Daniel C.

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Daniel C.

Daniel C.

@UltraRightSide

God has conferred upon you above all nations great glory in arms.

Beigetreten Şubat 2011
1.3K Folgt429 Follower
Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@MrPitbull07 @Aristos_Revenge What a great story. It is on level with the great heroic feats of the explorers in the past that crossed oceans guided only by the stars.
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
May 16, 1963. Gordon Cooper was orbiting Earth alone inside a capsule barely big enough to turn around in, moving at 17,500 miles per hour. He had been up there for over a day. Then the warnings started. First a faulty sensor screaming that the ship was falling — it wasn't. He switched it off. Then something far worse: a short circuit knocked out the entire automated guidance system. The one that kept the capsule steady. The one that was supposed to bring him home. Without it, reentry was nearly impossible. Too shallow an angle and the capsule would bounce off the atmosphere back into space. Too steep and it would incinerate. The margin for error was razor thin — and every computer that was supposed to hit that margin was dead. Down on the ground, NASA engineers watched the telemetry in silence. They could see everything going wrong. They could fix nothing. Cooper didn't panic. He uncapped a grease pencil and drew lines directly on the inside of his window to track the horizon. He looked up at the stars he had spent months memorizing and used their positions to orient the ship by eye. Then he set his wristwatch. Because when you have no computers left, you become the computer. At exactly the right moment — calculated in his head, confirmed by the stars outside — he fired the retrorockets. The capsule shook. The sky turned to fire. For several minutes, no one on Earth could reach him as plasma swallowed the ship whole. Then the parachutes opened. Faith 7 hit the water just four miles from the recovery ship — the single most accurate splashdown in the entire Mercury program. The man with a wristwatch and a few pencil marks on a window had outperformed every automated system NASA had. We talk a lot about technology saving us. And it often does. But Cooper's story is a quiet reminder that behind every machine, there still has to be a human being who can look out the window, think clearly under pressure, and decide what to do next. The final backup was never the software. It was him.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@arikuschnir It would be nice if this actually took place. Imagine tomorrow the PM of Israel announces to the world that Jesus visited him during the night and told him make peace. It would be earth shattering to have such a testimony.
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Ari K
Ari K@arikuschnir·
Jesus pays Bibi a visit tonight after his Genghis Khan comments to straighten him out.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@merry123459 You should've done like your grandparents and go live on a farm without running water, a hole in the ground for a toilette, and no access to hospitals or medications. After all, why struggle like they did.
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Vicki Campbell🇨🇦
Vicki Campbell🇨🇦@merry123459·
You also don’t walk out of college or university expecting to buy a new 4 bedroom house, two cars, boats, skidoos, etc. The reason you struggle is because you aren’t willing to wait and make do like we did. Your entitlement is causing you to struggle.
Bitcoin Teddy@Bitcoin_Teddy

Older generations say “we all struggled in our 20s.” No, you didn’t. You didn’t pay $3200 for rent and $10 for eggs. You didn’t graduate into $50K student debt and $0 job security. Gen Z isn’t dramatic. They’re drowning.

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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@ZalinskyS @davidpattersonx New York is great because its a hub of commercial, social, art, tourism, activity. All of these things happen there because of geography and historic growth, but that's where the new technologies will shift that dynamic from NY only to available everywhere.
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ZalinskySilverworks
ZalinskySilverworks@ZalinskyS·
@UltraRightSide @davidpattersonx Some people, but I've met a lot more people in my life who live in some anonymous town and dream of living in Manhattan than vice versa. If you all of your needs are met, you will crave experience, and real life experiences are most easily served in cities.
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David Scott Patterson
David Scott Patterson@davidpattersonx·
There will be four stages in the economic transition to a post-labor, post-scarcity economy. In the first stage, AI will more than double economic output. Many people will lose their jobs, but most will find new work, and real incomes will more than double. Some people will leave the workforce, either by retiring early or by receiving unemployment benefits. (AI implementation stage. 2026 to 2029) In the second stage, AI and robots will exceed the abilities of all human workers and will expand quickly to replace all remaining jobs. Everyone who becomes unemployed will receive universal high income (UHI) payments. (Full unemployment stage. 2030) In the third stage, the economy will continue to grow rapidly, as the quantity and quality of human labor will no longer limit growth. UHI payments will be extended to all adults, and their value will grow tenfold as prices drop rapidly with increasing production. (Continuing economic expansion stage. 2030 to 2035). In the fourth stage, economic output will continue to grow, reaching 100 times current output. UHI will be worth 100 times the current average salary. The demand for most products and services will reach a maximum beyond which people don't need or want any more. We will have reached post-scarcity for most things. Most people will not use their full UHI allowance. We may switch to an economy without UHI, where everything is given away for free. (Post-scarcity transition. 2035 to 2040)
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@UnmitigatedAss @DavidJPba Yes, the Canadian government is as satanic as it can get. They promote the culture of death, but do it with a smile while telling people they’re nice and “progressive “.
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David Parker
David Parker@DavidJPba·
Why do Canadians love their tax slavery? Our government is bad at everything. Immigration = Disaster Military = Pathetic Justice System = A Joke Healthcare = Collapsing Finances = A basket case Diplomacy = Horrific Social Services = Bankrupt Are they good at anything?
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@ZalinskyS @davidpattersonx Many people will not want to live in crowded cities with no sense of community. People abandoned farms and small towns because life was harsh, but with robots, Ai, drones, etc, you can live anywhere and have access to all the same technologies. People will leave cities in droves.
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ZalinskySilverworks
ZalinskySilverworks@ZalinskyS·
@davidpattersonx So what happens to things that can't be post-scarcity? Like real estate on Central Park? If everyone has near endless surplus, don't prices for non-scaling products go to infinity? Capitalism was designed to handle scarcity and limited resources. This dynamic breaks it.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@RamboVanHalen The future will be AI producing a video of stories one would like to see, and also watching videos from other people that have created interesting videos to watch. People producing movies will no longer be a selected few. Much like already youtube operates.
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Rambo Van Halen
Rambo Van Halen@RamboVanHalen·
Lots of comments about how to remake the film industry--and a lot of "build back better" type talk. Sorry you have to hear it from me, but film as a dominant cultural force is never coming back. But it's not going to go away either. It's going to stick around. Just like opera stuck around. At one time opera was mass entertainment. And then it faded and was replaced by other forms of mass entertainment--like movies. Today opera is a niche thing--reserved for the wealthy. But it still happens. Old operas are still being performed, and once in a while someone even writes a completely original opera. I think we can expect something similar from film. Niche film theaters will play old movies, and once in a while will play something new. But the days of everyone going to the movies on a Saturday night (or even streaming at home) is over. The new films won't be made for a mass audience--not like The Matrix or Starwars or Lord of the Rings or any of the other movies you love--because that mass audience is gone. And it's never coming back. Instead films will be made for a niche audience. And we're already there now. Marvel movies are made for a niche audience of beard neck fanboys, and Oscar bait movies are made for the NPR totebag and Volvo niche. What's going to take film's place? I have no idea. If I had to make a bet on the future of mass entertainment I'd go with anything live and in person. The faker (and gayer) the world gets, the more people will want authenticity. Stand up comedy is enjoying a resurgence--partly for this reason. As far as digital content goes, maybe it'll be gaming, or maybe vertical drama type shows. But who the fuck knows. It will probably be something that doesn't currently exist. But again, film will never go away entirely. Somewhere there are opera companies producing operas, Shakespeare festivals still happen, Greek plays still happen, and somewhere in the world somebody is putting on a Punch and Judy show. So film fans, don't despair. They'll be something for you. It might not be great, but it will be there. And I guess that's better than nothing🤷‍♂️ (Credit to my friend @DisgracedProp for the film/opera insight.)
Rambo Van Halen@RamboVanHalen

I put in 25 years. It would be 26 but I haven't worked yet this year and I'm not sure I'll ever work in entertainment again. The writing has been on the wall for quite some time. But it's a sad thing--especially since the collapse of Hollywood is (mostly) self inflicted. Outsiders like to blame the unions and burdensome regulations. That's not exactly wrong, but the big reason is that Hollywood stopped making a product that people wanted to consume. Film is a funny thing. On one hand it's art. But on the other it's a mass consumer product--like a car, or a soft drink. But unlike a typical consumer product, it was something we consumed together. We went to a special place, and sat with strangers, and watched stories. And those stories infected us. They entered our minds and our souls and they implanted things. Deep things. Ancient things. Timeless things. Things like heroism and beauty and love and fear and sex and death and adventure and tragedy and pain and injustice and all the things that make up our dreams. There's a thing we call "cinematic language". It's how we tell a story with images. (And BTW if you want to learn more about the language of visual media, read Scott McCloud's excellent book Understanding Comics.) An odd thing about cinematic language is that it's the same language as dreams. There's a scene in Christopher Nolan's Inception where Leonardo DiCaprio is explains to (the tragic) Ellen Page how dreams work. But what he's really describing is cinematic language. Inception is really a movie about movies BTW. While it's far from my favorite film, I think it's the perfect film. Because the suspension of disbelief is perfect. You believe the plot about dreams because you're familiar with how movies work--maybe not consciously--but you know. Everyone knows. Maybe not everyone has seen a movie, but everyone has dreams. Another odd thing about film: you don't "watch" a movie, you look into it. And you put yourself inside it. Now you're in the dream. And you're hypnotized. Because movies do that too. The motion--the moving images--they hack your brain. We're programed to pay attention to moving things. Even when the things aren't real. Even when they're just light reflected off a screen. So we'd go to these special places--these movie theaters--these temples--and we'd sit, and we'd "watch" and we'd enter the dream. And we did it together. And after the movie was over--and the lights came on, and we'd file out over the sound of popcorn crunching under our feet--we were different. We had become transformed. Sometimes we were changed in minor ways. But sometimes not. Sometimes we were changed in profound ways. And we did it together. Before the movie we were a room full of strangers. But after--on the way out the door--we all had something in common. Because we shared an experience. We'd shared the dream. And we'd all become transformed. And then tech got involved... Streaming turned movies from a communal experience to a personal experience. And that's an issue, but they did something else too. They started developing movies as if they were tech products. But you can't apply a KPI to a dream. At least, not successfully anyway. Because dreams don't work like that--nor does any sort of art. And that's a funny thing about making movies. You try to make the best film you can, but at the end of the day you have no idea if it's good or if it's going to be successful. You just have to hope the audience likes it. Now, you can design a movie that will appeal to a preexisting audience. Marvel movies are like this. There's a large group of fanboy nerds that will see every single one. You can count on them every time. Just like you can count on the Gay Oscar Bait crowd (for example). But those movies are slop. But Hollywood became specialists in slop. Because slop is safe. Because you could apply KPI style metrics to slop. As a result they lost the audience. And the audience is probably never coming back. I wrote a book in 2024 (that was published in 2025). While writing, I thought of it as my farewell to the industry. But looking back, what I was actually writing was a eulogy for Hollywood--the place where dreams were made. And so it goes...

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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@HockleyTyson They're also mostly a bunch of losers. A people that have accomplished nothing with their lives even though they're given all kinds of helping hands.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@JPHilllllll The factories are going to get automated one way or another, and if Americans don't do it, then the Chinese will do it. Then Americans will not only lose the jobs but also the ability to produce and become totally dependent on the Chinese. Is that what you thing it's best?
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Read Raising Expectations (and Raising Hell)
It’s just a weird sickness at some point, this level of greed. You have $200 billion dollars. You could wipe your ass with $100 bills and keep getting richer every day. Why kill thousands and thousands of jobs at this point?
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS

Jeff Bezos has begun the process of raising $100 billion for a new fund that would buy up manufacturing companies and then use AI to automate production.

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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@disclosetv Jesus Christ is God but his kingdom is not of this world, and while we wait his return, and aim to build a just society as best as possible, Christians must also take up the sword and defend themselves against the enemies of Christianity. Pacifism does not solve problems.
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Disclose.tv
Disclose.tv@disclosetv·
NOW - Netanyahu: "Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan. Because if you are strong enough, ruthless enough, powerful enough, evil will overcome good."
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@TheCinesthetic The only bad thing about the first Dune was the ending, which had nothing to do with book. The new Dune is a beautiful, but the acting is simply not on par with the old Dune. The acting in Lynch's Dune was Shakespearean. It's a fantastic movie.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@hugoman98 Na verdade, todo esse esforço é para eventualmente levar ao sexo, lol. E não há nada de errado nisso. Sem sexo a humanidade morre.
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hugoman98
hugoman98@hugoman98·
"Os homens só querem s*xo." Fantasia media de um jovem sensível:
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@megha_lilly I don't think people will be able to live for years on end in an artificial environment, where to even go outside one needs to wear a space suit of some kind. On the moon people will be able to do it for a few moons then return to 🌎, but on Mars they'll likely go insane.
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Megha
Megha@megha_lilly·
Live in a hot, inhospitable desert climate with no nature and everything imported and artificial for a few years and your desires to live on Mars will quickly dissipate. You will realize the only real prize is EARTH and you should do whatever you can to capture it for the good, the beautiful and the innocent.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@ShaneSchaetzel They need to have much bigger voices than that sole guy. Plus, it all starts with what the rabbis determine should be the message. The ultra-Orthodox rabbis are living as religious Jews, but the liberal/reform rabbis is a different story, and those are the ones backed by big $$$.
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Shane Schaetzel †☧
Shane Schaetzel †☧@ShaneSchaetzel·
This is Kobe Friedman, an Israeli Jew who has something very important to share with us. As I’ve said many times, anti-Zionism is not the same as antisemitism. So don’t let anyone ever tell you it is. Also, as I’ve said many times, Romans 11 warns Christians not to be prideful against Jews, even though the Church and the Apostles fulfilled and replaced the borders and government of ancient Israel. Thus, antisemitism, properly defined as hatred of Jews because of their culture and ethnicity, is forbidden in Christianity. Yet, antisemitism does exist within Christendom, even though it is not as prevalent as some (particularly Zionists) would have us believe. Kobe has some very thought-provoking comments about this, which we should all take to heart. Hatred goes both ways between Jews and Non-Jews (Gentiles or Goyim). It’s wrong no matter who is doing it, and everyone is without excuse. I strongly encourage you to watch this short video on anti-goyism.👇🏻
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@MericaCulture America lost itself once the 1960's rolled in. It progressed technologically, incredibly so, but it lost itself culturally and socially.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@Templarpilled The face tattoos look like 💩. There are no such things in the book so why did they have to include that in the movie. It literally adds nothing to it. These movies could've been so epic, and they had to besmirch them with all the woke crap.
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Templarpilled
Templarpilled@Templarpilled·
The seething about "cultural appropriation" and "colonialism" with regard to Dune comes off as the pettiest thing ever. A European, especially from a nation whose culture is not well known abroad, would be like, "They used our stuff as inspiration? Hell yeah!" You don't see Polish people losing their minds over the Witcher books and games. Although I suspect it's mostly Western leftists who complain about Herbert and the movies.
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Daniel C.
Daniel C.@UltraRightSide·
@lallathurayya Dune is a work of imagination about a fictitious future taking place 10000 years from. It has nothing to do with your culture or history. It's a fantasy book that projects into the future based on elements of today. IT'S A WORK OF FICTION, it's not some documentary.
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World Athletes
World Athletes@world_athelete·
Sofia Luper - South Carolina Swim and Dive
World Athletes tweet mediaWorld Athletes tweet media
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