Another TBB post featuring the most eclectic links around the web such as predicting stock market bubbles, the Money Queen, AI global cybersecurity gap, the best hiking trails, our Seattle trip, US stock market average annual returns, the current state of AI, winners and losers of the Iran war energy shock, shocking African funerals, why airlines continue to go bankrupt, world’s busiest airports, the best photography links and of course always all of the most important developments in the crazy world of frequent flyer miles and points at the lower half of the post. And much more. Enjoy the weekend.
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This blog started way back in 2012 focusing on my crazy hobby addiction of traveling with frequent flyer miles, hotel and bank points. It has since evolved to curated posts featuring the best web content along with my commentary.
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BLOG HOUSEKEEPING
This is truly a one man labor of love operation, enjoy it while it lasts.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“In the stock market, the most important organ is the stomach. It’s not the brain.” – Peter Lynch
MUST READ GEMS
There is so much bubble talk these days. And I get asked this question a lot: “Is it a bubble?”. And Jason Zweig over at the Wall Street Journal answered it in the best way possible, must read:
Why It’s So Hard to Spot a Stock-Market Bubble
The whole article is a must read. You can skip everything else if you are pressed for time and just read the articles in this section. If I were you though I would not skip much in this once a week blog post. But I am biased I guess.
Just a few gem quotes:
If the stock market’s a bubble, that’s dangerous. If you’re positive it is—or isn’t—a bubble, that could be even more dangerous.
…bubblespotting is a lot harder than it seems. If identifying a bubble were easy, then we all could do it. And, if we all could do it, then a bubble wouldn’t form in the first place.
The real danger of bubblespotting is believing you can do it…But stocks aren’t a toggle switch that you flip on or off. Few investors should have either all or none of their money in stocks. The future is rarely certain enough for that. Now is a good time to make sure you’re diversified, holding not just the S&P 500 but smaller stocks and international stocks as well. You should also check whether you can rebalance—trimming some winning assets, such as large U.S. stocks, to add some recent laggards like bonds. Also be on the alert for any signs your financial adviser is sure we’re in—or not in—a bubble. They don’t know any better than you do.
PERSONAL FINANCE
In investing you hear a lot how stocks return 8% to 10% annually on average. The key word is average. Actually, returns can and do usually vary all over the place almost every year. On average, you almost never get returns between 8% to 10%! Check out the chart below with annual returns of the S&P 500 since 1950. In fact, only just four years returned between 8% and 10%, that’s it. It is actually just six years that had returns between 5% and 10%. Found HERE:

CRYPTO/TECH/SCAMS
This article had a strong impact in me. No, I am not into farming. But this guy had a really big following on YouTube and one day he decided he had enough and posted a goodbye video. It must be so hard to do this. I have been contemplating the end here and I guess I am just not quite there…yet? Signing off in a world of what’s next.
We live in a world of such duplicity, lies, greed and avarice that seeing everyday people do everyday things is such a nice break…These creators become a quiet, steady presence in your life…They’re the opposite of the announcement economy…Someone is just trying to grow something and be honest about how hard it is…When that disappears, you lose a small refuge. Worth a moment of sadness. Near the end of his final video, Pete said two words. “I’m sorry.” He knew people relied on that rhythm. He felt the weight of leaving. He carried it. That’s character. [Well, I sure don’t have hundreds of thousands of readers and no income stream so it should be easier to end my blog I guess. But yet, I don’t want to walk away from all nine of you lol]
One of the biggest fraudsters out there still free is going to go for what fraudsters in this grifting age do. And that is ask for a pardon of course: Jho Low, Fugitive Behind 1MDB Scandal, Seeks Pardon From Trump. Malaysian financier recently submitted a pardon request, some 10 years after he disappeared amid a $4.5 billion scandal.
Anyone can be anything they want online. Some time ago a blog reader had a quote that went something like ‘on the internet, nobody knows you are a dog’ with a picture of a dog tweeting away. And they can just make shit up selling fake expertise and, wait for it, become influencers. Meaning, they go on tricking innocent victims who fall for their shit. And here is another one who developed a marketing machine calling herself the Money Queen smh: Who Trusts The Money Queen? Amanda Frances made millions helping women manifest their dream lives. Some former clients think they just funded hers.
She regularly drops new video courses with names like “Turning Shit Into Gold,” “Become a Money-Making Coach,” and “Money Mentality Makeover,” her foundational course, which she values at more than $26,000 but can be yours for just $2,999. “Spend as though you are supported, make purchases as though more is available for you, buy things as though you are a wealthy woman,” Frances writes in Rich As F*ck. [Vomited after this quote in the first few paragraphs and after I went through the article I swear I must have lost at least five pounds! Look, you can read my blog for free and I guarantee you will get way ahead of these victims falling for this shit]
AI
Great piece in the MIT Technology Review: Want to understand the current state of AI? Check out these charts. According to Stanford’s 2026 AI Index, AI is sprinting, and we’re struggling to keep up. Yes, check out the charts.
The Us and China are nearly tied
AI models are advancing super fast
But the way we test AI is broken
AI is starting to affect jobs
People have complicated feelings about AI
Governments are struggling to regulate AI
I have been getting some very sophisticated scam emails lately. And I have no doubt they are all AI generated. I think this is only going to get worse, so brace yourselves: The global cybersecurity gap deepens as AI-powered attacks surge. Restricted access to powerful defensive AI tools like Anthropic’s Mythos leaves some companies, central banks, and nations more vulnerable than others.
- AI-driven cyberattacks are surging because models can now weaponize software vulnerabilities within hours of their discovery.
- A massive global shortage of cybersecurity professionals is compounding the risk of an “AI bugocalypse.”
- With the interconnected nature of the global digital economy, leaving smaller institutions and nations vulnerable means that no one is truly safe from the cascading effects of a breach.
In 2018, the median time from a vulnerability being disclosed to the first exploitation was 771 days, so organizations had over two years to fix it. By 2024, that window had reduced to four hours; last year, most exploited vulnerabilities were weaponized before they were even publicly disclosed.







Good morning!
Good links about bubbles and the dismal state of points / miles.
Given how much the airlines earn from their rewards program via
credit cards, it will be interesting to see what happens
when the rewards aren’t worth chasing ….
I’m kind of relieved that my balances are just about at rock bottom and unlikely to rise to previous levels. I’m about ready to call time on the game for us. We are currently on an Asian vacation, only decided a week before departure we were doing it and somehow we managed to find redemptions for 5/7 required flights in business or first. By time we get home in June that will wrap up Hyatt Globalist for another year. We’ve even managed to book Singapore business class to Europe in April 2027 and a week in London at Hyatt on points. So figure we are going out on a high, it’s been fun but time to focus on more important things. What I find most annoying about the Hyatt devaluations etc has been the ever decreasing promotions, not giving an opportunity to earn bonus points and as for the so called targeted promotions never had a sniff of any in our household yet seems the same people get targeted over and over.