Illegitiimis non carborundum

Joined June 2012
118 Photos and videos
Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
These people are more assimilated after one week than Somalians who've been here for generations. Its as if there's an obvious reason for this.
The Scots are assimilating well to American culture.
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The DTCC likely facilitated the naked short selling. That’s why $NWBO has also subpoenaed them in their lawsuit against @citsecurities @VirtuFinancial and the other market makers
📣📣DTCC IS TRYING TO RUN OUT THE CLOCK ⏰️ MMAT MMTLP Bankruptcy subpoenaed the DTCC over a year ago. They still have not fully complied with the records that were requested in the subpoena. The Trustee has contacted them many times. Now, a hearing is set for tomorrow, June 16th, 2026, at 9.30 am. Let's see what the Judge has to say about their noncompliance. If you have nothing to hide, supplying the records shouldn't be a problem. DTCC IS HIDING THE CRIME‼️
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
In March 2025, the last surviving pilot of the Battle of Britain died at the age of 105. He had been shot down four times. He survived a burning cockpit, the sea, a parachute that snagged in a tree, and a fall behind enemy lines. When he died, the last of Churchill's "Few" was gone forever. This is the story of Paddy Hemingway..🧵1/6
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It’s not only insane it’s homicide. $DCVax, a safe and effective treatment for one of the world’s deadliest diseases tangled up in a kafkaesque bureaucracy while thousands die. $NWBO
To put the @MHRAgovuk 2.5-year $NWBO delay into perspective: ​Around 2K people in the UK are diagnosed with Glioblastoma every single year. As the average survival time is only 12 to 18 months, a conservative estimate means well over 5,000 UK residents have died from this disease while regulators just sit on the DCVax-L Phase 3 data. ​Instead of approving a proven therapy, they are fast-tracking failed drugs based on an n=1 "study." Insane.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
Je vais partir du principe que tu es de bonne foi, parce que ton raisonnement est intuitif et que 90% des gens le partagent. Mais il repose sur trois erreurs factuelles, et ça vaut le coup de les regarder calmement. Erreur 1 : la fortune d'Elon n'est pas un tas d'argent. C'est de la propriété d'usines, de fusées et de satellites. "Prendre la moitié de sa tune", concrètement, ça veut dire forcer la vente de la moitié de SpaceX et Tesla. L'argent ne sort pas d'un coffre, il sort des entreprises elles-mêmes, qui passent sous contrôle de fonds étrangers ou d'États. Tu ne redistribues pas du cash, tu démantèles un outil de production. C'est la différence entre récolter des pommes et découper le pommier. Erreur 2 : "ça résout énormément de problèmes dans le monde". Cette expérience a déjà été tentée, en vrai. En 2021, le directeur du Programme Alimentaire Mondial de l'ONU a affirmé que 6 milliards de Musk pouvaient "résoudre la faim dans le monde". Réponse d'Elon : décrivez-moi exactement comment, comptabilité publique à l'appui, et je vends mes actions Tesla immédiatement. Le PAM a publié son plan. Verdict : ce n'était pas "résoudre la faim", c'était nourrir 42 millions de personnes pendant un an. Un an. Puis il faut re-payer, pour toujours. Le PAM avait d'ailleurs levé 8,4 milliards l'année précédente, et la faim était toujours là. Les ONG traitent les symptômes en boucle, jamais les causes, parce que leur financement dépend de l'existence du problème. Erreur 3, la plus importante : tu cherches ce qui sort vraiment les gens de la pauvreté. Bonne nouvelle, on a la réponse, et elle est massive. En 1990, 36% de l'humanité vivait dans l'extrême pauvreté. Aujourd'hui, moins de 9%. Plus d'un milliard de personnes sorties de la misère en 30 ans. Par quoi ? Pas par la charité ni par l'aide internationale (plus de 1 000 milliards versés à l'Afrique en 60 ans pour un résultat à peu près nul). Par l'ouverture des marchés, l'industrialisation, le commerce. La Chine seule a sorti 800 millions de personnes de la pauvreté en abandonnant le collectivisme, pas en taxant ses entrepreneurs. Donc fais le calcul complet. Option A : tu confisques 500 milliards, tu finances quelques années de programmes, l'argent est consommé, et tu as détruit la machine qui produisait les fusées, les voitures électriques et l'internet des zones rurales. Option B : tu laisses le meilleur allocateur de capital de sa génération réinvestir 100% de sa fortune dans des industries qui baissent les coûts pour tout le monde et emploient des centaines de milliers de personnes. L'option A soulage ta morale pendant 18 mois. L'option B sort des populations entières de la pauvreté pour toujours. La pauvreté ne se redistribue pas. Elle se résout par la création. C'est contre-intuitif, c'est frustrant, mais c'est ce que disent 200 ans de données.
tu lui prends la moitié de sa tune ça résout énormément de problèmes dans le monde et ça ne change strictement rien à son train de vie
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
Une des meilleures vidéos que j'ai vu sur internet 🥹🤩🤩🤩🥰
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$NWBO $DCVax Interesting
Creatine is known for building muscle and improving athletic performance. A new UCLA study just found it does something completely different—it powers the immune cells that direct your body's cancer-fighting response. Researchers published the findings in iScience after studying both mouse models and human cells. The discovery builds on earlier work showing creatine fuels killer T cells that attack tumors directly. Now they've found creatine also energizes dendritic cells—the immune cells that capture tumor fragments and train T cells where to strike. Most cancer immunotherapies target killer T cells directly, but only 20-40% of patients respond. The limitation isn't the T cells themselves. It's the dendritic cells upstream that activate and direct them. The research team started by examining which metabolic genes were most active in dendritic cells that had infiltrated tumors in mice. One gene stood out: the creatine transporter, which pulls creatine into cells. It was markedly elevated in tumor-infiltrating dendritic cells compared to those in healthy tissue. To test whether this mattered, they engineered dendritic cells that couldn't transport creatine. These cells showed impaired survival, reduced activation, and weakened ability to prime T cells for tumor response. When grown alongside T cells in a lab dish, those T cells divided less and produced fewer cancer-fighting signaling molecules. Then they tested the opposite intervention—increasing creatine instead of removing it. Daily creatine injections in melanoma-bearing mice significantly slowed tumor growth and boosted both the number and activation of dendritic cells infiltrating tumors. The creatine-treated dendritic cells produced higher levels of chemical signals that recruit additional immune cells to the tumor site. Metabolomics analysis revealed the mechanism: creatine supplementation raised intracellular ATP levels in dendritic cells. ATP is the energy currency cells use to power nearly every function. Creatine acts like a battery—storing and releasing energy on demand, helping dendritic cells maintain stable energy levels even when competing with fast-growing tumor cells for nutrients. The effect extended to human cells. Creatine treatment enhanced activation of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells—the type often used in dendritic cell cancer vaccines—and improved their ability to stimulate human T cells against cancer-associated targets. The findings suggest incorporating creatine during manufacturing of dendritic cell vaccines may boost their therapeutic potency. More broadly, they reveal that creatine doesn't just help the immune cells fighting cancer directly—it energizes the infrastructure that supports and guides them. Immuotherapy works for some patients but fails for most. The difference may come down to whether dendritic cells can maintain enough energy to properly activate the T cell response. Creatine supplementation addresses that metabolic constraint. A supplement taken by millions for muscle growth and athletic performance turns out to support immune cell function at a fundamental metabolic level—powering both the killer T cells that attack tumors and the dendritic cells that train them where to go.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
The vibes are insane. Driving through the great state of Louisiana on our way to New Orleans. It’s crazy how diverse this country is, every day the scenery looks different.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
$NWBO How long will this blindness continue? You have a therapy, #DCVax, that has been waiting nearly 900 days for commercial approval in the UK from the @MHRAgovuk How many patients have lost their lives while waiting? Such political and regulatory incompetence and arrogance are simply unacceptable.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
SEC Rule S7-2026-15 would let public companies stop filing quarterly reports and hide financials for six months. Your savings are in those stocks. Comment is open right now.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
$NWBO “My 18-year-old daughter Braelyn and I are currently in London so she can receive DCVax-L, an immunotherapy developed in the United States. Despite being pioneered by an American neurosurgeon and showing encouraging long-term survival data, we could not access it in the United States. Instead, we’re paying hundreds of thousands of dollars, traveling across the Atlantic, and spending weeks away from home to pursue a treatment that originated in our own country….” - @HollensbeAmanda Families should not have to go overseas to access American innovation. Northwest Biotherapeutics should not have to fight a multi year court battle to stop market manipulators from trying to destroy $NWBO Why are regulators allowed to look the other way? It’s beyond time to Demand Trade Settlement @pulte @DOJFraudDiv @JDVance
We’re living the Right-to-Try problem in real time. My 18-year-old daughter Braelyn and I are currently in London so she can receive DCVax-L, an immunotherapy developed in the United States. Despite being pioneered by an American neurosurgeon and showing encouraging long-term survival data, we could not access it in the United States. Instead, we’re paying hundreds of thousands of dollars, traveling across the Atlantic, and spending weeks away from home to pursue a treatment that originated in our own country. Patients facing terminal illnesses deserve meaningful access to promising therapies—not just in theory, but in practice.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
$NWBO $MMAT Respected securities attorney Stephen Tountas is following the data, trades and money in both He is the lead trial attorney in the NWBO market manipulation case against six big market makers including Citadel and Virtu. Canaccord already settled. And Tountas is also helping the MMAT bankruptcy trustee investigate alleged fraud in that case @kimkep4796 @FlyEaglesFly529 @palikaras
🚨MMAT NWBO🚨 Side by side at the suggestion of @FlyEaglesFly529 Song added too. suno.com/s/nA52KEpM1brc4XFF
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It's shameful that they had to travel to the U.K. A safe and effective U.S. developed cancer treatment not available to U.S. citizens. @RobertKennedyJr @POTUS
We’re living the Right-to-Try problem in real time. My 18-year-old daughter Braelyn and I are currently in London so she can receive DCVax-L, an immunotherapy developed in the United States. Despite being pioneered by an American neurosurgeon and showing encouraging long-term survival data, we could not access it in the United States. Instead, we’re paying hundreds of thousands of dollars, traveling across the Atlantic, and spending weeks away from home to pursue a treatment that originated in our own country. Patients facing terminal illnesses deserve meaningful access to promising therapies—not just in theory, but in practice.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
Tout le monde pense que le monde libre a gagné en 1989, à la chute du mur de Berlin. C'est faux. Et c'est exactement pour ça que le monde est aujourd'hui en feu. Ce qui est tombé le 9 novembre 1989, c'est un appareil. Une économie planifiée, un empire militaire, un mur de béton. Ce qui n'est pas tombé, c'est l'idée. L'idée que le monde se divise en oppresseurs et en opprimés. L'idée qu'il existe une égalité finale à atteindre, par tous les moyens. L'idée que tout ce qui existe (la famille, la nation, le mérite, l'héritage) est une structure de domination à abattre. Cette idée-là n'était plus dans le bâtiment quand le bâtiment s'est effondré. Il faut reprendre la chronologie, parce que tout est dans la chronologie : Le communisme économique avait un défaut fatal : il était réfutable. Il promettait l'abondance, il produisait des famines. Il promettait l'émancipation, il produisait des barbelés. Budapest 1956, Prague 1968, L'Archipel du Goulag publié à Paris en 1973, les boat people de 1979 : à chaque décennie, le réel envoyait sa réfutation. Les boat people étaient une réfutation flottante, visible depuis les plages. Alors l'idéologie a fait ce que fait tout organisme menacé : elle a muté. La mutation a un nom, et j'en ai raconté la généalogie ici : la French Theory. Foucault a déplacé la guerre du terrain des faits, où le communisme perdait à chaque fois, vers le terrain du savoir lui-même. S'il n'y a pas de vérité, s'il n'y a que des rapports de pouvoir déguisés en savoir, alors plus aucune famine, plus aucun mur, plus aucun goulag ne peut réfuter quoi que ce soit. La French Theory n'a pas enterré le marxisme. Elle l'a rendu irréfutable. Et la mutation a des dates. Toutes antérieures à 1989. 1934 : l'École de Francfort, chassée d'Allemagne, s'installe à Columbia. La critique de l'économie devient critique de la culture. 1964-1965 : Marcuse, exilé allemand devenu professeur américain, remplace le prolétariat défaillant par un nouveau sujet révolutionnaire (les minorités, les étudiants, les marginaux) et écrit noir sur blanc que la tolérance doit être accordée aux mouvements de gauche et refusée à ceux de droite. Octobre 1966 : le débarquement a une date précise. Université Johns Hopkins, Baltimore. Derrida, Barthes, Lacan présentent la pensée française aux campus américains. 1967 : Rudi Dutschke lance le mot d'ordre, la longue marche à travers les institutions. 1968 : les révolutions de rue échouent partout. Qu'importe. La révolution ne passera plus par la rue, elle passera par la salle de classe. 1975-1985 : Yale, Berkeley, Columbia absorbent la théorie, qui devient le système d'exploitation des humanités. 1987 : Allan Bloom publie The Closing of the American Mind pour donner l'alerte. Un million d'exemplaires vendus. L'université le traite de réactionnaire et passe à autre chose. L'Amérique avait son Aron, elle en a fait la même chose que nous du nôtre. Puis arrive le 9 novembre 1989. Le Mur tombe. L'Occident célèbre. Fukuyama avait déclaré la fin de l'Histoire dès l'été, avant même la chute. On démantèle les missiles, on encaisse les dividendes de la paix, on déclare le match terminé. Nous avons célébré notre victoire sur une adresse vide. L'idéologie avait déménagé vingt ans plus tôt. Nous avons gagné contre les chars et perdu contre les chaires. Pendant ce temps, l'autre empire communiste faisait la lecture inverse. Pékin avait écrasé Tian'anmen dans le sang cinq mois avant Berlin. Sinistre, mais lucide sur un point : la Chine savait que la guerre était idéologique. Elle a choisi : abandonner l'économie marxiste, garder le contrôle du récit. L'Occident a fait l'exact opposé : il a gardé le marché et absorbé l'idéologie. Trente-cinq ans plus tard, regardez qui construit des centrales et qui déboulonne ses statues. Vous voulez la preuve que c'est le même logiciel ? Faites la table de correspondance. La lutte des classes est devenue la lutte des identités. Les koulaks sont devenus les privilégiés. L'autocritique maoïste est devenue le privilege checking. Les commissaires politiques sont devenus les DEI officers. Le samizdat est devenu le compte shadowbanné. La nomenklatura a quitté Moscou pour Davos et Bruxelles. Et le paradis ne s'appelle plus la société sans classes : il s'appelle l'équité, l'égalité des résultats. Exactement ce que je décrivais ici il y a quelques semaines. On me dira : il n'y a pas de Goulag. C'est vrai. C'est même tout le génie de la version 2.0. Le communisme dur devait briser les corps parce qu'il ne tenait pas les esprits. Le communisme mou tient les esprits : il lui suffit de briser les carrières. Pas de camps, des services RH. Pas de procès de Moscou, des excuses publiques. Pas de Sibérie, la mort sociale. Demandez aux émigrés du bloc de l'Est installés en Occident ce qu'ils ressentent en traversant une université américaine en 2026. Ils reconnaissent l'odeur. Et voilà pourquoi le monde est en feu. Une civilisation a passé trente-cinq ans à enseigner à ses propres enfants qu'elle était le problème. Résultat : elle ne sait plus défendre ses frontières, transmettre son héritage, ni même nommer ses ennemis. Quand la présidente de Harvard, devant le Congrès, répond que condamner un appel au génocide « dépend du contexte », vous voyez le logiciel tourner en production. Et les prédateurs du dehors lisent cette faiblesse comme un livre ouvert : Moscou teste, Pékin patiente, l'islamisme avance dans les rues de nos capitales. Le feu extérieur n'est que la conséquence du désarmement intérieur. On ne brûle bien que les maisons qui se sont vidées de leurs défenseurs. Le Mur n'est pas tombé. Il s'est déplacé. Il ne sépare plus l'Est de l'Ouest : il passe désormais à l'intérieur de chaque institution occidentale, entre ceux qui construisent et ceux qui déconstruisent. La première guerre froide s'est gagnée avec des missiles et du PIB. La seconde se gagnera avec des écoles, des médias libres et des modèles d'IA. Celui qui écrit les valeurs dans les machines écrira le prochain 1989. Cette fois, ne nous trompons pas de victoire. Au travail.
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Richard Fairgrieve retweeted
254 years ago today, an 18-year-old tavern-keeper's son borrowed his friend's gun, shot a British naval officer in the stomach, and shouted "I have killed the rascal." Three years before Lexington and Concord. Some Rhode Islanders say THAT was the first shot of the American Revolution. It was June 9, 1772. The HMS Gaspee was a British customs schooner patrolling Narragansett Bay, and her commander, Lieutenant William Dudingston, had made himself the most hated man in Rhode Island. Every day, his crew boarded merchant ships without warning. Seized cargoes. Confiscated goods with no charges and no recourse. The crew had a financial incentive to collect as much as possible because they shared in the customs revenue. They insulted sailors to their faces. Even the Governor of Rhode Island had written to London complaining about him. Nobody in London cared. On the afternoon of June 9, Dudingston made a mistake. While chasing a small packet boat named the Hannah across the bay, the Gaspee ran aground on a sandbar off Warwick. She was stuck until the tide came in, well after midnight. The captain of the Hannah sailed straight to Providence and found John Brown, the wealthiest merchant in Rhode Island. Brown didn't waste a minute. He had eight longboats brought to the wharf, their oars wrapped in cloth so they wouldn't make a sound. Then he sent a town crier through the streets of Providence banging a drum, announcing that the Gaspee was grounded. Anyone who wanted to settle things with her should come to James Sabin's house by the water. More than 100 men showed up. Among them: a 19-year-old named Ephraim Bowen, who grabbed his father's gun and ammunition. His friend, 18-year-old Joseph Bucklin, a tavern-keeper's son with nothing to lose. On a moonless night, they rowed out in silence across the bay. When they reached the Gaspee, Dudingston leaned over the gunwale in his white shirt and demanded: "Who goes there?" Abraham Whipple, a Providence seafarer who was also somehow the sheriff of Kent County, answered him. "I am the sheriff of the county of Kent, G-d d-mn you. I have got a warrant to apprehend you, G-d d-mn you; so surrender, G-d d-mn you." Bucklin turned to Bowen and said: "Ephe, reach me your gun and I can kill that fellow." Bowen handed it over. Bucklin fired. Dudingston took a ball in the arm and lower abdomen and collapsed on the deck, convinced he was dying. The men swarmed aboard. The crew was captured, Dudingston was carried off the ship, and then they burned the Gaspee to the waterline. The British launched a full royal commission to find and prosecute the perpetrators. They couldn't get a single person in Rhode Island to testify against anyone. Not one. Nobody was ever charged. Lexington and Concord happened three years later. Paul Revere got a poem. Joseph Bucklin got a footnote. Most Americans have never heard his name.
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$NWBO - new trial for ovarian cancer: clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT…
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84 years ago today, a pilot running out of fuel made a decision that won the Pacific War. Most Americans have never heard his name. June 4, 1942. Six months after Pearl Harbor, Japan's navy is undefeated. Four of the carriers that burned Pearl, Akagi, Kaga, Soryu, and Hiryu, are steaming toward Midway to finish off the US Pacific Fleet. At 7:52 AM, Wade McClusky launches from USS Enterprise leading 32 Dauntless dive bombers. Here's the detail nobody mentions: McClusky is a fighter pilot. He'd been given the air group weeks earlier and had barely flown a dive bomber in combat. Now he's leading every SBD the Enterprise has at the most important target in the Pacific. 9:20 AM. He arrives at the intercept point where the Japanese fleet is supposed to be. Empty ocean. Nothing for miles. The Japanese had turned. Nobody knew where. And now McClusky owns the worst math problem in naval aviation: his fuel is bleeding away, and every minute he keeps searching, he condemns more of his own pilots to ditch in open water where nobody will find them. Doctrine is clear. Turn back. McClusky keeps going. He works a search pattern, squeezing miles out of dying fuel tanks. 9:55 AM. Far below, a single Japanese destroyer is cutting a white scar across the ocean at flank speed. It's the Arashi, racing to rejoin the fleet after depth-charging the American submarine Nautilus. Think about that. A failed sub attack is about to give away the entire Japanese navy. McClusky reads the wake like an arrow and follows it. 10:02 AM. The horizon fills with the entire Japanese strike force. Four carriers, their decks crammed with planes being refueled and rearmed. Fuel lines snaking everywhere. Bombs stacked in the open. And here's the miracle: the sky above them is empty. Minutes earlier, American torpedo squadrons had attacked at sea level and been annihilated. Torpedo 8 lost all 15 planes. One survivor, Ensign George Gay, watched what came next while hiding under his seat cushion in the water. Those doomed pilots dragged every Japanese fighter down to the waves. The door upstairs was wide open. 10:22 AM. McClusky pushes over from 14,500 feet. Both squadrons follow him down onto Kaga. It's actually a mistake, doctrine said split the targets, but Lt. Dick Best catches it mid-dive, pulls out with two wingmen, and goes after Akagi alone. His single bomb pierces the flight deck into the packed hangar. It's enough. By 10:28, Kaga, Akagi, and Soryu, the third hit simultaneously by Yorktown's bombers, are floating infernos. Six minutes. Three carriers that attacked Pearl Harbor, gone. Hiryu follows them to the bottom that evening. The cost of McClusky's gamble was real. Many Enterprise bombers never made it home, some shot down, others swallowed by the sea when their tanks ran dry. McClusky himself was jumped by two Zeros on the way out, took five bullets through his shoulder, and still flew his shot-up Dauntless back to the Enterprise. Admiral Nimitz said McClusky's decision "decided the fate of our carrier task force and our forces at Midway." Japan never won another major battle. One borrowed pilot. One destroyer's wake. One choice to keep flying when every gauge said go home.
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