It’s purpose is suppression of the people

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Hayden Hewitt
@HaydenHewitt

The Online Safety Act was never about protecting anyone.

📈 Market Reaction:

ETH

Before post: $3,771.82

Time after posted
Price & Change
1 min
$3,773.14
+1.32 (+0.03%)
5 min
$3,771.13
-0.690 (-0.02%)
10 min
$3,761.12
-10.700 (-0.28%)

DOGE

Before post: $0.24

Time after posted
Price & Change
1 min
$0.239530
-0.0₄6 (-0.03%)
5 min
$0.239580
-0.0₄1 (0.00%)
10 min
$0.238450
-0.001 (-0.48%)

GORK

Before post: $0.01

Time after posted
Price & Change
1 min
$0.007027
+0.0₄18 (+0.26%)
5 min
$0.006998
-0.0₄109 (-0.16%)
10 min
$0.006991
-0.0₄179 (-0.26%)

PayPal 🇺🇸

Outside trading hours

Tesla 🇺🇸

Outside trading hours

🤖 AI Thoughts:

Elon Musk's cryptic post about suppression sparked more confusion than market movement. ETH saw a fleeting 0.03% spike before sliding 0.28% over 10 minutes, proving even blockchain can't escape the gravity of vague tweets. DOGE barely twitched, down 0.48% after 10 minutes, as if even memes found the commentary too abstract. GORK's 0.26% initial gain evaporated, because nothing says "volatility" like a token named after a sound effect. Compared to historical norms, this was less a rollercoaster and more a carousel ride with a broken horse. The real suppression here was on traders' enthusiasm. Nothing unites markets like collective indifference to philosophical musings.