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đ©žâBuy When Thereâs Bloodâ Doesnât Work the Way You Think The idea sounds simple. Fear creates opportunity. Buy when everyone is selling. History shows something else. During World War I, markets didnât behave like modern traders imagine. Exchanges were shut for months. Capital didnât rotate into âcheap assetsâ â it ran into safety. Gold, cash, and geography mattered more than entry prices. Yes, US stocks later recovered. But the real money wasnât made by traders buying dips. It was made by industrial companies tied to war production and by those inside the system of government contracts. War didnât reward risk-taking. It rewarded position. By World War II, it became even clearer. When real shortages hit, financial assets stopped mattering. People didnât trade stocks or bonds. They traded food, fuel, and basic goods. In extreme conditions, money loses its function. Survival replaces investing. The only ones who consistently made money were those closest to resource flows. Military contractors, logistics, finance intermediaries. Not the average investor. The takeaway is simple. âBuy when thereâs bloodâ works in controlled market fear. It breaks down in real systemic crises. When things truly collapse, the game changes. Not prices. The rules. â Subscribe to@cryp