Physician and critical thinker

Joined April 2022
201 Photos and videos
Richmond Allan retweeted
Henry Nowak is murdered by an immigrant, his family, and the police. A man is nearly beheaded by an immigrant. A report shows 250,000 UK children have been raped by immigrants. UK PM Keir Starmer responds with a social media ban, digital ID, and proposed VPN ban. Why? He wants the Muslim vote. A sick man.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
What actually happened over the last five years, just looking at the Covid caper alone? It goes something like this: in 2019 or before, a US-funded biolab in Wuhan, China, one of some 120 in 30 counties, made a virus and inoculation based on an American recipe that leaked and spread, causing worry that US officials would be blamed but they had a fallback: lie about the lab origins and prepare the population for the fix based on a new gene-editing technology that otherwise would never have been approved on grounds that it was too dangerous and not effective. That required buying time while preserving pre-leak immunity profiles via lockdowns for all of 2020 until the injection was available, during which time there had to be mass censorship, deep trauma, manufactured panic, school closures, a removal of other therapeutic options, and millions of business failures, not to mention a shut down of the arts and a printing/spending binge that would hack off a third of the value of the dollar, leaving vast carnage but permitting an indemnified pharmaceutical experiment, meaning that mass injury has no recourse. With low uptake of the supposed inoculation, millions were forced to accept it on pain of losing their jobs. No one has been punished for any of it, and the mainstream media has no interest. Did I get this mostly correct? @grok will correct this post with all the usual orthodoxies you are supposed to believe.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
This is one of the most reliable sell signals in history. Just look at TIME's latest issue. I've been doing this since 1981, and when I see a cover like that, I don't get excited. Because history has a brutal sense of humor about moments exactly like this one: In 1979, BusinessWeek ran the most infamous cover in the history of financial journalism: "The Death of Equities." The argument was that inflation had broken the stock market for good and that stocks were finished as a serious place to put your money, perhaps permanently. The country agreed and everybody gave up. But what came next was the single GREATEST bull market in American history. Stocks returned roughly 18% a year for the next two decades. Off the 1982 low, with dividends reinvested, the S&P went on to gain nearly 7,000%. The cover that buried equities turned out to be the starting gun. Now look at the second cover. In 2019. Bloomberg Businessweek puts a dead, deflated dinosaur on the front and asks "Is Inflation Dead?" The consensus was unanimous - inflation was extinct, a relic, never coming back. 3 years later we printed the WORST inflation in four decades, with prices peaking at 9.1% in June of 2022. That was the exact opposite of what the cover declared, and it happened all over again. This is the oldest pattern there is. By the time a story is so obvious, so universally accepted, so completely understood that the editors of a mainstream magazine slap it on the cover, every single person who was ever going to believe it already does. So the trade is crowded, the buyers are exhausted, and there is nobody left to come in behind you and push the price higher. The cover doesn't predict the future the editors think they're describing - it marks the exact moment a belief became unanimous. And unanimous belief is the textbook definition of a top. But here's what makes the AI cover even MORE dangerous than the two that came before it: "Death of Equities" and "Is Inflation Dead" were business magazines, read by people already in the markets. TIME is a general-interest newsweekly read by over 100 million people who don't trade stocks for a living. When the AI build-out has saturated the public mind so thoroughly that it becomes the cover of TIME, the message is that there's almost nobody left who hasn't already heard the story and bought in. And the fundamentals are screaming the same thing the cover is whispering: The largest tech companies are set to spend north of $600 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, up from roughly $388 billion just last year. Tech investment is now running near 4.4% of GDP, approaching the peak of the dot-com bubble. These founders are literally saying that they'd rather go bankrupt than lose this race. Hundreds of billions of dollars and mountains of debt are all resting on a single untested premise - that the profits eventually show up to justify the spending. But so far they haven't. Now let me be honest with you, because that's the only way I know how to do this. I'm not telling you AI is worthless or that the whole thing collapses tomorrow. The 1979 cover was about three years early, and the real bottom didn't arrive until 1982. The 2019 cover took two years to be proven right. Covers mark the mood, not the exact day, so I'm not calling the top to the week. What I am telling you is that the EASY money has already been made, the consensus is now total, and the risk and the reward have flipped upside down. When everyone you know already owns the story, the story stops being an opportunity and becomes a liability. Mr. Market hands out a scorecard every single day, and that scorecard doesn't care what TIME magazine believes. It only cares about valuation. And right now the things nobody would ever put on a cover - gold, silver, energy, real assets, the unloved corners of this market - are exactly where the next decade of returns is hiding.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
The "News Channel" that gets 70% of its money from Big Pharma doesn't tell you that the guy they're bringing on to criticize RFK's policies is on the Board of Pfizer. Imagine watching CNBC and think you're getting the "news". You're getting brainwashed by news whores.
31 Jan 2025
CNBC decides it’s a good idea to trot out Scott Gotlieb to criticize RFK Jr. and introduces him as former head of FDA but fails to disclose that he is currently on the board of directors for Pfizer…disgusting. I find it interesting this wasn’t disclosed in his intro by Becky. #BloodMoney
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Say it louder for the people in the back:
Elon Musk becoming the world’s first trillionaire has triggered a familiar round of progressive outrage. But the focus on wealth obscures the real issue: how much of modern wealth is acquired through politics rather than production. | @connorokeeffe mises.org/mises-wire/musk-tr…
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Richmond Allan retweeted
🚨 BREAKING : Trump is asking where all the money in Ukraine has gone, and he estimates that they've poured in about 350 billion dollars. 🇺🇸🗣👉 🇺🇦 Trump knows that this money is being diverted and that this entire conflict is just a massive money laundering operation.💥🔥
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Britain now arrests more people for social media posts than China, Russia, and Turkey combined nearly matching the rest of the top 10 countries combined Britain really leads the world on these thought crimes Insane how the UK, which used to be a free country, turned out to be so totalitarian
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Richmond Allan retweeted
This is WILD! Tom Mueller. SpaceX employee #1, the man who built the engines and his 0.06% stake is now worth approximately $1.11 billion (Save this). But the number undersells the story. Mueller grew up in St. Maries, Idaho, population 2,500, the son of a logger who wanted him to follow the same path. He spent four summers cutting timber to pay his way through engineering school, then moved to California with nothing but a degree and a passion for rockets. He spent 15 years at TRW, one of the biggest aerospace companies in the world, watching his ideas get diluted inside a bureaucracy so he started building engines in his garage at night as a hobby. By early 2002 he had built the largest amateur liquid-fuel rocket engine in the world, 80 pounds, 13,000 lbs of thrust and moved it to a friend's warehouse. That's where @elonmusk found him. Fresh from selling PayPal for $1.5 billion, Musk walked into that warehouse and asked one question: "Can you build something bigger?" Mueller never fired that original engine, he took it back to his garage, where it still sits today. Instead, he joined Musk on May 1, 2002 becoming employee #1 on the SpaceX payroll. What followed was 18 years of building what became the most reliable rocket engine ever flown. The Merlin engine, designed from scratch powered Falcon 1, Falcon 9, and Dragon. The Merlin 1D holds the thrust to weight record for production rocket engines and it enabled the first ever propulsive landing of an orbital rocket booster, which is what made reusability possible, which is what made cheap access to space possible, which is what made Starlink possible, which is what made today's $2.1 trillion IPO possible. Mueller also started the early development of what became the Raptor engine, the full flow staged combustion methane engine that powers Starship, which no American aerospace company had ever successfully built before. He retired from SpaceX in November 2020 but he got bored within six months so he founded Impulse Space, building space tugs to move payloads around once they're in orbit, and planetary landers to deliver cargo to Mars. What an incredible story!
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Richmond Allan retweeted
The UK arrests people over retweets. Crazy.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
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Richmond Allan retweeted
The DOJ is now charging Antifa terrorists who violently obstructed ICE in Minneapolis. It’s not only the foreign assets of the Deep State we must go after, but the domestic ones as well. I’d imagine we see a lot more of this in the future.
U.S. Attorney Dan Rosen announces charges against 15 Antifa lunatics who violently obstructed ICE operations in Minneapolis. "Today's charges and arrests reflect a broad federal effort to address organized, lawless behavior which seeks to obstruct the execution of federal law."
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Richmond Allan retweeted
These greedy con artists made America hate itself while they got it on. Gross. What a shoddy scam it all was, the whole era. Good riddance.
SPLC boss funneled $1.2 million to lover in neo-Nazi group - pair even had joint bank account trib.al/7wnuofS
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Jun 16
Asian-American students are the top-scoring group in the world on PISA, and white American students are among the top 6. Our educational system doesn't "fail" groups with triple-digit mean IQs. Rather, our national performance is dragged down by groups with two-digit IQ means.
When Jimmy Carter purchased the teachers’ union’s endorsement in 1979 by establishing the Department of Education, the USA was #1 in education. 46 years and $4.1 trillion dollars later, the USA is #40. We are, however, #1 in cost per student.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Funny thing is if an Iran deal actually happens and holds right now it will disprove rightist theories that Israel controls America AND leftist theories that the US waged this war to implement a permanent blockade AND the GOP narrative that Trump was right to shred the JCPOA.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Seinfeld no era una serie “sobre nada”. Era una serie sobre el futuro. Jerry, Elaine, George y Kramer eran el prototipo del adulto moderno antes de que el adulto moderno se volviera mayoría. Gente sola. Sin hijos. Sin matrimonio. Sin religión. Sin misión. Sin raíces. Sin legado. Solo departamento, café, citas, consumo, neurosis y conversaciones infinitas sobre estupideces. Y ahí está lo brillante: no te lo vendían como decadencia. Te lo vendían como comedia inteligente. Jerry hoy sería creador de contenido. Vive de observar la realidad, convertirla en chiste y monetizar su personalidad. No tiene jefe visible, no tiene familia, no tiene hijos, no tiene misión superior. Su vida es comodidad, rutinas, cereal, tenis blancos, citas desechables y reputación. Elaine es la mujer urbana moderna antes de Instagram. Independiente, profesional, sexualmente libre, siempre rotando hombres, siempre encontrando defectos, siempre incapaz de cerrar con alguien. No es presentada como tragedia. Es presentada como una mujer divertida, lista y “libre”. George es el hombre moderno promedio con ego alto y valor bajo. Resentido, inseguro, cobarde, envidioso, poco masculino, con estándares absurdos y cero capacidad real de convertirse en el hombre que las mujeres que desea elegirían. No es exactamente un incel, porque a veces tiene suerte. Pero su mentalidad sí es la del hombre frustrado que quiere más de lo que merece. Kramer es el adulto sin estructura. No trabaja de forma clara, no produce de forma estable, vive entrando y saliendo de la vida de los demás, sobrevive con favores, trucos, ocurrencias y algún ingreso fantasma. Hoy podría vivir de ayudas, reventas, economía informal o cualquier sistema donde no tenga que construir nada serio. Y lo más brutal: Ninguno construye nada. No hay familia. No hay sacrificio. No hay hijos. No hay patrimonio emocional. No hay comunidad real. No hay proyecto trascendente. Solo el yo. Mi cita. Mi incomodidad. Mi departamento. Mi café. Mi marca favorita. Mi problema ridículo. Mi neurosis. Eso no era “una serie sobre nada”. Era una serie sobre el individuo convertido en centro absoluto de su propio universo vacío. Y claro, estaba llena de marcas: Junior Mints, Twix, Snapple, PEZ, cereales, restaurantes, cafés, productos. Pero la propaganda real no era “compra esto”. La propaganda real era más profunda: consume, ríete, no te comprometas, no aprendas, no madures, no formes familia, no dejes legado. La famosa regla de la serie era “no abrazos, no aprendizaje”. Es decir: nadie cambia, nadie crece, nadie madura, nadie se redime. Perfecto. Porque ese es exactamente el adulto moderno. Un niño de 40 años con renta, citas, opiniones, ansiedad, consumo y cero dirección. Y aquí es donde hay que entender el contexto: Seinfeld nace desde una élite cultural urbana, neoyorquina, secular, irónica, neurótica, sofisticada. No necesitas inventarte una conspiración barata para ver el patrón. No fue una reunión secreta para destruir la familia. Fue algo más efectivo: una élite cultural exportando su estilo de vida como entretenimiento masivo. Y como nos hizo reír, bajamos la guardia. Hollywood entendió algo antes que muchos: si presentas la descomposición como tragedia, la gente la rechaza. Pero si la presentas como humor inteligente, la gente la adopta. Por eso Seinfeld sigue pareciendo actual. Porque no predijo el futuro. Lo ensayó. Nos mostró al adulto urbano sin propósito antes de que ese adulto llenara las ciudades, las apps de citas, los departamentos pequeños, los antidepresivos, los podcasts, los cafés caros y las redes sociales. Seinfeld fue el tráiler de una civilización cómoda, sola y estéril. Y lo más cagado es que todos se reían porque pensaban que estaban viendo una comedia. En realidad estaban viendo el manual de usuario del vacío moderno.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
@HillaryClinton Ma’am, I was the Air Force Lt. Colonel who carried the nuclear football for your husband inside that “people’s house” you’re suddenly so precious about. I saw it all up close for two years. While Bill was getting blow jobs in the Oval Office from an intern and groping female Air Force enlisted crew on Air Force One, you and your staff treated the military with open disdain, like we were the help, not the men and women sworn to protect this nation. The disrespect for anything non-Clinton was palpable. You lecture about “respect for the institution” while your husband lost the nuclear codes and shrugged it off. And when you finally slinked out in 2001? You and your crew trashed the place—vandalism, theft, glue in drawers, obscene messages, stolen property, and filth left behind for the next administration. The GAO confirmed it. Classy exit from the “people’s house.” The White House belongs to the American people, not your grifting dynasty. They just elected a fighter who actually respects the military and the office. Keep ripping off poor kids in Haiti, selling your merch and clutching pearls. Sit down, bitch. The adults are back in charge.
Remember, during today's literal cage match on the White House grounds: No matter what, it's not his house. It's our house. Get a hat, coaster, or sticker to support groups and candidates who will respect the form AND the function of the people's house. shop.onwardtogether.org/coll…
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Babe, the haves are losing their minds over the have-mores again. I get the move. Tyrants like Elizabeth Warren never let a rich person get richer (or any person for that matter) without turning it into a crisis demanding more government power. The rhetoric is always about “inequality” and “fairness,” but the goal is control, deciding who is allowed to keep what they earn and who gets redirected to their preferred clients. These people genuinely see themselves as the only ones competent to allocate society’s resources. Anyone accumulating serious wealth outside their permission structure threatens their self-image as the rightful elite. So they frame success as theft, push redistribution schemes that expand their own authority, and direct the proceeds toward whoever keeps them in power, consequences be damned. In billionaire and wealthy progressive circles, it’s mostly status theater. Virtue-signaling about inequality is cheap social currency. It signals to their audience that they’re not the problem, buys them cover, and lets them keep funding the activists and institutions that serve their longer-term interests while pointing the outrage elsewhere. Strip the pseudoeconomic language and it’s just another round of the eternal game of who gets to sit at the top of the hierarchy. (the public is the prop department, historical tradition and all that)
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Richmond Allan retweeted
I’ll take the trillionaire visionary who creates wealth for tens of millions of people, over the millionaire politicians who loot that wealth for themselves.
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Richmond Allan retweeted
Obama and Sen. Dick Lugar co-wrote an op-ed warning that an avian flu pandemic could kill millions and represents a major national security threat comparable to nuclear proliferation and terrorism. Guess where they just traveled from before writing a report about a "KILLER AVIAN FLU" and signing a biological agreement? UKRAINE. DNI Gabbard's report warned of over 120 BIOLABS across 30 countries, including, UKRAINE. On September 2, 2005, the Nunn-Lugar program transported 124 samples of 62 unique strains of dangerous pathogens, including plague, anthrax, cholera, and others, from Azerbaijan's anti-plague station to Washington, D.C. for "study" and secure storage. The report Obama and Lugar wrote was the beginning of the psychological operation aspect of the "killer flu" pandemic, planting it into the public domain. This is predictive programming. This is the precursor and the beginning to the Fauci gain-of-function and military preparation of the COVID "plandemic."
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