. Innovation is powerful, but wisdom decides where it leads.
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2 months ago
MrBeast once joked about “going to college” — but instead of lecture halls, he chose the classroom of the internet. While others chased degrees, he obsessed over thumbnails, algorithms, retention graphs, and storytelling. Every video was an experiment, every dollar reinvested, every failure a lesson. His path wasn’t traditional, but it was intentional. The real takeaway: success doesn’t always follow the expected script. MrBeast built his own curriculum — discipline, risk, creativity, and relentless iteration. Whether it’s college or a camera, the outcome reflects the work you put in when nobody’s watching. Different road, same goal: mastery. Follow @capitalism for more!
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2 months ago
Steve Jobs admired Japanese marketing for its simplicity, precision, and obsession with craft. He believed the best marketing doesn’t scream for attention — it quietly communicates quality, intention, and respect for the customer. From packaging to presentation, every detail matters. The product is the message, and when it’s built with care, you don’t need noise to sell it. He often pointed to the discipline behind Japanese brands — patience, minimalism, and long-term thinking. No clutter, no confusion, just clarity. Jobs carried this philosophy into Apple: focus on a few great things, present them beautifully, and let the experience speak for itself. Simplicity isn’t basic — it’s the ultimate sophistication. Follow @capitalism for more!
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2 months ago
Elon Musk has long warned that as AI and automation accelerate, millions of jobs could disappear — not because people aren’t capable, but because machines will simply be cheaper and faster. His view: when productivity becomes nearly unlimited, society may need a new system to distribute wealth, and Universal Basic Income could become unavoidable rather than optional. Musk doesn’t frame UBI as a handout, but as a structural shift for an automated age — a world where survival isn’t tied to employment, and humans are free to pursue creativity, innovation, and meaning instead of just wages. In his vision of the future, the biggest question isn’t whether we can produce enough… it’s how we choose to share it. Follow @capitalism for more!
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2 months ago
Elon Musk has repeatedly warned that artificial intelligence won’t just change jobs — it could eliminate most of them. According to Elon Musk, any role built on repetitive, predictable tasks is at risk. He’s pointed to customer service, administrative work, data entry, basic office jobs, and even many white-collar roles as the first wave to be automated. In Musk’s view, if a job can be broken down into clear steps, AI and robots will eventually do it faster, cheaper, and better. But Musk goes even further — he believes AI could ultimately replace all jobs, making work optional rather than necessary. In that future, humans wouldn’t work for survival, only for purpose, creativity, or passion, while machines handle production and services. Whether that future arrives in 10, 20, or 50 years, one thing is clear: Musk sees AI as the most disruptive force in human history — and the biggest shift the workforce has ever faced. Follow @capitalism for more!
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2 months ago
In January 2021, the market witnessed one of the wildest financial moments in history — the GameStop short squeeze. What started as a heavily shorted, struggling retailer turned into a full-blown market rebellion when everyday traders from WallStreetBets piled in, driving the stock up over 1,000% in days. Hedge funds betting against the company, most famously Melvin Capital, took massive losses as the squeeze forced short sellers to buy back shares at skyrocketing prices. The movement was fueled by conviction, memes, and one man — Keith Gill — who believed the market had underestimated GameStop’s potential. Trading apps like Robinhood became the battlefield, sparking debates about market fairness, retail power, and Wall Street control. The GameStop squeeze wasn’t just about money — it was a moment where the crowd moved the market, and finance changed forever. Follow @capitalism for more!
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2 months ago
25% of all McDonald’s Filet-O-Fish are sold during Lent. The sandwich only exists because Catholics in Cincinnati stopped buying burgers on Fridays in 1962. A 2,000-year-old fasting tradition forced the world’s largest fast food chain to change its menu. (Lent starts today) Follow @capitalism for more!
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2 months ago