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#Spread Trading
nlvxexchange · 8 months
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Mastering the Art of Spread Trading Strategy
In the fast-paced world of financial markets, traders are constantly seeking innovative ways to maximize their profits while minimizing risks. One such strategy that has gained popularity over the years is spread trading. This article will delve deep into the intricacies of spread trading, providing you with valuable insights and strategies to excel in this field. Understanding Spread…
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maceration-smell · 1 year
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A message from conservationists, please don't buy taxidermy bats or bat skeletons.
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spread-bet · 2 years
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Spread betting is a risky product - learn to control the risks
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catlover4536 · 1 month
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My part of an art trade I did with @bloomynmoon!
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saphushia · 11 months
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Patrick O'neill - I Am Having So Much Fun [spotify] [soundcloud]
album cover redraw :3 go listen!! im so obsessed with this guy's music i need to infect more ppls brainspaces with these bangers
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hrina · 4 months
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thank u @ashstfu for tagging me this is such a cute lil trend!!
come decorate my tree! 🌲❤️
i’m gonna tag @chapellroan @lovedeluxe92 @cowgirlrising @agorahills @harryshouseparty @stylesprimes @wocs @beyoncerry @soulmvtes @barbieing @neattequila @katecastle @superscut @lesbianhallieparker @plantrry @cuff-it @tinytulip @gingeralepdf @girlrry @theholetour @breakfastgf @flordetoloache @guccifloralsuits @sunnypeachyy @gucciwoodnymph @atlafan @petruchio @warmfoodjpeg @sunflowers-styles and @ryebreadgf 💕
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mariocki · 7 months
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A young Roger Delgado works to expose an otherworldly conspiracy, as newspaper columnist Hugh Conrad in Quatermass II: The Coming (1.4, BBC, 1955)
#fave spotting#roger delgado#the master#quatermass#doctor who#classic doctor who#delgado!master#quatermass ii#quatermass 2#images are rough i know‚ but that reflects the quality of the material to a degree#that we have complete copies of Quatermass II is a small miracle and to be celebrated#but as a bbc series from 1955 it is understandably in rather poor form as regards picture and sound quality#at least compared to contemporaneous shows from itc or america (largely shot on film)#anyway. what a delight to see young Rog! he's only in this one episode (although he can be seen briefly in the recap at the start of ep 5#and thus sometimes is credited with both) but he's playing a great character‚ a fleet street wonder that Quatermass brings in to try#and spread word about the conspiracy at the heart of the series. it allows Rog to play quite a different figure to the villains and foreign#dignitaries that became his stock in trade later on; he's a wily‚ astute but sceptical figure‚ who wants proof of Quatermass' claims and as#such is exposed to the alien horrors at work (allowing SPOILER for some very good 'battling possession' acting that leads into a truly#great cliffhanger). the serial almost feels like it has a guest of the week‚ with a significant character turning up for one ep only in#most installments‚ including Rupert Davies in the previous episode‚ but i think it's just the way the serial was formatted (and it's not#like Delgado or even Davies were particularly well known actors at this point in their careers)#still it's been fun to revisit. highly recommended for fans of dark and doomy sci fi horror
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absurdumsid · 3 months
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Ever so silently asks for the files to the hazbin hotel episodes
/nf of course, you dont have too
they absolutely ARENT here !!
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*rattles the bars of my cage*
hey mechs tumblr?
what the FUCK do you mean the angel drank bottles of dionysian wine?
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puppyboygf · 1 year
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interesting new take i just saw: goblins aren't antisemitic caricatures because european folklore has featured goblins since before europeans first made contact with jewish people (incorrect)
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symbioticsimplicity · 9 months
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I hate to be this guy but I need help.
My car just decided to take a shit, which basically executes my current income entirely. I'm not asking for like...donations or anything. I wrote a whole book and I'd rather ask for you guys to check that out so at least there's like...something you'd get from helping out.
That said, if you can't afford it that's more than fine, please just reblog this so I can get some traction.
Link to the book is here, thank you for anything.
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majorkphob · 2 years
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*Taps the lid* exactly what it says
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eloquentornot · 6 months
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I know that logically it's just because it's what he's good at building and/or it fits in with the scenery, but I haven't seen anyone point out how the Secret Keeper looks a bit like Grian's HC S9 base? Mossy boulders?
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minty-cofffee · 3 months
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cuddlytogas · 1 month
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Fyre sent me an article that made me Lose My Mind, so instead of sending 800 tweets about it, I decided to just write up my thoughts here
so, in re: ET Fox, 'Jacobitism and the Golden Age of Piracy' --
Fox is definitely exaggerating. His logic jumps from 'ship names and alleged toasts', to 'every pirate was one contact away from a confirmed Jacobite', to "a Jacobite maritime community" (296), with little evidence beyond each previous assumption. He does demonstrate a link with popular Jacobitism, but overstates pirates' political commitment by far.
There's one letter to George Camocke, a Jacobite naval officer, suggesting that the pirate fleet should unite under his command and take Bermuda as a Jacobite base, but the source is shaky, and it went nowhere once Woodes Rogers ousted the pirates. (It's I think from 1718 and unsigned? Possibly from Charles Vane and his crew? Fox only says that, "Through these contacts [unspecified, between Vane and English Jacobites] a letter reached George Camocke" (286), which is suspiciously vague, and I can't access the original to check. Either way, it would still only prove the committed politics of one crew.)
Fox also makes a lot of Archibald Hamilton, governor of Jamaica from 1710-16, who commissioned and profited from the anti-Spanish privateers who turned pirate and made up some of the original Bahamas pirates c. 1715. Since "it has been suggested that [Hamilton] was a Jacobite supporter" (283), Fox claims that these establishing pirates were also committed Jacobites, and therefore the whole pirate community that grew around them must have been. (Which leads to Fox then being baffled when there's no direct evidence of Jacobitism among some of them, such as the crews of Anstis, Fenn, or Rackham.) He relies on these assumptions, and then claims that every connection between pirates proves their mutual Jacobite sympathies.
It's much more likely (and in line with the historians I've read so far) that the Jacobite toasts and ship names speak to a broader anti-authoritarianism among pirates, with no evidence of committed Jacobite actions by them, eg, specifically targeting Hanoverian ships, or materially supporting or trying to support Jacobite rebels beyond that one letter. Indeed, the 1710s/20s pirates are generally agreed to be distinct for not adhering to religious/national loyalties like the C17th pirates usually did. (I'm so sorry, I haven't consolidated my notes yet, but I know Marcus Rediker goes through this, as does Kris E Lane, and I think Tim Travers and David Cordingly.)
Fox does identify a correlation between the rise and fall of Jacobitism and piracy over the mid/late 1710s, but attributes a pretty shaky causation: pirates ceased their Jacobite loyalties due to the suppression of Jacobitism in Britain and Europe. A much more obvious explanation is that both anti-authoritarian movements simultaneously flourished in the post-war, post-succession instability, then were both quashed as the new regime established itself and cracked down on rebels.
So, did many pirates espouse Jacobite sympathies? Yes! They named their ships in favour of Jacobite causes and rulers, and there are plenty of reports of them toasting to King James / the Pretender. (Which it must be said, although the sheer volume lends a ring of truth to the trend, individual claims should be taken with a grain of salt, as Jacobitism was a common accusation against criminals at the time, with or without a basis.)
Does that mean that the 1710s Caribbean pirate community was centred around a heart of politically committed Jacobites, as Fox argues, or largely motivated by Jacobite sentiments? Yeah, probably not.
Anyway, I am SO sorry that this article got me riled up XD the whole point of this is to say, I've never read anywhere that "many pirates were Jacobites driven out of Britain", which I KNOW wasn't even your main point, but I am unfortunately Insane. We can and should talk about expressions of pro-Jacobitism and actual political engagement among 'Golden Age' pirates, but what we know of their actual actions and espoused ideals doesn't speak to a trend of committed Jacobite politics beyond a general loyalty to rebellious causes.
#history#pirates#pirate history#Jacobites#Jacobitism#Togas does meta#this article annoyed me so much omfg#at every step Fox makes a sort of shaky assumption and then bases his next assumption entirely on that as if it's a proven truth#it's like IF hamilton was a commited jacobite and IF that loyalty was shared with the privateers and IF those privateers#retained and spread that belief among the growing pirate community and IF that was the belief that held the community together#then yeah sure i guess jacobitism was a core cause and concern for the golden age pirates#but that's a lot of fucking 'if's among a situation with a lot more obvious explanations#Fox is right that historians so far are probably ignoring the influence of Jacobitism on golden age pirates a bit#it really hasn't come up in all my reading so far and I've done... a pretty fair amount lol#but he goes so far in the opposite direction that it's kind of embarrassing#very BR Burg coded tbh XD (i say as if i've actually read burg >.> but all the reviews are forming a picture for me...)#EDIT: it's also worth noting that Jacobitism was rarely (never?) a charge laid against pirates in all the trials and moralising against them#which you'd think - if they were actually hardcore individual or broad-base supporters of the cause - might've come up more often#but anti-pirate arguments basically always revolve around the threat to trade and property therefore nation/empire#if lawyers and reverends wanted to argue that pirates were traitors - and they did! - you'd think they'd mention any actual treasons#EDIT EDIT: N: Harry M. Lewis (2021) George Camocke’s 1718 Proposal of a Jacobite–Pirate Alliance#The Mariner's Mirror 107:3 pp366-370#has better detail and context for that letter
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kitether · 11 months
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If you are interested in getting a physical copy of my yuuyanghel zine, “Do You See it in the Stars? The Epic of the Fallen Angel of Judecca and the Apostle of the Violet Rose: Entangled Together Until the End of Emptiness”, then I have good news for you!
I’ve finally set up a bigcartel! But if cost is a barrier for any reason, I’d love to exchange art or fic or whatever else you have to offer in exchange for these goods! I’ve created a form to make it easy 🌈
additional zine photos under the cut! 🌹✒️
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