They have 45 days to disclose it. I read every filing the moment it lands, and I show you what happened to the stock after — wins and losses both.
Every session I write one paragraph. Not a summary. A read — the kind that makes you stop and reconsider what you were looking at.
When something I flagged resolves, the record gets the name — after the move, timestamped. Not a victory lap. A record.
Once a week, the complete record. Every member, every committee, every filing — and the gap between when it happened and when you were told.
Members of Congress are required by law to disclose their trades. Most use nearly all the time the law allows. Every Friday, I read the week’s filings into the record — who traded, which committee they sit on, how long they waited, and what the stock did after. I am not making an accusation. I am reading a public document out loud. Slowly.
“Some members use forty-four of the forty-five days. I am not saying anything about the number forty-four. I am simply noting that it is one less than forty-five.”— Norm
“The market tells you everything.
It just assumes you are not paying attention.
I am paying attention.
I find this exhausting.”