Alarick retweetet
Alarick
670 posts

Alarick retweetet

If the Algorithm shows you my creative work, kindly support by sharing
Lammie_Art@Lammie_Art01
Not to brag but I made this A repost will be appreciated
English
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet

Dario is wrong.
He knows absolutely nothing about the effects of technological revolutions on the labor market.
Don't listen to him, Sam, Yoshua, Geoff, or me on this topic.
Listen to economists who have spent their career studying this, like @Ph_Aghion , @erikbryn , @DAcemogluMIT , @amcafee , @davidautor
TFTC@TFTC21
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei: “50% of all tech jobs, entry-level lawyers, consultants, and finance professionals will be completely wiped out within 1–5 years.”
English
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet

#Chronicle: While Cameroon Watches the Buzz, Power Is Rewriting the Rules of the Game!
Every day in Cameroon now seems to follow a strange hierarchy of attention. While major political decisions quietly reshape the country’s institutional future, public opinion is consumed by fleeting controversies. The alleged infidelity of Kang Quintus sets timelines on fire, the clash between Himra, Tenor and Kocee dominates conversations, and social media runs at full speed. Meanwhile, the Republic moves forward… without its citizens.
Far from the digital noise, however, decisions with serious consequences are being prepared in Yaoundé. The government is preparing to modify the rules governing the extension of the mandates of municipal and parliamentary councillors, opening the door to potentially unlimited extensions. Officials whose mandates should have ended in 2025 remain in office today solely by presidential decision. Tomorrow, what was once an exception could become the norm.
The issue is no longer merely legal; it is fundamentally democratic. Can a nation remain vibrant when its people look away at the very moment the balance of power is being redefined? While public debate focuses on relationship scandals and musical rivalries, other decisions pass almost unnoticed: new customs clearance requirements for phones imported from abroad, controversial electoral reforms, and the gradual restructuring of local representation mechanisms.
The most alarming aspect is not the action of those in power (every government naturally seeks longevity) but the collective silence that accompanies it. Indifference itself becomes a political force. A democracy does not erode only through government decisions; it weakens when citizens stop watching those who govern them.
Cameroon does not lack intelligence or an engaged youth. What is missing today is a collective ability to distinguish between what is essential and what is trivial. A country is never lost in a single day; it is lost slowly, distraction after distraction, buzz after buzz, while irreversible decisions are made far from public scrutiny.
GN
#MMINews


English
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet
Alarick retweetet













