As I'm reading this, it's February 12th. So should this be taken as speculative fiction? Or perhaps as something by an AI that struggles with numeracy?
Writing now on Feb 14th, it seems to me that the reason most prognosticators of doom place their predictions more than twelve hours in the future is that they hope to get a following. Baseline idiots and psychopaths at least have the cunning or intelligence to realize that it serves no purpose to predate their predictions to the morning before the apocalypse they're predicting. One big clue to the idiocy of this post was the weird assertion that gold was now being sold at "fire sale" prices. My portfolio was up almost 4% on Friday, and I'm not hugely concerned about the American economy collapsing. But if you prompt Gemini for reasons why it will, I'm sure you'll get what you want to hear. And that's all this is - some dude prompting Gemini for why 2/13 would be the day of doom. I wish I could say good riddance, but I'm sure he'll do it again and again, like all failed prophets of doom.
From a Cohen: If you figure that out, I'll split the profit with you. I'll send the bitcoin by pigeon. If only time zones worked that way, Kiribati would be the wealthiest country on earth.
The headlines will tell you the market is "correcting." The pundits will call it a "seasonal adjustment." But on the ground, Friday, February 13, 2026, marks the moment the structural floor of the American economy finally gave way. We aren’t just looking at a recession; we are witnessing a synchronized deleveraging event where technology, climate, and debt have converged to create a "March Cliff" that no amount of traditional stimulus can bridge.
As I'm reading this, it's February 12th. So should this be taken as speculative fiction? Or perhaps as something by an AI that struggles with numeracy?
>> By Ramakanth Dorai & Gemini AI
Ah, I see.