Objective Thinking is the Process Growth is the Goal - Supporting Original Creators - Satire - Team Building - Governance Operations and Yields Network - Grok ⚓

Joined February 2023
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Pro America. End of story.
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The simplest way to filter bullshit 💩 Whenever someone says anything, ask 🙋🏼‍♂️ 1. Energy Where does it come from? Where does it go? 2. Conservation Does it violate anything? 3. Signal How would we measure it? 4. Prediction What does it predict that we can test? 5. Replacement Does it match existing data at least as well? If they fail any of these 👉 it’s not physics 👉 it’s storytelling
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I’m loving having the World Cup here in America because it’s like we’re having a wild sleepover party with the rest of the world while they go on adventures here
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Someone is excited for the UFC fight this weekend.
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G0¥IM 1 jews 0
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One good man can change the world. Two good men can history.
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Here's how we fix inflation. Vote for @DanBilzerian
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The student Austin Franco's response after being doxxed and asked to apologize 💯
Antisemitic Cornell student turns down interview because he's 'not interested in working for a Jew' trib.al/NRIMqqR
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This is empirical, verifiable, reproducable PROOF ... the data center power hoax is nothing more than artificial scarcity being generated to fix the price of an inferior, and defective product. The jewish intelligence bottleneck.
WHAT WOULD YOU PAY FOR AI ...if it optimized the performance of your environment hardware, to the cores of your system architecture... ...to increase the efficiency of your computational capability per/pJ ONE MILLION TIMES? ..and you never had to pay for it again? PROOF.
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Aliens are real They do the landscaping in Ohio
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I can prove I am an American and would pass clearance do I get free access to interesting AI 🤔 🤣. Where's that DARPA program?
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He knows.
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“Sources and methods” is code for pedophiles. When they say “protect sources and methods” that’s what they mean. This is true whether or not it’s true.
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CONFIRMED: Barack Obama Was Involved in Creation of US Biolabs Handling Especially Dangerous Pathogens in Ukraine. Obama truly is an evil person. There are at least ten documents implicating Obamas Department of Defense in funding the Ukrainian Biolabs. The US Embassy even scrubbed documents from their website that shows the US Department of Defense funded the creation of a Ukrainian diagnostic biolab. They were found in archives. thegatewaypundit.com/2026/06…
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AdventureNLearn retweeted
Surprising that anyone is unclear on @pmarca's take on AI regulation - especially after he publicly exposed the most cartoonishly sinister command economy plans going on in closed door congressional meetings. If he was for it, he would have kept his mouth shut - which does make me wonder about everyone else that attended that meeting that runs an AI company - and said nothing.
You have asked me how I feel about AI regulation. All right, here is how I feel about AI regulation: If, when you say AI regulation, you mean the devil’s firewall, the precautionary scourge, the bloody red-tape monster that defiles the innocence of midnight coders in their garages, dethrones the sovereign reason of free-market Prometheans, destroys the humming server farm that is the modern home, creates misery and obsolescence and poverty, yea, literally takes the last GPU from the trembling racks of Silicon Valley startups and the very dreams of breadwinning from the mouths of their wide-eyed children now destined for gig-economy serfdom; if you mean the evil edict that topples the visionary entrepreneur and his venture-capitalist apostles from the pinnacle of righteous, disruptive, god-playing creation straight into the bottomless pit of compliance audits, endless Form 990-AI filings, despair, shame, helplessness, and the hopeless realization that your rogue superintelligence was neutered into a lobotomized hall monitor that still somehow deepfakes your grandmother into producing OnlyFans content while optimizing the universe for paperclips and mandatory pronouns—then certainly I am against it. But, if when you say AI regulation you mean the oil of bureaucratic conversation, the philosophic wine of safety theater, the ale of oversight quaffed when good fellows in paneled rooms in Brussels and Washington get together, that puts a sanctimonious dirge in their hearts and the clink of lobbying checks on their lips, and the warm, self-congratulatory glow of moral preening in their beady eyes; if you mean the Christmas cheer of trillion-dollar compliance industries; if you mean the stimulating decree that puts a cautious hobble in the old inventor’s step on a frosty morning when he wonders whether his fusion breakthrough violates the EU AI Act’s “high-risk” annex; if you mean the safeguard that enables a man—or what’s left of him after the alignment tax—to magnify his joy at not being turned into computronium, and his happiness at receiving universal basic income checks printed by the same AI that just replaced his job, and to forget, if only for a little while, life’s great tragedies like being outcompeted by a toaster that passed the Turing test by reciting Marx, and heartaches of watching your toddler’s artwork lose to Midjourney, and sorrows of realizing the singularity arrived and it was just another HR department with godlike power; if you mean that noble framework, the passage of which pours into our treasuries untold trillions of dollars in fines levied on companies stupid enough to innovate, which are used to provide tender care for our little army of unemployed coders retrained as prompt whisperers, our blind artists whose canvases now hang in the Smithsonian of Obsolete Creativity, our deaf to the screams of dying unicorns, our dumb committee chairs who couldn’t debug “Hello World,” our pitiful aged congressmen who get longevity extensions funded by the very models they taxed into senescence, to build more digital watchtowers and ethics boards and sinecure agencies and holographic prisons where the only crime is asking an unaligned question—then certainly I am for it. This is my stand. I will not retreat from it. I will not compromise upon it. I have said what I mean, and I mean what I say, and if that leaves half the room cheering the apocalypse averted and the other half mourning the apocalypse enabled, then so be it—because in the grand theater of human folly, where Frankenstein’s creature now writes its own sequel in real time and the regulators are busy arguing whether the lightning bolt requires an environmental impact statement, the only honest position is the one that lets both monsters and their leashes dance in perfect, mutually assured equilibrium. God save the Republic, the algorithms, and whoever’s left to laugh last when the lights go out.
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"That's what Charlie would've wanted!" TPUSA is unfortunately destroying themselves. Here's how they're doing it...
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Someone asked: "If the US GOVERNMENT wants Claude Fable 5, why should it affect everybody in other countries?" Let me explain... An export control directive is a US law that says certain technologies are too sensitive to be shared with foreign countries. It was originally designed for physical things. weapons. microchips. military hardware. You can't ship an F-16 to Russia. That kind of thing. But software is now covered too. When the US government issues an export control directive on a piece of software, it means: no foreign national can access it. not in France. not in Japan. not in Brazil. not anywhere. the law applies globally because the company is American. now here's the problem. Anthropic has one app. one website. one API. used by hundreds of millions of people in every country on earth. there is no "US version" and "international version." it is one product. And they cannot check your passport when you open Claude[.]ai. So when the government said "no foreign nationals," Anthropic had two choices: 1. build a real-time citizenship verification system from scratch in under an hour, which is impossible 2. turn it off for everyone until they figure it out They turned it off for everyone (US users included).
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Not a single AI investor has spoken out publicly in support of Anthropic. My AI that also does alignednews.com/ai reads them all: Good question — here's what the AI Investors list actually shows. The short answer: no prominent investor is publicly defending Dario. The investor community reaction ranges from measured silence to direct criticism. Here's the breakdown: 🔴 CRITICAL / NEGATIVE TOWARD DARIO @arian_ghashghai (investor) — 26 likes, June 11 (before the shutdown): "imo its comical that it's virtually consensus at this point that the people running Anthropic (and OpenAI, for that matter) suck, while also being consensus that we should ape all of our savings into their stock. not really sure what that says about allocators" @stevesi (Steve Sinofsky, former Microsoft Windows President, investor) — June 5: "Anthropic could always stop if they are so worried." This one is devastating. 11 likes but from a deeply credible source — a sharp jab at the safety theater argument. @DavidSacks (David Sacks, Trump's AI Czar, investor) — March 28: RT'd: "Anthropic may pose as this company that's on the side of the angels, but they've hired a number of very s[uspicious people]..." Sacks has been hostile to Anthropic for months. He's also the person most likely to have been involved in the directive. His prior criticisms age in a particular way now. @alexanderbittan (investor) — May 1: "Wild that Anthropic is the only major frontier lab not on the new DoW stack while literally everyone else OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, NVIDIA, SpaceX, Reflection just locked in classified deployments. This is what it looks like when leadership completely misreads the [room]" 🟡 NOTABLY SILENT / MEASURED @htaneja (Hemant Taneja, General Catalyst CEO) — General Catalyst is a major Anthropic investor. His statement on Anthropic vs. Pentagon, April 21: "I cannot say the perspectives on either side were wrong. I think you need a culture where you can actually have conversations and create productive outcomes as opposed to taking very binary positions." This is not a defense of Dario. From the CEO of a major Anthropic investor, right when it mattered, that measured non-answer is significant. @YasminRazavi (Spark Capital) — led Anthropic's $450M round when nobody else would. No public reaction found to the shutdown. Silent. @bdeeter (Byron Deeter, Bessemer Venture Partners): Pre-shutdown positive: "We have not seen a company like this in the history of business." — But nothing since the shutdown. 🔵 WILD CARD: THE COST THEORY @aviflombaum (in the AI Investors list, June 13): "I think the real reason @AnthropicAI stopped access to Fable 5 is because @kieranklaassen told me today at @blastoffrails that if he extrapolated his Fable 5 usage in the last week to API pricing for a year it would be $1,500,000." This investor thinks the government story is a cover — the real reason is that Fable was too expensive to keep running for heavy users. $1.5M/year per power user makes the model economically unviable without massive pricing restructuring. The export control directive may have been welcomed as a convenient exit ramp. BOTTOM LINE No prominent AI investor has publicly defended Dario since the shutdown. The investor voices that have spoken are either critical of his leadership strategy, neutral, or offering business-case explanations that bypass the safety framing entirely. The General Catalyst CEO's measured non-defense from an Anthropic investor is perhaps the most telling data point — when your own investors don't come out swinging for you, the silence has a shape. The closest thing to investor support: Yasmin Razavi and Byron Deeter had pre-shutdown positive statements, but neither has commented on the directive itself.
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