Not exact matches
Russell Lamberti: Yeah my website, ETM macro advisors website is www.etmmacro.com and I am starting a new newsletter called the macro outsider, and you can
sign up for it for free on www.etmmacro.com and you'll get a free essay called «The real currency war» which is subtitled «monopoly money vs real money» and essentially there I just go into a lot
of what we've spoken about today in terms
of chronic malinvestment, the
weakness of fiat currency reserve systems, and then ultimately where I think the real currency war is, which is in centralized vs. decentralized money, and I talk a
little bit about cryptocurrencies there as well, so that's www.etmmacro.com you can
sign up for that free newsletter.
The difference between us and our pets is that our pets can't outright tell us that they're in pain - often, the exact opposite is true - they hide all
signs of pain as a survival mechanism they developed over thousands
of years
of evolution to keep
weakness hidden from predators and other members
of their own colonies, Your pet may tell you in different ways when they are uncomfortable, such as by whining or whimpering, staying too still and showing
little interest in what's going on around them, sleeping more than usual, becoming aggressive or intolerant
of petting or exercise or even by becoming more active - pacing, circling, wandering - as the pain is too much for them to sit still and rest.
Finding out those patterns and correcting them means being a
little vulnerable, but I see a willingness to be vulnerable as a
sign of strength, not
weakness.