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All I can say is this:
1. I study the book.
2. I consume any information on VSA I can.
3. I have yet to find anything I have been told in 1 or 2 above to be false.
4. My results speak for themselves because I follow what I have learned.
5. I am happy at the results I have gained from being a student of VSA
I'm not here to be some champion of VSA- I agree with it and adhere to it. It has served me well. Other than that, I don't feel I have to justify anything else.
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I'm glad that you're happy with your results. However, I continue to be interested in the logic of your position, i.e., the position of an ordinary, part-time, retail trader as opposed to the author of the book.
For example, if professional money is the herd, and the objective of
VSA is to follow the activities of the professional money, does it not follow that by following the activities of the professional money one is following the activities of the herd?
On the other hand, if "professional money" is defined as specialists, is one to assume that the majority of specialists are all doing the same thing in the same way at the same time?
Or is it possible that there's some other more reasonable explanation of which specialists and market-makers play only a small role, or at least no larger than anyone else?