How to Profit from Anarchists
in Just 7 Minutes
France’s crown jewels were lifted in seven minutes from the Louvre.
So while you’re waiting three hours in line for a ticket, the thieves already had their immersive experience — and left with the gift shop.
That’s the difference between those who wait for permission and those who act.
One stares. The other seizes.
You know who else acts? Anarchists.
For the past few years, they’ve been spray-painting masterpieces, gluing themselves to frames, and vandalizing the cultural icons of civilization — all in the name of “awareness.”
Some cheer them on. Others roll their eyes.
But a smaller, quieter group is watching closely, looking for opportunity.
Because chaos always leaves footprints.
Who’s to say these art anarchists aren’t the same kinds of minds that test security systems, build new forms of protest, or even write the next decentralized protocol?
Every empire trains its own revolutionaries — they just call them “consultants” or “founders” once they go legit.
With geopolitics heating up and U.S. politics turning into performance art, the real question isn’t whether the anarchists win.
It’s who profits when they lose interest.
And now, with the largest U.S. city electing a dedicated Socialist, the protests, uncertainty, and outrage are baked into the system.
The misrepresentation isn’t the bug — it’s the feature.
When everyone else is horrified, ask yourself:
What infrastructure is being tested? What rules are about to change?
Anarchists break things to reveal what’s brittle.
Investors profit by buying what replaces it.
So next time you see a protest, a cyber-attack, or someone gluing themselves to a Rembrandt, don’t get angry.
Get curious.
Because in markets, as in museums — those who move first don’t wait for the guided tour.
Does 1 + 1 = 2?
Only you can make that decision.



