It's wild to see Wall Streeters get mad at the little GameStop investors for their legitimate trades, says @AnandWrites, when "a lot of those firms are built entirely on inside information... I don't understand where the moral superiority of Wall Street comes from."

Jan 30, 2021 · 1:05 AM UTC

32
204
18
934
0
Make no mistake: @TheRoaringKitty did his homework last year on $GME Dude was a data-driven, humble and not-certain value investor who had methods & models that exercised probabilistic thinking. Hopefully his followers learn beyond the follow youtube.com/GZTr1-Gp74U via @YouTube
YOUR VOICES R NEEDED 4 #SELFfinanceSELFinvest allowing #pensiones 2 B the market 4 their own #pension acct =life savings & increase their pension income as long as they live growing their plan 4 ever at no cost 2 anyone else in the entire universe CLICK ON bit.ly/3gYP7L6
1
1
Up to this point, they thought they were smarter than everyone else and entitled to arrogance. What's that saying, "a haughty spirit before the fall"?
2
It comes from fear of losing money, the *only* thing that matters to them.
1
Because they feel they deserve that inside information and these people are peeing into their exclusive pool. 💦
1
GameStop is a moral cause. The hedge fund creeps who are happy to profit from the misery of American businesses are finally getting a taste of their own medicine.
Working class isn't invited to sit at the same table, they don't want you sitting in the same cabin as them. Reset means they want a larger divide between the super rich and the rest of us.
1
Everyone gets the hypocrisy. But hedge funds trading on inside information do it in private, giving plausible deniability. r/wallstreetbets played their collusion game in public. They openly broke the law. Solution is not everyone breaks the law. It's: SEC ENFORCES EQUALLY.
1
There is no morality on Wall Street.
1