Just realized something watching the market lately—when money speaks, nobody checks the grammar, right? 👀



You see it everywhere. Some billionaire posts a half-coherent tweet and it trends globally. Meanwhile, a perfectly written thread from someone with no clout gets buried. It's wild how that works.

The thing is, when money speaks nobody checks the grammar because people aren't really evaluating the message itself—they're evaluating the messenger. If you've got wealth or influence behind your name, suddenly your words carry weight regardless of how you express them. Spelling errors? Ignored. Logic gaps? Overlooked. The status does the heavy lifting.

I've been thinking about this in the context of how narratives move markets. A casual comment from a known figure can shift sentiment, while detailed analysis from an unknown account barely moves the needle. It's not about the quality of insight—it's about who's saying it.

This whole dynamic reveals something deeper: when money speaks, people listen first and think second. Respect gets tied to net worth instead of wisdom. The hierarchy of influence isn't based on correctness or clarity—it's based on capital and credibility.

Makes you wonder how much of what we believe or follow is actually merit-based versus just... wealth-based. That's the real grammar we should be checking. #MarketTurbulence
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