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RE: Haejinality vs. Reality (RDD Review)--Reddcoin-- 75% LOSS in 2018--

"Again I will state unequivocally that during the majority of 2017 (largest bull market in history) his calls made people money."

Anybody who made any investment made money. If I told people to invest in more Dogecoin every day it would have been a good call. That is a version of the Perfect Prediction Scam.

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I agree, and it is obviously a scam.. no doubt about it..

perfect prediction scam
This scam involves making a series of opposite predictions (on winners in the stock market, football games, or the like) and sending them to different groups of people until one group has seen your perfect track record sufficiently to be duped into paying you for the next "prediction."

For example, Notre Dame is playing Michigan next week, so you send 100 letters to people, predicting the outcome of the game. It doesn't really matter whether the recipients of your letter are known to bet on college football games. The information you provide will stimulate some of them to want to bet on the game. You name your letter something swell like The Perfect Gamble. In 50 letters you predict Notre Dame will win. In the other 50 you predict Michigan will win. You write a short introduction explaining that you have a secret surefire method of predicting winners and to prove it you are giving out free predictions this week. Notre Dame wins.

The next week you send a free copy of The Perfect Gamble to the 50 who got the letter that predicted a Notre Dame victory. In the introduction you remind them of last week's prediction and you inform them how much they would have won had they followed your advice. To show there are no hard feelings and to give them one more chance to take advantage of your surefire system you provide—free of cost—one more prediction. This week Notre Dame is playing Oregon State. You divide your list of recipients and you send 25 letters predicting Notre Dame will win and 25 predicting Oregon State will win.

After the second game, you will have 25 people who have seen you make two correct predictions in a row. Three correct predictions in a row should convince several recipients of your letter that you do have a surefire way to pick winners. You now charge them a substantial fee for the next prediction and, if all goes as planned, you should make a handsome profit even after postage and handling costs.

Since you are a crook for running this scam, you won't feel guilty in promising the prospective suckers their money back if not completely satisfied with your predictions. Your hope is that they will be greedy and say: "How can I lose?" You needn't remind them how. You might even be able to rationalize your behavior by telling yourself that they deserve to be scammed because they're so greedy!

For different audiences, you can pretend to be a psychic or an astrologer or a mathematician or a gambler who knows how to fix college football games. If you are cheating the gullible as well as the greedy, you may be able to convince yourself that you are performing a beneficial service to the community by cheating these people out of their money. You might persuade yourself that rather than try to put you in jail for being a fraudulent scammer, society should give you an award for reminding people to use their common sense and critical thinking skills.

A variant of the perfect prediction scam is used by some psychics. If you tell enough clients "someday you will be rich beyond your wildest dreams," then if one of them inherits a great sum or wins a lottery, you may get credit for being psychic.

"A variant of the perfect prediction scam is used by some psychics. If you tell enough clients "someday you will be rich beyond your wildest dreams," then if one of them inherits a great sum or wins a lottery, you may get credit for being psychic."

That one, but slightly different. The psychic example uses the law of large numbers, leveraging statistics. Considering the cyclical nature of the market, statistically you will be right if you predict what happened yesterday will continue today. When it goes up consistently you can keep telling people buy. If it starts going down for a few days you can keep saying sell. Then when it starts going up a few days you can start saying to buy again. And you will be right most of the time. You can use the technical analysis to write off the times you were wrong as "indicators that the market was about to change".

What the real life proof that technical analysis isn't predictive? I'll let this article explain:

"Over the last 15 years, 92.2% of large-cap funds lagged a simple S&P 500 index fund."

Smart, professional investors who do dedicate their lives to research and technical analysis lost to a nearly static list of companies 9 out of 10 times. What's worse? Nearly 2 in 3 large cap funds FAILED in the last 15 years.

"...only 34.11% of large-cap mutual funds that existed 15 years ago are around today. Needless to say, the 65.89% of funds that didn’t survive were mediocre performers when they were merged or liquidated out of existence. "

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