Daily Stormer
November 9, 2013
You are probably familiar with day trading ads. Brokers are advertising everywhere online, through Google ads, banners on websites and through affiliate programs. They even offer you a bonus if you sign up.
Daily Stormer
November 9, 2013
You are probably familiar with day trading ads. Brokers are advertising everywhere online, through Google ads, banners on websites and through affiliate programs. They even offer you a bonus if you sign up.
With fast internet and online brokers with low commissions, day trading has become very popular. And doesn’t it sound nice? Earning money over the internet, from wherever you are: from home, from a coffee shop, or perhaps from a 5 star beach resort. Why not?
It seems a tempting offer. Now the average Joe can compete with the big bankers. Buy and sell currencies like a Wall Street hotshot from your cheap laptop. And the sky is the limit. If you can earn $1, you can earn $1000 or $1,000,000, right?
Day trading looks more sophisticated than most get-rich-quick schemes, with its sleek charts, financial vocabulary, etc., but is it really any different? The charts come with many indicators to predict future movements and there are books, videos and courses that can teach you how to use those indicators to read the charts. You can trade many financial instruments: currencies, indices, commodities and all the big stocks people with serious faces talk about on the financial channel.
Foreign Exchange
The forex market is the biggest day trading market in the world with over $5 trillion a day in transactions. This is up more than 20% from just 3 years ago!
And the funny thing is, no value is added. Forex is a zero-sum game. Nothing is created. What you win, another fellow loses. Or, more likely, what you lose, Goldman Sachs wins (minus the commission and interest of overnight carrying of positions for the broker, of course).
This is a Scam
Day trading is of course a scam. Not in the sense that the online brokers don’t pay out. No, the concept of day trading itself is a scam, it’s the nature of the game. It’s presented as serious business. As the happy alternative to working a normal job. In fact, it’s not. It’s a casino. The brokers let you trade with leverages of around 1:200. With an account of just $100, you can buy or sell (go short) $20,000. There is a potential of huge profits, but it’s more likely that your account will be wiped out by a slight fluctuation.
The house always wins. You might find yourself an expert, trying to read the charts. You imagine yourself a lot smarter than all the simple people doing the hard work. That is, as long as it goes well. In most cases, you will lose. You might have a winning streak, but then it’ll turn against you.
The guys you’re playing this zero-sum game with are professionals. They are Goldman Sachs and all the other Jewish banks. They are so big they can cause fluctuations. They make EUR/USD fall from 1.3000 to 1.2950 and then go back up again, wiping your position out just as completely as they did to the Czar and his family a century earlier.
Day trading can also be very addictive. At first it looks boring, staring at a chart, but before you know it you have been staring for hours. Some people describe it as hypnotic.
A Poisonous Worldview
The NSDAP cared for the well-being of the German people. Whereas in a capitalist country everything that makes money is considered good, in a National Socialist state the most important criterion is the well-being of the Volk. That is why point 11 of the party program says this:
Abolition of unearned (work and labor) incomes. Breaking of debt (interest)-slavery.
Day trading would not be considered acceptable in a National Socialist state. Day trading doesn’t create anything. It only destroys. It destroys your time by tying you to a computer, it destroys your money because you will lose more than you plan and it destroys your noble soul because day trading is only about money, it makes you obsessed with money. On top of this, it causes unnecessary stress and anxiety.
Day trading is immoral. It is possible to make very big profits from big tragedies. Disasters and “terrorist” attacks cause big movements in currency and stock prices. Shorting airline stock after 9/11 could have made you a large profit. Knowing in advance about terrorist attacks can give the people behind them even larger profits. Can you really respect yourself if you try to earn money out of the BP oil spill, the Greek debt default, the earthquake in Japan?
The Jews in Charge
All of the key companies running this racket are Jewish.
Plus500
They give you a bonus when you sign up. That should ring an alarm bell. There is no such thing as a free lunch, especially not coming from a sneaky Jew money-man.
They are based in London to give it an air of respectability, but the company is entirely Jewish. The management team consists of the following people: Alon Gonen, Gal Haber, Elad Ben-Izhak, Omer Elazari, Shlomi Waizman, Shirron Shofer.
eToro
eToro is another popular broker, they were founded in 2007 in Tel-Aviv, by brothers Yoni Assia and Ronen Assia together with David Ring.
Currensee
This is what Wikipedia says about Currensee:
The company was founded in 2008 by software developer Asaf Yigal and Forex trader Avi Leventhal, at the time of the late-2000s recession. They identified an opportunity to offer Forex trading as an alternative asset class and a new way to trade together.
The company is currently led by CEO Dave Lemont, and is headquartered in Boston’s North End neighborhood. Currensee is funded by North Bridge Venture Partners, Egan-Managed Capital and Vernon & Park Capital. They are a member of the National Futures Association and registered with the Financial Services Authority.
Anyoption
Anyoption is a binary options broker. Binary options is betting on a financial instrument being priced higher or lower after an hour. It’s win or lose.
Anyoption claims to be based in Cyprus, but it’s easy to have an offshore company there. This one too is actually Jewish. On fxempire.com we read:
Although the official website for Anyoption™ do not disclose who their executive officers and partners are, an Israeli by the name of Shay Ben Asulin is said to be an official partner and co-founder of Anyoption™. Ben Asulin is also said to be the person who actually innovated online trading of binary options. Apart from the above mentioned, very little else is known about the management of the company.
Conclusion
Day trading is yet another Jewish scam, designed to fleece us with the added benefit of breaking down the cohesion of society by promoting a destructive ideology.