meatbag version of a custom LLM ⚡️ lifelong learner ⚡️ physician assistant ⚡️ recovering journalist

Joined January 2009
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Replying to @logonaut
But just because lots of thoughtful, empathetic, responsible, kind-hearted people are scaling up their coordination game today doesn’t mean people on the other end of the human decency spectrum won’t figure out how to use the same coordination tools for purposes less noble.
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Tonya Harding School of International and Public Affairs
Karoline Leavitt: "Some of the previous leaders are now no longer on planet Earth because they lied to the United States and they strung us along in negotiations, and that was unacceptable to the president, which is why many of the previous leaders were killed"
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U.S. realizes it might have pulled a muscle with its imperial overreach Troops working remotely while they try to recover nytimes.com/2026/03/25/us/po…
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"pay more at the pump" is the new "buy war bonds" except we're the Axis responsiblestatecraft.org/th…
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❝Records show both men are from South Texas. ... Ochoa, who goes by Jesse, graduated from the University of Texas-Pan American [now known as @utrgv] with a degree in criminal justice, according to his ex-wife, Angelica Ochoa.❞
BREAKING: The two federal immigration agents who fired on Minneapolis protester Alex Pretti are identified in government records as Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa and Customs and Border Protection officer Raymundo Gutierrez. propublica.org/article/alex-…
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
Join my @CIPolicy colleagues @NegarMortazavi and @SinaToossi for this discussion, which could not be more timely as reports of an imminent U.S. attack on Iran circulate.
TODAY, IRAN LIVE Q&A: Join Iran experts to unpack the protests, potential US air strikes, Israeli intervention and more. @SinaToossi and @NegarMortazavi join @prem_thakker in a LIVE conversation – and they're taking audience questions! Register here: zeteo.com/p/iran-town-hall-3…
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
functional prototype complete. with the designer now for the rest of the experience
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
25 Nov 2025
alignment is a core crisis of the 21st century: individuals do what makes sense for them while systems spiral into outcomes that make no sense for anyone. open source gets underfunded, climate cooperation collapses, ai races accelerate, social media incentives melt our brains. different symptoms, same disease: misalignment. how do we align capital & labour? principle & agent? humans & ai? we keep trying to fix these problems with vibes, governance theater, or hero narratives. none of it shifts the underlying incentive landscape. and until incentives change, nothing changes. what if we actually had tools to rewrite incentives, to tilt coordination toward net-positive outcomes instead of runaway collapse? ethereum quietly cracked this open. programmable trust, programmable incentives, programmable coordination. a new substrate for alignment work. the @gitcoin 3.3 rainbowpaper is a (work in progress) attempt to map that frontier, to explore how new incentive systems might help us escape multipolar traps and build alignment at scale. it’s not finished. it’s barely beginning. but if you care about the question “how do we stop coordinated self-destruction?” or "how do we create alignment?", you might find something here:
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
waitlist: machines.cash builders: @alexanderchopan @ardaerturk @hennadios knowledge base: docs.fileverse.io/0xAE9bCa7C… contract address: 0x7F6F8bB1AA8206921e80Ab6aBf1ac5737E39Ab07 contracts: clanker.gitbook.io/clanker-d… treasury [safe]: 0xa4a910757414EEdc78A572CfBE75C9403a721Ce4 trading wallet [fees]:
0x3f0728d11aed94e166272dab266b6b617e94d6fc

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once you’ve made you first dollar on the internet, there’s no going back. @earnfirstdollar coming soon :)
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👀
Coming Soon... interacting with this tweet might have some benefits
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I have officially given up on future-proofing my life. A thread 🧵 1/22
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Texas Rio Grande Valley churches targeted for foreign influence operation by Israeli government INCLUDES: •Baptist Temple Church (McAllen) •Palm Valley Church (Mission) •International Christian Center (Brownsville) @MyRGVNews @RGVBizJournal @ProgressTimes
4 Oct 2025
Holy Shit Guys! I just put all the events of the Influencer campaign that I can find on a timeline that I’ll post tomorrow morning (gotta do a double check) but WTF! For now, if u live in these states & go to church, you’re getting geofenced, tracked by your phone & targeted with Israel ads: - California - Arizona - Nevada - Colorado - All Christian Colleges They called it the “largest Geofencing & targeted Christian Digital Campaign ever”
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❝Imagine the CEO of Philip Morris in the 1960s saying: good news, we’ve added filters to the cigarettes, so now you can feel comfortable giving them to your toddler. Would you buy that line?❞
If you let your child consume content on Sora - OpenAI’s shiny new TikTok clone - or whatever “Vibes” slopoff Meta is peddling this week - you are a bad parent. These “services” offer an unending feed of AI generated videos - garbage, all the way down - intended to remove the already tenuous connection between short form video and reality, in pursuit of the scum coated bottom of the media consumption barrel. There’s no wiggle room here. No shades of gray. If you let your kids use either of these apps, you’ve failed the most basic test of guardianship: protecting the undeveloped mind of a child from a machine designed to liquefy attention and hardwire addiction. That might sound harsh. We’ve developed an instinct to recoil when someone draws an unambiguous moral line in an age of perpetual and near-crippling “nuance.” Everyone wants to argue about the gradations: “But what if I monitor it closely?” “What if my kid only uses it for fifteen minutes a day?” “What if I use it with them?” Stop. Do you monitor fentanyl use in fifteen-minute increments? Do you sit down with your kid and say, ‘Sweetheart, only one puff of the vape before bed’? No? Then why are you doing the same with the digital equivalent? These apps are not neutral. They are not tools that can be molded by “responsible” use. They are engineered, down to the sub-second, to bypass executive function and hijack dopamine loops. OpenAI’s press release practically admitted it: they bragged that Sora will use your location, your chat history, your activity, your every flick of the thumb, to serve up the next hit. They are telling you outright: we are building a slot machine that knows you better than you know yourself. And parents will still line up to let their twelve-year-olds (and younger) walk into the casino unsupervised. I have no patience anymore for the language of “parental controls.” The same companies that perfected infinite scroll are the ones offering you toggles and filters as if that absolves them. Imagine the CEO of Philip Morris in the 1960s saying: good news, we’ve added filters to the cigarettes, so now you can feel comfortable giving them to your toddler. Would you buy that line? Parents are buying it now, and worse, congratulating themselves for “engaged” parenting because they bothered to open the settings menu. When I first wrote about the dangers of TikTok and got emails from readers saying I was exaggerating, that it was no different than the TV their generation grew up with. That was nonsense then, and it’s nonsense now. The television sat in the living room. It didn’t study your micro-reactions in real time and feed them into a neural net optimized to hold your eyes for thirty more minutes. TV was passive. These new platforms are predatory. They learn, they adjust, they adapt. Sora might “entertain” your child - but it’ll do much worse, by reprogramming them. And yes, I’ll use that word: reprogramming. Anyone who has watched a child scroll knows the vacant look, the slack jaw, the flicker of a smile that’s gone before it registers. Try to pull them away mid-feed and you’ll see the withdrawal symptoms. How much worse does that become when the content is a feed of the lowest possible form of digital media ever conceived by the human mind: AI slop that has not been conceived by the human mind. I grew up in a home with books stacked on every table, spines cracked, pages dog-eared. Reading was just what you did. The default state of childhood was // is boredom, and out of boredom comes imagination. What happens when boredom is obliterated? When every microsecond can be filled with a synthetic video that’s been tested against millions of other videos to maximize its grip? You don’t get imagination. You don’t get curiosity. You don’t get intelligence. You don’t get critical thinking. You don’t even get a sign of life. You get a “human” being conditioned to fear silence, to recoil from stillness and to mistake stimulation for meaning. I anticipate the pushback: you’re blaming parents when the real culprits are corporations. But both are true. Yes, OpenAI and Meta are guilty. They know exactly what they’re building. But parents still have the power to say no. You can delete the app. You can block the download. You can endure the tantrum. And if you don’t - then yes, you are complicit. People like to retreat to relativism: “Every generation thinks the next one’s media will rot the brain.” Socrates worried about writing, after all. Isn’t this the same? Writing didn’t reduce human connection to a string of ten-second simulations. Writing didn’t keep children up at 2 a.m. with dilated pupils and sweaty palms. The Sora feed will. I don’t expect parents to throw their smartphones into the ocean. I don’t expect children to live like monks. But if we can’t draw a bright red line at an AI-generated infinite video slot machine, then what line will we draw? Are we really so cowardly that we can’t endure a few weeks of sulking in exchange for preserving our kids’ sanity? Is it truly easier to outsource our authority to an algorithm than to hold the line as a parent? Some folks are already saying I’m overreacting. That I should trust the “marketplace.” That the kids will turn out fine, just like we turned out fine with Nintendo and cable. But what if they don’t? What if this time the experiment is different? What if the stakes are higher, the tools sharper, the prey younger? If we wait for the data to come in, it will already be too late. Addiction doesn’t leave long enough control groups. We’re already seeing the results of a generation of isolated, memified, disconnected, unsocial teenagers becoming adults with access to firearms. We’re already seeing the brain rot of TikTok and short form video manifest in nihilism from the kitchen table to the class room to the voting booth. If you honestly belief an always on, endless pipeline of inhuman content won’t make that worse, I have nothing to say to you. Nor would I wish to keep your company long enough to say it. Here’s the line, and as far as I’m concerned, it’s not up for debate: if you let your child consume content on Sora, you are failing them. They don’t need your friendship. They don’t need you to be the “cool” parent with the latest app. They need you to be the barrier, the wall, the force that protects them from the machines they cannot yet resist. You wouldn’t let them play Russian roulette with a revolver. Don’t let them play it with their brains. History will not look kindly on this era. It will wonder how we let our children’s minds become the raw material for machine learning experiments. It will wonder why we defended our kids’ right to be exploited rather than defending their right to grow up unharmed by algorithmic manipulation. I don’t want to be on the wrong side of that judgment. Neither should you. Don’t rationalize it. Don’t negotiate with it. Don’t turn the choice into a think-piece debate. Just say no. And if your child screams at you, fine. Better they scream at you now than spend their adulthood unable to sit in silence, unable to read a book, unable to hold a single thought of their own. That’s the line, and that’s the responsibility. Cross it, and you are no longer parenting. You are volunteering your child for the great experiment; don’t be surprised when you discover what they become. Trust me when I tell you: it won’t be what you hoped.
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
I don't network. I write. I’ve always been suspicious of the industry dogma that tells us success in tech is mostly about who you know. The idea is repeated so often it starts to feel more like moral instruction. Go to the dinners. Get in the right Slack channels. Find the insider who can whisper you through the door. I’ve tried a few of these rituals, and I always leave feeling like I’ve delivered a scenery-chewing disaster in an off-off-off-off-off Broadway play I wouldn’t force on my worst enemies. Everyone delivers their lines about disruption and collaboration, and everyone applauds each other’s performance. But a performance is all it is. I never built much through those rooms. The “right” What changed my life was the slower, and - to me - more honest act of writing. When I write, I’m forced to wrestle with my own thinking. I can’t hide behind buzzwords or charm. I have to put the words down, line after line, until I’ve said something that holds up on its own. That discipline created more opportunities than any networking dinner ever has. An essay, after all, can outlast a thousand handshakes. Tech culture has a near-religious faith in serendipity. People tell stories about chance introductions leading to unicorns and hallway conversations sparking billion-dollar companies. And no doubt, it happens. Not to me, not to you, to someone. But I wonder how many brilliant ideas never see daylight because their creators are too busy chasing rooms, too busy performing for gatekeepers. The chase itself becomes a distraction. You become known less for what you’ve built and more for how well you circulate. Writing is its own form of networking, only scalable. You put your ideas in public, and the right people find you. Why do so many of us resist this? Why do we find it easier to make the rounds at a mixer than to sit alone at a desk and write? Maybe because writing exposes us. A blank page has no patience for vagueness; it forces you to know what you mean. We’re so often rewarded for sounding confident, even when our ideas are half-baked. Writing strips that shield away. You have to be coherent, or you have nothing. That’s hard. It’s easier to put on a good face at an afterparty. But hard things are often the ones worth doing. Writing has given me rooms I couldn’t have entered otherwise. My words circulate in spaces where I am absent. They argue for me, persuade for me, provoke on my behalf etc. And unlike a conversation at a bar, they persist. They can be returned to, challenged, reinterpreted. Writing isn’t opposed to networking at all. It’s networking’s more honest sibling. One is presence; the other is permanence. I’m not naive. I know that in tech, relationships do matter. Companies are built by groups, not individuals. But I’ve come to believe the best relationships grow out of ideas, not transactions. When someone finds me through my writing, the conversation begins on different ground. We’re not trading business cards, we’re engaging in thought. And that makes for a stronger foundation. When I hear the familiar refrain - your network is your net worth - I find myself shrugging. A network can disappear overnight. Words endure. Arguments echo. Clarity travels. For me, writing has become the only form of networking that feels real. The rest is a plague on my time and my dignity. And I’d rather spend my time at the desk, trying to get one more sentence right.
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I just backed Macabre Valley #1 by @zackquaintance on @kickstarter! Zack and I worked together at 𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙈𝙤𝙣𝙞𝙩𝙤𝙧 newspaper in McAllen, Texas, many moons ago. I'm so stoked to check out his new grindhouse Texas horror comic based on his time there. kickstarter.com/projects/zac…
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
Writers spend years worrying about the wrong thing. They obsess over finding the perfect word. They agonize over blank pages. They buy notebooks and apps and courses about "unlocking creativity." All of this misses the point. 🧵 1/7
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logonaut.eth (is on Farcaster) retweeted
25 Aug 2025
We’re launching the very first Causes Quadratic Funding Round! And the spotlight is on YOU → the Cause Creators. 🌍 This is your chance to: ✨ Curate 5–50 verified projects under one powerful mission ✨ Rally a community around your vision ✨ Earn 3% of every donation in $GIV ✨ See your Cause amplified with quadratic funding Matching pool: $20,000 💜Sponsored by @PublicNouns @TheSandboxDAO @ShapeShift 👉 Apply with your Cause now: giveth.typeform.com/causesqf
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