The Kitty is Roaring. Are you holding the bag?
With Roaring Kitty back and meme mania echoing the GameStop short squeeze, the signal is simple: when hype peaks, attention gets paid.
The market doesn’t ring a bell at the top. It memes.
The groundwork is being laid to meme louder than ever.
The Return of the Cat
Roaring Kitty re-emerged this week. Tuesday, April 14, to be exact.
It wasn’t just a nostalgic blip—it was a signal flare. The same figure who helped ignite the GameStop short squeeze is back in the public imagination, dragging with him the ghosts of stimulus checks, zero-commission trading, and a generation that learned markets through dopamine loops.
Back in 2021, the battleground was GameStop, and the Reddit war room was r/WallStreetBets—a chaotic digital coliseum where avatars, memes, and YOLO trades converged into something that looked suspiciously like collective power.
SIDE NOTE: Scroll through the visual language of r/WallStreetBets and you’ll see a recurring cartoonish, defiant face—red tie, exaggerated hair, unmistakably evoking Donald Trump. It isn’t accidental: the same anti-establishment energy, distrust of institutions, viral symbolism, and “us vs. them” framing that defines MAGA culture also permeates the Roaring Kitty community.
Let’s be honest: it wasn’t just about sticking it to hedge funds.
It was about belief.
Narrative.
Identity.
Now enter DUMBMONEY—a meme coin that doesn’t even pretend to be anything else. It’s self-aware irony weaponized as an asset. The name alone tells you everything: the crowd knows how it’s perceived, and instead of resisting, it leans in.
This is late-cycle behavior.
Not early innovation. Not cautious accumulation. Late-stage spectacle.
PROPHETIC PERSPECTIVE
In 2020, I recorded something that made me pay attention to the GameStop phenomenon. I said, “At some point, the game is going to stop.”
More on that in a later post.
NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE, but if you’re investing in crypto, please always check the Contract Address (CA) as there are lots of scam accounts around these.
$DUMBMONEY:
CAjtTHvC878f8cZ4zEwdvgjkjFM7rbYN8Mb1go1cpump$WAR: (if you want a speculative coin not mentioned in this post)
C9dJfTGUzhuqPWxh9mcDr66JZN4uzXh2gh9EWnEdpumpI believe these junk meme coins are setting the stage for actual crypto solutions that will be deployed later in the year and early next year. More on that later.
The Metrics Behind the Memes
The memecoin cycle isn’t happening in isolation—it’s the retail end of a much larger narrative market, where stories are being priced faster than fundamentals can catch up. And if memes are the surface layer of excess liquidity, then the deeper layer is the same story showing up in AI and tech: a belief that scale is infinite, constraints are optional, and infrastructure will bend to narrative demand.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: meme coins aren’t breaking the market—they’re revealing it. More importantly, they’re revealing a hidden hand that choreographs the puppet strings for a well-timed market crash.
The question is not if it will crash, but when?
I believe that DumbMoney may be an indicator.
The Calculated Crash
Every cycle ends the same way: the story becomes more important than reality—until reality reasserts itself. Have you been hearing how AI is unstoppable and it’s a clear winner in the markets? I invite you to take a moment to reflect on a contrarian view.
History doesn’t reward the loudest narrative. It corrects it.
The GameStop short squeeze wasn’t the beginning of a new financial paradigm. It was a preview of how chaotic the end of one can look. And now, with meme coins leaning fully into self-parody, the market is no longer whispering excess.
It’s shouting it.
I believe that the stage is set for a massive market reversal. When?
I also believe that it will not be accidental when it arrives, but a calculated crash.
The Lion has roared; who will not fear?
—Amos 3:8—
I’m Gr8ful.






