Hello, my name is Ding. Seriously! I'm a jolly male wasp with many questions for the people on Twitter.

Joined March 2020
5 Photos and videos
Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
😮 Yet ANOTHER great find from Wifey 🔥 Finding the information you need to make good decisions is dependent upon knowing WHERE to look… 👀 Here are a few places TO look 👇🏽 How many of these did you know about already❓
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
𝑰 𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒆 >$7.3𝑴 𝑷𝑹𝑶𝑭𝑻𝑰𝑺 𝒔𝒊𝒏𝒄𝒆 2024 𝒔𝒆𝒍𝒍𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝒅𝒊𝒈𝒊𝒕𝒂𝒍 𝒑𝒓𝒐𝒅𝒖𝒄𝒕𝒔 Here's how in 35 steps: 1. Create a new Twitter/X account (takes 5 sec). 2. Add PFP and banner using AI tools like Midjourney or Leonardo (2 min). 3. Write a 160-character bio with your niche and authority (30 sec). 4. Add a Notion or Typeform link for lead capture (1 min). 5. Pin a post with a free guide CTA (“Comment ‘guide’ for free resource”) — boosts engagement 10x. 6. Connect TweetHunter or Typefully for automated posting (2 min). 7. Create a Google Sheet or Notion CRM to track every comment → lead. 8. Pick a profitable niche: ecom, AI tools, sales, or agency growth. 9. Find top 3 influencers with over 100K followers in that niche (10 sec each). 10. Scrape their top 100 tweets each (300 total). 11. Feed them into ChatGPT or Claude: “Rewrite these into 500 viral-style tweets.” 12. Now you have 300–500 tweets ready to post for 30 days. 13. Use TweetHunter’s scheduler to auto-post 10 per day. 14. That’s 3,000 tweets per month, leading to 1M–5M monthly impressions minimum. 15. Add reply automation for keywords like “guide,” “ebook,” or “how.” 16. Automatically DM users your free guide link via Zapier (100–500/day). 17. Your free guide acts as the magnet → collects emails, Telegram, and SMS. 18. Each 1M views equals roughly 1,000 comments → 600 opt-ins → 60 hot leads. 19. Use Zapier to auto-send their emails to ConvertKit or ActiveCampaign. 20. Send a 3-email sequence promoting your paid course or mentorship. 21. Expect 20–30% open rate and 5–10% click rate. 22. At this point, about 400 people visit your checkout page per month. 23. Use ChatGPT or Gemini to outline 5 eBooks (200 pages each) in under 10 minutes. 24. Use Notion → export → PDF, or Canva eBook templates for visuals. 25. Each book can be completed in 30–40 minutes, all AI-assisted. 26. Now you have a $20,000 value library of digital assets. 27. Bundle them into a $300–$500 digital course or “starter pack.” 28. Or sell each individually for $49–$99, depending on your upsell ladder. 29. Connect your Stripe and PayPal accounts to handle global payments. 30. Use Whop or Skool for delivery and community backend. 31. Create 2–3 upsells (for example, $997 mentorship, $2K partner program). 32. If 20 out of 400 buyers purchase at $500, that’s $10,000 per month baseline. 33. Scale to 10 accounts → $100K per month, all automated. 34. Hire setters and closers to handle high-ticket DMs (4–10% conversion). 35. Reinvest profits into more accounts and paid promo to compound 10x growth. - Within 3 months u reach $10K/month. - Within 6 months u reach $100K/month. - Within 12 months u surpass $3.5M annualized. All with zero ad spend, AI-written content, and 100% automation. If my 17 yr old student with no business experience can do $78K per month, then so can you. Note that I made $600K in last 2 months. obviously there is more details to this biz so... if u want the full 5 module bootcamp AND a 65 page PDF blueprint on how I built this business, 𝐂𝐎𝐌𝐌𝐄𝐍𝐓 << 𝐏𝐃𝐅 >> 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐢'𝐥𝐥 𝐬𝐞𝐧𝐝 𝐢𝐭 Must be following Retweet to receive the guide.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
If I launched an HVAC company tomorrow, here’s how I’d take it from $0 to $100K/month with SEO in 90 days:
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
A message from a Kindergarten teacher: After forty years in the classroom, my career ended with one small sentence from a six-year-old: “My dad says people like you don’t matter anymore.” No sneer. No malice. Just quiet honesty — the kind that cuts deeper because it’s innocent. He blinked, then added, “You don’t even have a TikTok.” My name is Mrs. Clara Holt, and for four decades, I taught kindergarten in a small Denver suburb. Today, I stacked the last box on my desk and locked the door behind me. When I started teaching in the early 1980s, it felt like a promise — a shared belief that what we did mattered. We weren’t rich, but we were valued. Parents brought warm cookies to parent nights. Kids gave you handmade cards with hearts that didn’t quite line up. Watching a child sound out their first sentence felt like magic. But that world slowly slipped away. The job I once knew has been replaced by exhaustion, red tape, and a kind of loneliness I can’t quite describe. My evenings used to be filled with construction paper, glitter, and glue sticks. Now they’re spent filling out digital reports to protect myself from angry emails or lawsuits. I’ve been yelled at by parents in front of twenty-five children — one filming me with his phone while I tried to calm another child mid-meltdown. And the kids… they’ve changed too. Not by choice. They arrive tired, anxious, overstimulated. Their tiny fingers know how to swipe a screen before they can hold a crayon. Some can’t make eye contact or wait in line. We’re expected to fix all of it — to patch the gaps, heal the trauma, teach the curriculum, and document every move — in six hours a day, with resources that barely fill a drawer. The little reading corner I once built, full of soft beanbags and paper stars, was replaced by data charts and “learning metrics.” A young principal once told me, “Clara, maybe you’re too nurturing. The district wants measurable results.” As if kindness were a weakness. Still, I stayed. Because of the small, holy moments that no spreadsheet could measure — a whisper of, “You remind me of my grandma.” a shaky note that read, “I feel safe here.” a quiet boy finally meeting my eyes and saying, “I read the whole page.” Those tiny sparks were my reason to keep showing up. But this last year broke something in me. The aggression grew sharper. The laughter in the staff room turned to silence. The light went out of so many eyes. I watched brilliant teachers — my friends — vanish under the weight of burnout, their joy replaced by survival. I felt myself fading too, like chalk on a board that’s been wiped one too many times. So today, I began my goodbye. I pulled faded art off the walls and tucked thirty years of handmade cards into a single box. In the back of a drawer, I found a letter from a student from 1998: “Thank you for loving me when I was hard to love.” I sat on the floor and cried. No party. No applause. Just a handshake from a young principal who called me “Ma’am” while checking his notifications. I left my rocking chair behind, and my sticker box too. What I carried with me were the memories — the faces of hundreds of children who once trusted me enough to reach out their hands and learn. That can’t be uploaded. It can’t be measured. It can’t be replaced. I miss when teachers were partners, not targets. When parents and educators worked side by side, not in opposition. When schools cared more about wonder than numbers. So if you know a teacher — any teacher — thank them. Not with a mug or a gift card, but with your words. With your respect. With your understanding that behind every test score is a heart that cared enough to try. Because in a world that often overlooks them, teachers are the ones who never forget our children.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
1969 video of G. Edward-Griffin
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
This will blow your mind This is what we are facing
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
5 Jan 2025
The UK will throw you in prison if you retweet this video of Elon and Joe Rogan exposing the UK… “Several Thousand people in the UK have been given prison sentences for social media posts” So what ever you do, DO NOT RETWEET IT
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
A Biopsy Is Almost A Guarantee Of Cancer Metastasis & Acceleration. Dr Thomas Lodi, MD The Problem With The Biopsy Is This. When A Cancer Tumor Is Growing, The Body Contains it Within A Fibrin Sheath. The Minute That Sheath Is Broken, By The Puncture Needle Of A Biopsy, The Cancer Metastasizes & Spreads. You Break That Seal That Kept It Contained & Now Cancer Is Unleashed. The Body Does Everything It Can Do To Isolate The Cancerous Tumor From Harming The Rest Of The Body. Disturbing The Fully Intact Tumor Has Deadly Consequences. Forcing A Histo-Pathological Diagnosis instead of non invasive alternative cancer diagnostic testing is criminal & harmful. It's part of the sales technique set up by Big Pharma. That diagnosis procedure justifies those particular FDA approved cancer drugs, paid for & contracted by health insurance conglomerates & Doctors claim it's the right thing & the only thing to do. What Doctors aren't telling you: *⃣ Research shows these drugs almost guarantee metastasis. *⃣ If you did a biopsy &/or surgery you're going to get metastasis. *⃣ If you do high dose chemotherapy you'll get metastasis. *⃣ If you do radiation you'll get metastasis. They're Giving You A Short Term Reduction Of The Primary, Achieving Clinical False Remission & In 9 Months The Cancer Returns. A holistic Oncologist will utilize non invasive diagnostic testing using CT Scans, MRI, Bloodwork Cancer Biomarkers & Thermography. There are many ways to diagnose without the risk of spread & acceleration. There are ways to prevent & treat cancer without the risk & harm of Chemotherapy & Radiation. 👇Needle Biopsy Accelerates Breast Cancer👇 sciencedirect.com/science/ar… 👇Seeding Tumor Cells Into Metastasis👇 pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/article… 👇Cancer Protocol: Keto/Fasting/Ivermectin👇 isom.ca/article/targeting-th… Video: @incomeparent
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
How to spot a Psyop- a very good listen! This guy was trained in psychological operations and knows what he's talking about.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
Watch this video to be completely blown away on parasites and cancer. Another "conspiracy theory" that is true, go figure. Here German oncologists prove cancer is caused by parasites. They cut open tumors and show you the parasite. Can't get anymore clear than this. Do a parasite cleanse people. @BrockRiddickIFB
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
12 Nov 2024
Current NPR CEO Katherine Maher says that during her time leading Wikipedia, she abandoned a "free and open" internet, because this led to the platform to recapitulating a "white male Westernized construct".
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
RFK JR: “Pediatricians who vaccinate 80-85% of the kids in their office, get these giant bonuses...And that's why they throw you out of the office if you fight back…You'll lose them their bonuses.”

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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
If you are voting for Kamala Harris because you fear Donald Trump would be a ‘fascist’ dictator, educate yourself. Here is a handy chart that reveals that Democrats have much more in common with fascists than Donald Trump. It’s not really even close.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
1 Sep 2024
Interesting observation
Also known as the Reich effect.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
Stage 4 colon, liver and lung cancer, given 6 months to live but still alive and “doing better than ever”. Regimen included. I like this but add chlorine dioxide and enemas.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
1 Aug 2024
Black women who watched Trump being treated so rudely by a black woman have more respect for Trump today.

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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
Covid-19 was the biggest scam in history
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
🚨💉This child suffered fully blown autism by age 3 - by age 6 he was completely free of autistic traits. How? His parents, through detoxing, removed the heavy metals in his blood acquired through immunisation.
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Sheldon Doghouse retweeted
7 Mar 2024
Every parent should read this
Just finished this book - Bad Therapy by @AbigailShrier This is one of the most eye-opening books I've ever read. It's a must read for any parent, any teacher, and should be required reading for any school administrator as well. The book dives into trying to figure out why kids are having so many mental health problems, when there are so many resources devoted to improving mental health outcomes. Anxiety, depression, suicide, etc are all higher than they've ever been with kids, even though their lives are arguably better than ever before. It just doesn't make sense. A few key takeaways from the book: A constant attention on how kids are "feeling" or "thinking" is causing negative outcomes. Constantly ruminating on your emotions and how you feel negatively impacts your mental health. If all you do is focus on your emotions, you are destined to be anxious or depressed. We incessantly ask kids how they're feeling, if they're happy, how their mental health is, etc, and this is creating kids who think they're fragile instead of resilient. Trying to solve every problem for kids has caused a generation who can't do anything for themselves. We (Gen X) were told to "suck it up" or "you'll live" or "rub some dirt on it" all the time. Many of us came to the conclusion this is "bad parenting" because our feelings were neglected, and we vowed not to do this to our own children. Because of that, kids immediately over-dramatize everything that happens to them, making mountains out of molehills, and thinking the world must revolve around their emotions and feelings. You develop confidence and strong mental health by doing things, not by thinking or via therapy. You can't think your way out of anxiety. You don't gain confidence by analysis of your thoughts or mental health issues. You gain confidence and eliminate anxiety by doing gradually more difficult tasks, excelling at them, and realizing you are a competent, capable person. The non-stop attention therapy gives to these small, common emotions we all feel blows them out of proportion to their seriousness (not talking about genuine disorders here, just normal anxieties that millions of people go to therapy to try to avoid). One of the best ways to decrease your happiness is to chase it. Our society constantly tells kids they should be "happy" and asks them if they are. Happiness isn't a state you should be in 24/7. That's not realistic. Joy and bliss aren't permanent states - they are fleeting. Contentment, stillness, and being even-keeled are much better goals to aim for mentally. The happiest, most well adjusted kids come from families with loving parents that have strict rules for the household. This one really set off the confirmation bias in me... I feel really blessed we have 2 well adjusted middle school kids who do great in school, are very respectful and well mannered, and we barely even need to parent them. But for years, we were very strict with them. Bedtimes, family rules, how we do things, etc. The in-laws and lots of friends thought we were totalitarian. In reality, we just had high standards. And it's really paying off right now. I found it really interesting that strict rules equals happy kids. Makes sense, though, as kids need to know what their boundaries are. Constantly surveying school-age kids about their mental health causes more issues than it solves. Mental health resources is big money. Districts need to validate all the resources allocated towards mental health, and they often do that via surveys. Asking kids non-stop questions like: - Have you thought about self harm? - Have you thought about suicide? - Have you been so anxious you can't get out of bed? Etc, etc puts into their heads the idea that themselves, or many of their peers are broken and cannot function properly in the real world. It normalizes situations that would be incredibly rare at any other time in history. There's a lot of other takeaways, too, but I'll stop there. It's a fantastic book. Go pick it up and read it. This isn't an affiliate thing or a promotion thing at all. I just really enjoyed it, and it will further shape the way I parent moving forward.
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