ya daily cyberia
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Beyond Halloween
Sunday, October 26, 2025
What School Should Look Like.
Thursday, October 23, 2025
Beyond Meme
Another interesting day in the Beyond Meat saga.
It opened high, continuing the rocket to the moon of previous days, but by the day's end it had finished slightly in the red. It's now getting hammered down more in the after hours trading. Though it's still a lot higher than it was last week.
I feel a little mercenary, as I took more profit during those early highs. It seemed wise to take the money I'd put in off the table. So whatever happens I can't really lose now. Before this week I'd invested about $650 in total. I've now sold around $700 of stock. Leaving me with about $400 worth in my account.
I've been very lucky. Especially considering I was down around $400 last week. So I've kind of came out with $400 of free stock in the end.
What happens with that stock now I don't know. My opinions have moved back and forth a little depending on what articles and videos I've been consuming. Overall I still feel it's a neat way to turn the company around. A brand that was once viewed as a darling of the globalist overlords is now rebranded as a people's stock. With those invested (and investing) in the meme perhaps also developing an emotional investment in the actual products.
And, with the company getting three more years of life thanks to the debt restructuring, there's time for that potential turnaround to bed in. So there is some outlook for optimism.
However, ..it's also a neat way to rinse retail investors as a company faces its death rattle. So pessimism might be the best armour.
As I noted yesterday, it could well be both. We see this dichotomy with Bitcoin. The endless pump and dumps and "We're Going To The Moon." The believers buying and holding for the long term. The more unscrupulous buying, but also selling to skim profits, as they fluff the hype to the true believers on the rollercoaster. Yet, as the ups and downs are skimmed, the wider Bitcoin upward trend continues.
So maybe this is similar. Beyond Meat continues into the future (and the company won't be going bankrupt - at least not any time soon), but at the same time that doesn't mean believers won't be taken for a ride along the way. (We even see the same 🚀rocket emoji and language in all the posts hyping it. So it looks like the same playbook.)
As for me, I won't be selling what I have left. I know I said that yesterday, but this time I mean it. Largely because I'm in work the next two days, so won't be sat anywhere near a screen when the markets open. I do genuinely want to hold some for the long term though, and as what I have now is essentially free it'll be a lot easier to do. So that should be the plan.
I'm also definitely going to buy some beyond burgers next week to finally try them. Hopefully that'll be my next post and I won't be having to post daily about this until then.
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
To Infinity and Beyond ..Meat
Thursday, October 16, 2025
Beyond Meat - Paying for the Ride
Earlier this year I made a post asking, Will There Ever Be A Vegan Nestlé?
In that post I mentioned that I'd bought some stock in the company Beyond Meat, and I wondered aloud if we'd ever see a huge food multi-national like Nestlé that was exclusively animal friendly. Or if profitable smaller vegan companies would simply get bought up by these existing giants.
Incidentally, Nestlé's stock rose today after an announcement that they're going to be laying off 16,000 workers. So that's bad news, though I guess good news for me, as I own a little bit of Nestlé as well. The Beyond Meat shares however - they're not doing too well. To say the least. And worse still, I've been topping up my position. Buying more on the big slide down. I'm about $400 down, *grimace*.
It's not too bad though, as I'm still doing fairly well overall.
Monday, October 13, 2025
Astrology, Rhesus Negative ..and Folic Acid in Bread
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
The Gary Neville Thing
For future context this is in response to Gary Neville blaming the "division in the country" on "white middle-aged men" who are putting up Union Jacks.
I've had a few digs at Gary Neville over on Twitter about his comments. However, I always try to think about how I would word things were I posting to my real life friends on Facebook. It's easy to throw around off-the-cuff remarks on Twitter, where everyone's a stranger, but on Facebook you're forced to be mindful of the people you work and live with. In the real world I have plenty of friends that are from minority backgrounds in one way or another - British-born Muslims, black and mixed-race people (some born here, some from overseas), Eastern Europeans. In fact, where I work the list of nationalities is endless: Poland, Romania, Eritrea, Nigeria, Latvia, Greece, the list goes on..
Anyway, when I think in this way it only heightens my feeling that Gary Neville is wrong. It doesn't bring me any closer to his "everything is rosy, and you're just a racist for complaining" worldview. I just think he's irresponsible, and is making things worse by throwing around the label racist.
Old Trafford
The capacity of Old Trafford - the football stadium where Gary Neville used to play - is 74,000. If they sell all 74,000 tickets for a game and someone tries to buy one more then the guy working at the ticket office has to say, "Sorry, we're sold out. No one else can enter the stadium."
The guy doesn't do this because he's racist towards the ticket buyer, or because he's filled with "HATE." He does it because he has a responsibility, and sometimes being responsible means making hard decisions. On the one hand he wants as many people to come to the game as possible. However, at the same time, he also has a duty to make sure the people inside the stadium are safe. So there's a balancing act, and trying to get that balance right means sometimes having to turn people away.
Ideally the whole world would be allowed into the stadium to watch the game, but in reality there are practical limits.
The Stadium Britannica
Of course, it's similar with countries. Ideally we'd just let everyone enter, but, in reality, there are restrictive factors ..lack of housing/infrastructure, fears over social cohesion, etc. We want a vibrant stadium, but we don't want a rowdy, violent one - where things are too overcrowded and the stewards can't control the numbers.
Again, it's a balancing act, and that means someone taking responsibility and at times saying, "Sorry, you can't enter."
Yes, it's mean. But it's also mean to turn a blind eye to homelessness, crime, ever-rising rents, and all the various other issues.
Back To Facebook
Anyway, back to posting on Facebook. Gary makes things worse, because:
a) He makes it difficult for governments to take responsibility - i.e. they can't ever say, "Sorry, you can't enter," for fear of being labelled racist. (Or, if the government is in fact too idealistic to take responsibility he provides cover for them.)
b) He's basically telling the numerous people that are from minority backgrounds, "Hey, this guy complaining about immigration rates, or putting up flags, he's racist and he hates you." Sowing more discord.
So, if I go and post on Facebook, my numerous minority friends will think, "Wow, I didn't realise he's actually a RACIST!, he must secretly hate me and not want me in the country." Not, "Oh, he wants someone responsible managing the ticket office." Which is the reality.
And this is the reality for the vast majority of the population. Yes, there are a teeny amount of genuinely racist people, but they're a tiny fraction. Most people just want policies that are practical not ideological.
It's perfectly natural that someone from another country, or from a minority background, will have a tendency to think, "They're talking about me," when they hear someone complaining about immigration. I'd think the same if I was in their shoes ..but most the time I'd be wrong. As, again, most people complaining see the issue as a practical/numbers issue, not a personal one.
People like Gary should be reassuring people that it isn't personal if they genuinely want to lessen social tensions. They should be explaining the practical limitations that all governments face and arguing for a balance. Not stirring up fears further by painting kumbaya rainbows on one side of the aisle and white Nazi bogeymen on the other.
It's in the interests of everyone here to want a safer stadium. Ultimately, homelessness and cost of living doesn't discriminate by colour, religion or nationality.

 





