Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
John Reyes retweeted
Replying to @ABC7
We went through this same definition of "violent felony" when California started unloading prisons. It doesn't include statutory rape, date rape, DUIs, burglary, drug dealing, etc. They use "violent felony conviction" rather than "committed a crime" to make the number look small.
5
22
253
1,328
Replying to @steven_1236
Just know I'll be slipping my cock into your ass and unloading
1
1
8
Replying to @Jassmini2
A tired woman who probably takes care of her children and is doing washing bathing kids and feeding them then taking them loading them in the car to food shop,then at home unloading the bags of food,then trying to get her kids to nap so she can cook dinner for hubby and kids.
1
4
Replying to @ChaosTV
Another successful day from a FA faggot auditor. Calling the cops after harassing people with a camera then unloading a can of mace in their face when they move the camera from their face
158
Replying to @h_e_p_56 @PeteKadar
I still train. I’m 75. Not long anymore and not hard. When I went through basic in ‘70 it was different, harder. When the war was over in ‘75, my job in AMMO was done. Sat in a munitions control room and directed loading and unloading training sorties till discharge. Did 8.
1
1
4
Thats racist as fuck, dude ignored the sketchy ass unloading and clear signs of burglary and went straight to "theres black people in the video it must be stolen"
6
Ill wait for the sell off once insiders can start selling its 4400 employees gonna be unloading thousands of shares
1
3
Stephen Mitchell retweeted
When companies start unloading risk onto public markets as a financier of last resort, the music is about to stop. " Up until now, private money and free cash flow carried the burden, and the stock market enjoyed the ride. Not anymore... Another transformative news came from SoftBank. It has a large position in OpenAI that given the most recent valuation, is valued at $60 billion. So it tried to get a loan for $10 billion to refinance some of its $40bn debt wall coming. Against it, it tried to pledge its OpenAI position as collateral. But it could not get a $10 billion loan, so it reduced its ask to $6 billion. And it can't get that amount either for reasons that are unknown. What that tells us is that banks are perfectly willing to take SpaceX, OpenAI et al public at insane valuations and a nice fee calculated on that insane valuation, but they are NOT willing to put their own balance sheets on the line for that exact same valuation. After all, insane valuations are for retail investors, not the banks that will take them public."
There are plenty of warning signs In 2025, Google spent $80 billion on AI CapEx, which it funded mostly from its enormous cash flow plus a bit of debt. In 2026, Google will spend $180 billion to $190 billion on AI CapEx, and that is too much for its cash flow. There are also stories that Meta and Microsoft will be doing similar transactions soon. This all goes to show that certain non-capital-intensive large software companies have now become capital-intensive hardware companies. AI capex contributes to GDP growth. All good. However, what has changed in 2026 is that the equity markets is now being asked to fund a significant chunk of this annual investment. Up until now, private money and free cash flow carried the burden, and the stock market enjoyed the ride. Not anymore. It's one thing to own AI stocks when the AI companies are footing the bill for the CapEx. It's another story to own these stocks when companies are raising capital from public shareholders and dilute them while valued at AI mania levels. Another transformative news came from SoftBank. It has a large position in OpenAI that given the most recent valuation, is valued at $60 billion. So it tried to get a loan for $10 billion to refinance some of its $40bn debt wall coming. Against it, it tried to pledge its OpenAI position as collateral. But it could not get a $10 billion loan, so it reduced its ask to $6 billion. And it can't get that amount either for reasons that are unknown. What that tells us is that banks are perfectly willing to take SpaceX, OpenAI et al public at insane valuations and a nice fee calculated on that insane valuation, but they are NOT willing to put their own balance sheets on the line for that exact same valuation. After all, insane valuations are for retail investors, not the banks that will take them public.
1
6
71
Replying to @thenotorious617
Good luck on unloading that contract! His extension kicks in this upcoming year!
1
8
Corruption in Kenya enabled them disguise themselves as residents of Mandera while unloading stolen money from Somalia and Minnesota to Nairobi
1
11
Replying to @MattGeorgeSAC
Unloading Fox was a good decision!
2
Replying to @DemocraticWins
Just a FYI: The past few weeks, I have done some reading about the US AI activity. It seems that though AI has many positive uses, the rich owners are ignoring that stuff and unloading all of the things that are not so good for citizens just top make a buck.
3
Replying to @FreddyLA7
Will be unloading the account on Germany today. Only because of the vibes this guy brings
1
236
Replying to @mikeachimugu01
A possible occurrence in any stretched 737 variant if unloading is improperly done , offloading both front passenger and front cargo hold and the same time will cause such a fulcrum effect
5
First win red unloading? Lewis bhai?
35
A flight arrived from Amsterdam and after a perfect @KLM flight the passengers were awarded by the @TorontoPearson with a 3 HOUR wait for their luggage. When you consider the passenger flow though Pearson, one can expect some issues - normal. On this flight, they had issues unloading the luggage containers and then the luggage carousel broke, stranding their luggage in the system. 3 HOURS!!! You would think that they would have a contingency plan to re- route to another carousel - they did at the 3 hour mark. There were many staff in vests there watching/ doing nothing - maybe help move the luggage to another belt? We understand that sh*t happens but a professional organization is usually quick to address an issue and provide alternatives. Like the Japanese rail transportation. If late apologize, fix quickly and not leave passengers stranded. @TorontoPearson needs to analyze their procedures re disruptive issues and pick up the slack. And for the record, the airlines do not handle the luggage - private contractors do. You know, the ones switching your luggage tag to distribute drugs. Maybe spend less time doing that and more time resolving luggage delay issues. That makes for happy customers….
1
2
5
86