Jason

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Jason

Jason

@JasonMatozzo

Connecticut, USA Beigetreten Kasım 2022
3K Folgt934 Follower
Matthew
Matthew@GoodTexture·
guess I will be the guinea pig with this glass cooker
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Jason
Jason@JasonMatozzo·
@Realdevinhaney This narrative is getting boring, boxing fans aren’t as ignorant as you believe
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Jason
Jason@JasonMatozzo·
@ShakurStevenson translation: I want as much money as possible without having to fight any real competition, but I want to make it look as if I am fighting the best as long as the majority of fans don’t catch on
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Shakur Stevenson
Shakur Stevenson@ShakurStevenson·
I want this shit so bad
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Andrea Bosoni
Andrea Bosoni@theandreboso·
Not sure what’s happening with Claude but since yesterday I’ve been hitting my usage limits with just a few prompts. Until a few days ago the same prompts would have consumed maybe 5% of the limits (I’m on the Pro plan). I hope this is a bug and not the new normal because this is absolutely unusable.
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Murray Hill Guy
Murray Hill Guy@MurrayHillGuy1·
Alcohol literally makes you ugly… I drank alcohol last night for the first time in a month and now I am fat, inflamed and ugly I felt ugly too btw Alcohol should be illegal
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
This where we are. The plan worked.
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Jason
Jason@JasonMatozzo·
@SignUp4KOs He’ll just hug you all 12 rounds
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Rolly 🤍
Rolly 🤍@SignUp4KOs·
Devin has no chin. Him and his daddy know it.
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Jordan Crowder
Jordan Crowder@digijordan·
The White House today had a @Figure_robot explain to the world that it will soon be replacing teachers… And it will. It will also replace surgeons, lawyers, pilots, truck drivers, police officers, soldiers and basically every other job. And believe it or not…this is good.
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Murray Hill Guy
Murray Hill Guy@MurrayHillGuy1·
Typical timeline of the American normie: • Varsity athlete in HS (peaked at 17) • Big Ten/SEC school, blacked out Thurs–Sat • Moves to a “fun” city for 3–4 years to continue college lifestyle • Slowly becomes a slave to a normie desk job • Settles for a beautiful mid at 31 because “it’s time” • Promoted a few times, still checks Slack at 9pm • Buys a house 45 min outside the city in the suburbs • Gains 30 lbs and calls it a “dad bod” • Develops a concerning addiction to gardening/lawn care and Costco runs • Sees friends 3x a year if lucky • 2 family vacations a year (one beach, one obligatory holiday) • Pops out a kid to run the exact same script is this the dream or did we all just agree to it?
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Jason retweetet
Fractal Water Vortex Magnetic Systems
Your water has a memory—and city pipes are making it forget. 🌀🔓 The Ultra Imploder uses biophysics-based technology to restore your water’s natural structure. By mimicking nature’s vortex, it transforms dead tap water into a high-energy source for peak culinary and garden vitality. Restore the "DNA" of your hydration. 🧬💧 See the science: fractalwater.com/catalog/ultra-… #StructuredWater #VortexPhysics #Biohacking #WaterTech #FractalWater
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Jason retweetet
Fractal Water Vortex Magnetic Systems
Stop feeding your garden "dead" water. 🌿💧 The secret to a 30% increase in biomass isn't a new fertilizer—it’s the molecular structure of your water. 🧬 The Ultra Imploder uses vortex and magnetic technology to reduce surface tension, making water more bioavailable at the cellular level. It delivers the exact energy profile plants need to thrive. Better hydration = Bigger yields. 📈 Upgrade your garden’s biology: fractalwater.com/catalog/ultra-… #RegenerativeAg #Biohacking #GardenHacks #FractalWater #AgTech #StructuredWater
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Jason
Jason@JasonMatozzo·
@alecttrona wore mine today, too cold for it though
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Jason
Jason@JasonMatozzo·
**Eggs and bacon (as the iconic American breakfast pairing) became widely popular in the 1920s—*after* Kellogg's cereal was introduced and had already gained traction.**3 Before the 1920s, most Americans typically ate light breakfasts (e.g., toast, coffee, or orange juice). Bacon was more often a dinner or general-purpose food, and while eggs had long been a morning option for some, the specific hearty combo of **bacon and eggs** was not a standard or heavily marketed breakfast staple.9 The shift happened thanks to a clever public relations campaign. In the early 1920s, the Beech-Nut Packing Company (a major bacon producer) hired Edward Bernays (often called the "father of public relations" and nephew of Sigmund Freud). To boost slumping bacon sales, Bernays consulted physicians and got about 4,500 of them to agree that a "hearty" protein-rich breakfast (specifically bacon and eggs) was healthier than a light one for energy and well-being. He then publicized this "survey" with nationwide newspaper headlines like "4,500 Physicians Urge Heavy Breakfast to Improve Health of American People." Bacon sales soared, hotels and restaurants adopted the pairing, and it quickly became the "All-American Breakfast."7 This was **not** an ancient tradition. Combinations of meat and eggs date back centuries (e.g., in medieval Europe or earlier Western meals), and the full English breakfast (including bacon and eggs) had some roots in Britain by the Edwardian era (1901–1910). But in the U.S. context, the duo only solidified as a cultural norm due to this 1920s marketing push.0 By comparison, **Kellogg's cereal** came much earlier. John Harvey Kellogg and his brother W.K. accidentally created the flaked cereal precursor in 1894 at their sanitarium (initially as a health food). W.K. Kellogg founded the Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Company in 1906, mass-produced Corn Flakes, and aggressively advertised it as a convenient, healthy ready-to-eat breakfast. By 1909, the company was producing over 120,000 cases daily, making dry cereal a mainstream option well before the bacon-and-eggs campaign.25 In short: No, eggs and bacon did **not** predate or rival Kellogg cereal in popularity—the cereal industry helped reshape light breakfasts first, and the bacon-and-eggs trend followed as another marketing-driven "traditional" American meal in the 1920s. Both were products of early 20th-century food industry innovation and promotion rather than longstanding custom.
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Debra Reinhardt
Debra Reinhardt@debraregypt·
Hi @JasonMatozzo - You might want to research that. I've read it many places ... and Grok also confirms - "John Harvey Kellogg, a Seventh-day Adventist physician, developed corn flakes in the late 19th century as part of a bland, vegetarian diet at his Battle Creek Sanitarium, believing spicy or rich foods fueled sexual urges like masturbation, which he viewed as sinful."
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animal.
animal.@animaldocfilm·
Kellogg invented cereal to suppress libido. It replaced eggs, bacon, and organ meats at breakfast. America lost its most nutrient-dense meal to a man who feared digestion would cause arousal.
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