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Joined May 2016
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
Karen Tries to Act Tough and It Backfires Spectacularly
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Austin Metcalf's father was swatted 6 times. Austin Metcalf's mother was swatted 2 times. They had to keep all of this under a gag order. The hell these people went through being terrorized by blacks was insane.
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No Agenda Episode 1873 - "Supercycle" l.curry.com/fUt
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🚨 NOW: The area around ICE Newark is DEAD SILENT after NJSP FORCED rioters out of the area Tens of THOUSANDS of dollars worth of supplies are just abandoned outside the facility. It is genuinely mindblowing how much money is poured into riot supplies. See for yourselves 👇🏻
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🚨 BREAKING EXCLUSIVE: I INFILTRATED the Antifa camp at Newark ICE with a hidden camera Tens of THOUSANDS of dollars of equipment, food, and even RIOT EQUIPMENT has been supplied. Hot food delivered every hour. ARREST THE FUNDERS, AND THIS WILL STOP
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
LAW 34: BE ROYAL IN YOUR OWN FASHION: ACT LIKE A KING TO BE TREATED LIKE ONE
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An MIT study shows 95% of companies that instituted AI say it is a failure. AI is a boondoggle. No one likes it. No one likes Waymo’s. No one likes help calls answered by bots. No one wants their finances, legal or medical handled by bots. AI will crash and burn. Shut it off!
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
I am deeply grateful for the trust President Trump placed in me and for the opportunity to lead @ODNIgov for the last year and a half. Unfortunately, I must submit my resignation, effective June 30, 2026. My husband, Abraham, has recently been diagnosed with an extremely rare form of bone cancer. He faces major challenges in the coming weeks and months. At this time, I must step away from public service to be by his side and fully support him through this battle.
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Looney Tunes hasn’t aged well
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
The man who proved your phone's safety standard is wrong worked for NASA. W. Ross Adey. UCLA Brain Research Institute. Then Loma Linda. 400 papers. NASA built his lab's biotelemetry into the Apollo program. The EEG of Lovell and Borman in orbit was Adey's tech. In the mid-1970s, 20 years before the FCC set its safety standard, Adey proved the assumption it would rest on was wrong. With Suzanne Bawin he showed that Radiofrequency radiation at "non-thermal" levels, too weak to heat tissue, could still drive calcium ions out of brain tissue. But only inside a window. Specific intensities. Specific modulation frequencies. Peak effect at 16 Hz, right in the EEG band. Crank the power higher? Effect disappears. Use an unmodulated carrier? Effect disappears. This is the Adey window. It is why FCC safety limits are useless. The FCC measures average power. Adey proved power alone isn't the variable. Modulation matters. Frequency matters. The window matters. He testified to Congress in 1980s, warning that the safety standard rested on a biology the science had already moved past. Congress thanked him. The standard got written anyway. Adey died in 2004. The Adey window is in physics journals and out of every regulatory document. The FCC's RF exposure rules were adopted August 1, 1996, built on an engineering standard from 1992. They have not been updated in 30 years. In 2021 a federal court, the DC Circuit, ruled that the FCC's RF guidelines were arbitrary and capricious. The court said the agency had ignored exactly the things Adey proved mattered. Non-thermal effects. Modulation. Children. Long-term exposure. The FCC was ordered to fix it. It hasn't. Three generations of kids have grown up inside the window Adey warned about. The fourth is being born this year.
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
When Spencer Pratt wins the Los Angeles mayoral race he gets to move into the mayor's mansion. The thought of Karen Bass having to give up her home to him after she burned down his home is reason enough to vote for Spencer.
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
Replying to @washghost1
It's a huge fire hazard. Same with the exhaust vent. It builds up a ton of lint and can burn the house down when not cleaned.
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There's a clay tablet with the founding charter of a 12-partner company on it. Twelve merchants pooled 33 pounds of gold to start the firm. The contract has the partner names, the starting capital, the profit split, and the penalty for cashing out early. The tablet is nearly 4,000 years old. It was found at a site called Kanesh, in central Turkey. Archaeologists have dug up 23,500 of these clay records there, most of them business documents: receipts, loan contracts, shipping orders, lawsuits. The houses they were stored in eventually burned. The fire baked the clay solid and preserved every record. The merchants came from Assur, in modern-day Iraq. They loaded donkeys with tin and cloth and walked them 1,000 kilometers across mountain passes to Kanesh, roughly the distance from New York to Atlanta. Each donkey carried about 180 pounds and the trip took two to three months. They came home with silver and gold. The company ran for twelve years under a merchant named Amur Ishtar. A third of the profits went back to the investors. Pull your share out early and the firm gave you four kilos of silver per kilo of gold, half the normal rate. Locked-up money was meant to stay locked up. That one company was just a tiny piece. The tablets show a complete economy with partners suing each other in commercial court, husbands writing home about prices, and wives writing back complaining the husband had been gone too long. A woman named Ahatum quietly lent silver to four different men over nine years. People bought up other people's loan documents and used them as collateral for new loans, the same thing Wall Street does today with mortgage-backed securities. One merchant got caught smuggling tin in his underwear to dodge a 10% import tax. In 2019, four economists from Harvard, Sciences Po, Chicago, and Virginia ran the tablet numbers through a gravity model, the math economists use today to predict how much two countries will trade based on size and distance. The Bronze Age numbers matched modern trade numbers almost exactly. Trade fell off with distance at nearly the same rate it does between countries today. The paper ran in the Quarterly Journal of Economics. There was no economic theory yet. The idea didn't even have a name. The word "capitalism" wouldn't be coined for another 3,800 years, and Adam Smith was 3,700 years away from writing a sentence about markets. Just a guy named Pushu-ken writing a clay tablet to his business partner about a shipment of cloth, and a woman in Assur recording who owed her how much silver. Capitalism was already there, doing its full job, almost four thousand years before anyone wrote down a theory of how it worked.
Niemand hat den "Kapitalismus" erfunden. Kapitalismus ist das, was freie Menschen von Natur aus tun - Waren und Dienstleistungen zu ihrem eigenen Vorteil tauschen.
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The Helpful Helper retweeted
Marco Rubio finding out he has to run Spirit Airlines now too.
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Prediction: The replication crisis will unfold like #MeToo. Everyone in science knows how bad it is, but nobody wants to speak first. Then it all comes crashing down.
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