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Only One Thing Can Stop Us

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wealthyretirement.com

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wealthyretirement@mb.wealthyretirement.com

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Tue, Dec 26, 2023 09:33 PM

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Our lives are transforming before our eyes... SPONSORED Thanks to Biden's Executive Order 14067, eve

Our lives are transforming before our eyes... [Shield] AN OXFORD CLUB PUBLICATION [Wealthy Retirement]( [View in browser]( SPONSORED [Biden to Replace U.S. Dollar?]( [Biden with dollar signs for eyes]( Thanks to Biden's Executive Order 14067, every dollar you own could be in serious jeopardy. They could be made worthless, or even confiscated - practically overnight. [Read More ]( Editor's Note: Have you heard the news? This is [the first company in the world to bring an AI-designed drug to clinical trials](. It is now working with some of the biggest companies on Earth to develop treatments for ovarian cancer, antiviral diseases, breast cancer and much more. And it's Chief Investment Strategist Alexander Green's big new recommendation. I don't suggest waiting on this... [Watch Alex's breakdown of this sub-$10 company here.]( - Rachel Gearhart, Publisher [LIFESTYLE]( [Only One Thing Can Stop Us]( [Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club]( [Alexander Green]( It was one of those books I'd had on my shelf for over a decade - and still hadn't read. Yet I kept coming across other writers who referred to it as "groundbreaking," "dazzling," "award-winning" and "the most optimistic book ever written." A few months ago, I quit promising myself that I'd get around to it eventually and finally picked it up. Then I couldn't put it down. In [The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World]( British physicist David Deutsch explains why human progress is not only accelerating but potentially boundless. You could read this book because it might make you a smarter investor. But you should read it because it will make you a much-better-informed human being. The infinity that Deutsch refers to in the title is knowledge, which he explains is limitless. Few would disagree with this statement. But it is a much bigger deal than most of us realize. Why? Because knowledge creates wealth. For untold centuries, for example, all the energy we needed - in the form of oil and natural gas - was available right beneath our feet, below the surface of the Earth. But we didn't know how to discover it, drill for it, extract it or refine it. That's partly because we lacked the tools - machines, electric lights, etc. - that the energy could power to make our lives better. (The reason, of course, is that we lacked the knowledge to create those too.) Today, however, [the situation is very different](. Scientists and engineers invent, develop, and use elements, compounds, materials, and processes in unprecedented ways. Building today's logic chips, for example, can require more than 1,500 manufacturing steps. Historically, performance gains in microchips were accomplished by shrinking the individual components. Until, eventually, chipmakers bumped up against a hard limit on how tiny the elements on a chip can become. Yet tech manufacturers today are able to deliver ever faster and more capable computers and smartphones thanks to profound discoveries at the atomic level. SPONSORED [AI Could Go Supernova in 3 Months]( There are three steps you need to take to protect and grow your money when America is threatened with mass unemployment. [Yes, I want to read the free report.]( Everything from the food you eat... to the clothes you wear... to the buildings you live and work in are due to the specialized knowledge of scientists, engineers, farmers, manufacturers, miners, extractors, builders, refiners, transporters, bankers, insurers, venture capitalists and others who - coordinated by commercial and financial markets - trade products, services and specialized skills for money. This - along with our democratic institutions and the rule of law - is what created our modern standard of living, the greatest the world has ever known. Most folks assume that progress has been occurring for a very long time, since the beginning of human history. [They are dead wrong.]( For 99% of human history, progress wasn't just slow. Over periods that could be measured in an average human lifetime - which (not incidentally) was a lot shorter than today's - it didn't happen at all. It isn't that our distant ancestors wouldn't have enjoyed progress. They would have loved to live longer, healthier, safer, richer, easier lives. But they couldn't imagine it. And they sure didn't experience it. Prior to the scientific revolution, discoveries such as fire, stone tools, agriculture, navigation, etc., happened so rarely that it appeared that the world essentially never improved. However, over the last 200 years (a period that economic historian Deirdre McCloskey calls "The Great Enrichment"), knowledge has exploded, leading to a standard of living that was inconceivable throughout most of our history. [And this progress - like the expansion of the universe itself - is accelerating.]( In the not-too-distant future, we will have transportation, communications, medical treatments, healthcare, goods and services, and investment opportunities that cannot be appreciated today. As Deutsch points out in The Beginning of Infinity, "Everything that is not forbidden by the laws of nature is achievable, given the right knowledge." Think about that statement for a moment. Every possible advance that could benefit you and the rest of humanity is either a) impossible because it is forbidden by the laws of physics or b) achievable given the right knowledge. And "the right knowledge" is increasing at an unprecedented rate. Forty years ago, you didn't have a personal computer. Thirty years ago, you didn't have an internet connection. Twenty years ago, you didn't have a smartphone. Fifteen years ago, you didn't have electric cars, voice recognition technology, cloud computing, 3D printing, augmented reality, 5G or the Internet of Things. And soon, all these advances will be surpassed by the greatest technological achievement of our era, one that will send human progress into overdrive: [artificial intelligence](. Good investing, Alex P.S. Uncover my new AI recommendation - the company that used AI to help save the life of an 82-year-old cancer patient named Paul who had undergone six failed rounds of chemotherapy - [RIGHT HERE](. [Leave a Comment]( [The Oxford Club's Wealth, Wine and Wander Tour of Spain - Barcelona, Granada, Seville and Madrid, June 6-16, 2024 (plus special extension through June 21)]( RECOMMENDED LINKS [100% Dividend Yields?! Details HERE]( [Discover the Top Passive Income Opportunity for 2024...]( MORE FROM WEALTHY RETIREMENT [Image of a detailed, black-and-white sketch of a charging bull]( [A New Bull Market for Small Caps]( [Image of the Harley-Davidson logo on a motorcycle]( [Can Harley-Davidson Rev Its Engine One Last Time?]( [Image of a hand holding a bag of cash that says "dividends"]( [Barnes Group: Is Heavy Insider Buying a Good Sign for Its Dividend?]( [Image of grandparents blowing bubbles with their grandchildren]( [The First Step to Achieving Financial Freedom]( [Facebook]( [Facebook]( [LinkedIn logo]( [LinkedIn]( [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Wealthy%20Retirement...&body=From%20Wealthy%20Retirement:%0D%0A%0D%0AOur lives are transforming before our eyes...%0D%0A%0D [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Wealthy%20Retirement...&body=From%20Wealthy%20Retirement:%0D%0A%0D%0AOur lives are transforming before our eyes...%0D%0A%0D [Push Alert]( [Push Alert]( SPONSORED [Discover How to Benefit From a Potential $5.8 BILLION Drug Royalty Stream]( [Dollar Signs Capsule]( One small company has lined up deals with pharmaceutical giants like Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Novartis, Merck, Amgen, Gilead and more. It could see $5.8 billion in revenue... and biotech expert Marc Lichtenfeld is gunning for a 3,000% gain in one year on this new play. [Click here to discover how you can get this potentially life-changing recommendation.]( [The Oxford Club]( You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Wealthy Retirement. Wealthy Retirement is published by The Oxford Club. Questions? Check out our [FAQs](. Trying to reach us? [Contact us here.]( Please do not reply to this email as it goes to an unmonitored inbox. [Privacy Policy]( | [Whitelist Wealthy Retirement]( | [Unsubscribe]( © 2023 The Oxford Club, LLC All Rights Reserved The Oxford Club | [105 West Monument Street](#) | [Baltimore, MD 21201](#) North America: [877.808.9795](#) | International: [+1.443.353.4621](#) [Oxfordclub.com]( Nothing published by The Oxford Club should be considered personalized investment advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed personalized investment advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after publication before trading on a recommendation. Any investments recommended by The Oxford Club should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. The information found on this website may only be used pursuant to the membership or subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of The Oxford Club, LLC, 105 West Monument Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.

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