DanielSwick.X

4.6K posts

DanielSwick.X banner
DanielSwick.X

DanielSwick.X

@DanielSwick

Building Success, Loving My Family, Following Christ, Enjoying Life

Ohio Joined Ocak 2010
2.1K Following1.3K Followers
Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
What is the single best health investment you’ve ever made?
English
773
43
1.3K
1.9M
DanielSwick.X
DanielSwick.X@DanielSwick·
@nasahqphoto @NASAArtemis @NASAKennedy @NASA Hey this is a good one! You need to fire all your video team and replace them with whoever set up this camera... The video looked like a bunch of 12-year-olds with equipment from 1990.
English
0
0
13
609
DanielSwick.X
DanielSwick.X@DanielSwick·
@AiPinfu2003 Oh man cheese kneaded right into the dough sounds amazing! I will have to try that with my American BBQ toppings haha
English
0
0
2
166
自衛隊医官だった人@ハイライトも見てってよ
日本語が英語に翻訳されるだけで良かった。 アメリカ人にだけ伝わってほしい日本の秘密なんだけど、日本のピザにはパイナップルもプルコギもカニもジャガイモもマヨネーズも、旨ければ全部乗っける。 あと生地にもチーズを練り込む。 このポストがイタリア語に翻訳されたら第三次世界大戦が起こる。
日本語
906
3.8K
44.2K
3M
DanielSwick.X
DanielSwick.X@DanielSwick·
@SecWar What a disgusting pig you are to demand a free company cave to your blackmail.
English
0
0
1
9
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth
This week, Anthropic delivered a master class in arrogance and betrayal as well as a textbook case of how not to do business with the United States Government or the Pentagon. Our position has never wavered and will never waver: the Department of War must have full, unrestricted access to Anthropic’s models for every LAWFUL purpose in defense of the Republic. Instead, @AnthropicAI and its CEO @DarioAmodei, have chosen duplicity. Cloaked in the sanctimonious rhetoric of “effective altruism,” they have attempted to strong-arm the United States military into submission - a cowardly act of corporate virtue-signaling that places Silicon Valley ideology above American lives. The Terms of Service of Anthropic’s defective altruism will never outweigh the safety, the readiness, or the lives of American troops on the battlefield. Their true objective is unmistakable: to seize veto power over the operational decisions of the United States military. That is unacceptable. As President Trump stated on Truth Social, the Commander-in-Chief and the American people alone will determine the destiny of our armed forces, not unelected tech executives. Anthropic’s stance is fundamentally incompatible with American principles. Their relationship with the United States Armed Forces and the Federal Government has therefore been permanently altered. In conjunction with the President's directive for the Federal Government to cease all use of Anthropic's technology, I am directing the Department of War to designate Anthropic a Supply-Chain Risk to National Security. Effective immediately, no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic. Anthropic will continue to provide the Department of War its services for a period of no more than six months to allow for a seamless transition to a better and more patriotic service. America’s warfighters will never be held hostage by the ideological whims of Big Tech. This decision is final.
English
10.4K
11K
70.6K
13.3M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
This is a dopamine loop, and it’s one of the most powerful ones humans have ever encountered. Every time you prompt an AI and get a useful result back in seconds, your brain gets a hit. Variable-ratio reinforcement, same mechanism as slot machines, except the reward is real: actual output, actual progress, actual leverage on your ideas. Traditional work follows a delayed-reward structure. You write code for 6 hours, maybe it compiles, maybe you get feedback in a week. The gap between effort and reward is wide enough that motivation decays constantly. AI compresses that loop to seconds. Effort → reward → effort → reward. Your prefrontal cortex stays engaged because the next payoff is always one prompt away. This is why people describe it as “fun” when they’re actually working 14-hour days. The subjective experience of effort disappears when reward frequency is high enough. The “harder than ever” part is real too. When your bottleneck shifts from execution to imagination, you run out of excuses to stop. There’s no “waiting on the build” or “blocked by review.” Every idea you have can be tested immediately, which means your brain never gets a natural stopping point. People who thrive on this are selecting for a specific neurotype: high novelty-seeking, high conscientiousness, tolerance for rapid context-switching. That’s maybe 10-15% of the population. The other 85% will experience the same tools as overwhelming, not energizing. And that split is going to define the next decade of who captures value from AI and who gets displaced by it.
Nat Eliason@nateliason

Nearly every ambitious person I know who has dived into AI is working harder than ever, and longer hours than ever. Fascinating dynamic tbh. I have NEVER worked this hard, nor had this much fun with work.

English
204
485
4.5K
564.8K
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Thomas Massie
Thomas Massie@RepThomasMassie·
“How will we know if this bill has been successful? We will know when rich men are being perp walked in handcuffs to the jail. Until then, this is still a coverup.”
English
2.4K
27.2K
142.6K
2.5M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
DataRepublican (small r)
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican·
@nypost That "dark money" group, Sixteen Thirty Fund, is Arabella Advisors and is pure Open Society passthrough. Congratulations to Taylor Lorenz for finally catching up to what we've all known for years: that the Democratic party is controlled by Soros.
DataRepublican (small r) tweet media
English
353
9K
18.3K
199.5K
DanielSwick.X
DanielSwick.X@DanielSwick·
@huang_song_ That looks really impressive, however, what are your privacy policies and privacy enforcements?
English
0
0
1
40
Huang Song
Huang Song@huang_song_·
Introducing Typeless for Android. The world's first smart voice keyboard on Android that truly understands you. Speak naturally. It turns your words into clean, perfect writing - ready to send. The on-screen keyboard was a transition. Voice is the next generation. Get it now 👇
English
214
176
1.6K
7.9M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Chris Boettcher
Chris Boettcher@chrisboettcher9·
I stopped taking advice from childless people. Fitness. Productivity. Life advice. All of it. And here's why: It's not that they're wrong. It's that they're playing a completely different game. Taking life advice from someone without kids is like getting marriage tips from a guy who's "really good at first dates." Cool, bro. But you've never had to initiate the tough conversation and own your mistake just to keep the peace. We're not in the same sport. We've all seen some 25-year-old fitness influencer with non-negotiable 5am routine. Wake up. Meditate. Journal. Cold plunge. 45-minute lift. Sounds beautiful. You know what woke ME up at 5am last Tuesday? A 3-year-old standing 3 inches from my face whispering, "Daddy, I frowed up." There's no cold plunge for that. Just reality. These people have optimized their lives around ONE variable: themselves. I'm optimizing for: → A marriage that still thriving after 10 years → Kids who actually want to be around me → A career that provides for my family → A body that lets me keep up with all of it That's a completely different goal and it requires a different formula. Real discipline isn't waking up at 5am when your apartment is silent and your only responsibility is a houseplant. It's a 10pm workout after the kids went to bed because your morning blew up showing up for your family when they needed you. That's the game I'm playing. Childless advice isn't just impractical. It's unrelatable. Their goal: optimize for SELF. My goal: optimize for FAMILY. It's like a vegan telling me how to grill a steak. You might technically know the steps. But I don't trust you with the tongs. The best advice I've ever gotten came from parents in the trenches. They don't talk about "optimizing morning routines." They talk about: • 20 push-ups while your kid eats breakfast • Walking with your wife after dinner because it's the only time you'll get together • Meal prepping Sunday because Tuesday night is a warzone THAT'S advice that actually works. So no, I'm not taking health advice from someone whose biggest inconvenience is their supplement stack being shipped late. I want the guy who's been elbow-deep in a diaper blowout and STILL hitting their goals. That's the guy who I'm listening to. Find your people. Take their advice. Ignore the rest.
English
1K
1.2K
13.2K
764.8K
Fights Club 🇺🇲
Fights Club 🇺🇲@Simi0__·
Tell me the number that is biggest then this Only 1 percent will succeed
Fights Club 🇺🇲 tweet media
English
27.1K
245
3.6K
3.8M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Divinely Designed
Divinely Designed@DivinelyDesined·
The Theory of Evolution is impossible & absurd. Contradictory evidence & data has been around for decades, but it is mostly just ignored. But one of the most glaring unsolvable problems facing Evolutionary Theory is this: Haldane's Dilemma. Buckle up for this one🧵
Divinely Designed tweet media
English
139
133
736
95.8K
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Josh Barzon
Josh Barzon@JoshuaBarzon·
The entire Book of Revelation is a giant chiasm. 🤯 A chiasm is a literary device where ideas unfold in order (A B C) and then repeat in reverse (C B A), forming an X shaped symmetry that aids memory and draws attention to the central point (C). The Bible is amazing.
Josh Barzon tweet media
English
756
4.8K
29K
1.2M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Bill Mitchell
Bill Mitchell@mitchellvii·
This unbelievable clip drops the red-pill nuke on the Somali fraud scam! She lays it out cold: "You can't afford another kid because childcare is so expensive - but Somali fraudsters got millions of your taxpayer dollars for child care centers that don’t exist." "You can’t afford a home - but 100 Somalis spent millions of your taxpayer dollars on luxury properties." "You’re paying $30K a year for terrible health care - while they got millions of your taxpayer dollars for health care centers they never opened." That's the corrupt Dem elites exposed raw - putting unvetted migrants and grifters first while screwing over hardworking Americans. They robbed us blind for years and smeared anyone complaining as racist. Everyday patriots finally shining the light forced the freezes and audits. Trump's team is cutting off the cash and cleaning house fast. Real Americans are taking our country back!
English
1.5K
21.2K
71.1K
12M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
LONG POST WARNING: How did this Somali fraud happen? I have a close relative who works inside this system. She processes medicalcare claims for a large provider, we’ll call it SMH, in a deep-blue state (not Minnesota). What people miss is that the biggest fraud isn’t the checks written to individuals. It’s the staggering cost of administering the programs. My relative isn’t some paper-pusher. She’s a nurse with multiple degrees, managing a full team. Her entire day is spent chained to a computer: nonstop paperwork, Zoom calls, audits. There’s a fingerprint scanner and a camera on her desk. Family emergency? Too bad. Break down in tears from abuse? Still too bad. Now, start with a real medical event: heart attack, cancer, stroke. The hospital treats you, then pushes you home quickly because long stays are crazy expensive and the hospital doesn’t have enough beds. Fine. But home recovery requires ramps, grab bars, equipment. The state cuts checks to upgrade homes. Many recipients simply pocket the money. The state knows this, but doesn’t have enough inspectors, so it forces SMH to do “due diligence.” That means more paperwork. More subcontractors. More verification. More zoom meetings for my relative. One claim can consume hundreds of man-hours. Then there’s a shortage of visiting nurses. So patients must travel for bloodwork and follow-ups. Transportation services exist, but they’re heavily regulated and audited. That’s expensive. Cheaper solution? Pay family members. Give them money to add a ramp to a minivan and drive the patient themselves. Have an uncle who already has a van (because he’s scamming the system too), great we pay him monthly and you have to do nothing. Now the real games begin. How much help you get depends entirely on how you answer Zoom questions. Normal Americans say things like, “My son can help” or “A neighbor can drive me.” That caps benefits. But there are cheat codes. Say instead: “I care for my autistic grandson.” “I provide childcare for my niece.” Now SMH must either support those dependents or move the patient into a full-service facility which is vastly more expensive than any other option. So they pay for childcare. Because my relative is a mandatory reporter and children are involved m, every meeting now includes medical care teams, child-safety teams, housing teams, transportation teams. The clock is running. These are highly paid professionals. Except there doesn’t even need to be children involved because privacy laws prevent basic verification. No birth certificates. No DNA tests. So SMH provides a list of approved childcare facilities. You can just borrow someone else’s child for the paperwork and give them a new name because things like ID and birth certificates are “anti-immigrant” so they can’t be checked. Now if the child supposedly has autism, costs explode: specialized care, transportation, services. Ironically, local public schools often have excellent autism programs but school administrators won’t jump through SMH’s audit hoops. And when a child doesn’t actually have autism, schools quietly disenroll them without paperwork to avoid lawsuits. SMH is left holding the bag so better just to contract with a center. If anyone complains you can just say the school doesn’t meet your religious needs. Those are just patient meetings. There are thred more meeting categories that devour time: State audits: Auditors expect problems and won’t leave without finding them. Missing paperwork means more meetings. Legal: Endless lawyers. Enough said. Efficiency Then come the “efficiency experts.” SMH needs to turn a profit so my relative’s boss is an Ivy League MBA. The solution is always the same: push more work onto families because it’s cheaper than more hospital time. That’s the cheapest option. And to republicans (the only ones demanding accountability) it makes sense to support families over facilities Except that if you’re a normal American, you’re screwed. 1/2
English
69
471
1.9K
102.4K
DanielSwick.X
DanielSwick.X@DanielSwick·
@HHS_Jim Why has this not always been the case for every dollar spent by the government?
English
0
0
0
56
Deputy Secretary Jim O'Neill
Funds will be released only when states prove they are being spent legitimately.
English
2K
2.5K
33.6K
18.3M
Deputy Secretary Jim O'Neill
We have frozen all child care payments to the state of Minnesota. You have probably read the serious allegations that the state of Minnesota has funneled millions of taxpayer dollars to fraudulent daycares across Minnesota over the past decade. Today we have taken three actions against the blatant fraud that appears to be rampant in Minnesota and across the country: 1. I have activated our defend the spend system for all ACF payments. Starting today, all ACF payments across America will require a justification and a receipt or photo evidence before we send money to a state. 2. Alex Adams and I have identified the individuals in @nickshirleyy's excellent work. I have demanded from @GovTimWalz a comprehensive audit of these centers. This includes attendance records, licenses, complaints, investigations, and inspections. 3. We have launched a dedicated fraud-reporting hotline and email address at childcare.gov Whether you are a parent, provider, or member of the general public, we want to hear from you. We have turned off the money spigot and we are finding the fraud. @ACFHHS @HHSGov
English
12K
26.1K
147.9K
13.9M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Lee 🦅 🇺🇸
Lee 🦅 🇺🇸@leeeeee_1985·
The absolute most accurate post I’ve seen today.
Lee 🦅 🇺🇸 tweet media
English
473
10.7K
36.8K
514.8K
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
RE: Fraud in Minnesota I’m not sure that most Americans understand that in large swathes of humanity, there is no actual concept of “fraud,” particularly fraud against the government. Instead, there is a belief in the virtue of getting away with what you can to help yourself and your tribe. I spent a lot of my life in the Middle East and Central Asia, working closely with foreign contractors and foreign governments to provide support to American military operations. As a US Army officer with a big checkbook courtesy of Uncle Sam, I can’t really count the sheer number of times I was offered bribes to award a contract, or falsify records to do things like create larger (fake) headcounts at places like dining facilities, or to just simply be on the take for future illegal requests. Of course I had enough sense to never comply with such requests. Moreover, they were never explicitly structured as “bribes”; instead it was usually along the lines of “Here I have these Rolexes as gifts for you and your wife to show our friendship.” (Unfortunately, too many US officers and NCOs succumbed to this siren song and ended up breaking rocks in Leavenworth.) The weird thing about this to me was that whenever I turned down such an offering, it was treated as a grave insult. I was the one in the wrong, and not the fraudster trying to bribe me. They considered it rude that I was in their country and refused to accept how things got done. After all, why did I not want to help my tribe by helping their tribe? Let me repeat: in these cultures, FRAUD IS NOT EVEN A CONCEPT. There is only what helps your tribe. Such thought processes are so alien to Americans and much of the West. We are raised on the presumption that our institutions are valid, that the rule of law always prevails, and that integrity is universal. We need these presumptions to have working governments and economies, and without those presumptions—without the mental barrier that causes us not to accept outright fraud—our nation would quickly descend into the economic and social hellscape of countries like…. ummm… you know…. SOMALIA! So when we import people en masse from cultures that accept bribery and fraud as routine, acceptable ways to advance one’s tribe, we should not be surprised that things like the $8 BILLION fraud schemes of the Somali population in Minnesota happen so easily. Introducing a fraud-based culture based on tribalism into America is like introducing some sort of lethal virus into a population that has no natural immunity. The virus will spread and grow, unchecked, because it is so alien to the host. Similarly, a culture of fraud is anathema to American thinking, and it must be cut out before it consumes the host. So when you see and hear patriotic Americans decrying what is happening in Minnesota or elsewhere, and when they seek deportation of the offenders, it is not “racism,” it is not “bigotry,” it is not “xenophobia”; instead, it is preserving the American tradition of responsible institutions and national integrity.
English
2.7K
11.6K
48.9K
15.9M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Amy Mek
Amy Mek@AmyMek·
🚨 PAY ATTENTION AMERICA: It’s Not “Somali” Fraud. It’s Islamic Doctrine Everyone today is hyper-focused on the massive "SOMALI" fraud scandal in Minnesota, while conveniently leaving out Islam. The fraud is undeniable. What’s being deliberately avoided is the motive. It remains politically safer to talk about ethnicity or immigration than to name the Islamic scripture that strictly observant, religious Muslims use to justify extracting money from non-Muslims. This is not just greed. Muhammad explicitly established that people of other religions must pay a poll tax to Muslims called jizya, imposed as a marker of inferiority and submission. This is not interpretation. It is stated plainly in Qur’an 9:29: “Fight those who do not believe in Allah… until they pay the jizya with willing submission and feel themselves subdued.” Jizya was a humiliating tribute tax placed on conquered non-Muslims, a permanent condition of subjugation under Islamic rule. In Western welfare states today, many Muslims live on public benefits. Among strictly observant adherents, those payments from non-Muslim (“kuffar”) governments are often viewed as the modern equivalent of jizya, money infidels are obligated to hand over. No reciprocity. No moral issue with fraud. No obligation to work. The doctrine provides the justification: non-Muslims in submission must pay; their wealth is not fully protected. In lands outside Sharia rule (dar al-harb), traditional Islamic rulings permit taking what is considered “owed.” This is why the same pattern erupts again and again in observant Muslim migrant communities across America and Europe: astronomical welfare dependence, organized fraud networks, and billions drained, all rationalized through religious doctrine that turns taxpayers into tribute-payers. Media and politicians obsess over the stolen billions but scream “Islamophobia” the moment anyone quotes the verse or names the ideology. They refuse to acknowledge the scripture that casts every non-Muslim taxpayer as a dhimmi obligated to fund Muslims. To the truly adherent, your taxes are jizya - enforced submission through the wallet. Enough evasion. Quote the scripture. Expose the doctrine. America is not dar al-Islam. We do not pay jizya. Look at the illegal Islamic invaders in the UK, LAUGH at their host nation... A "Migrant" uses his smartphone to show his friends back in ‘Somewhereistan’ all the free money he is getting from British taxpayers. I am sure he will be filming his free 4-star hotel room, free food, free clothing, free legal aid, free healthcare, etc., which will encourage more of his fellow freeloaders to invade the country!
Amy Mek@AmyMek

AMERICA HAS HAD ENOUGH SNAP now burns $145 BILLION a year. That is $7.8 BILLION every single month. Recipients spend TWICE what the average working American spends on groceries, because they aren’t spending their money; they are spending yours. This isn’t “helping the poor.” This is rewarding dependency and subsidizing foreign populations who arrived to take, not to build. 43 million people are on food stamps. 80% of SNAP users are also on Medicaid. 61% get two or more additional welfare programs. And 53.5% of immigrants are on at least one welfare program. Nearly 45% of Afghans in the U.S. are receiving FREE FOOD from you. And now - incredibly - we have Somali migrants in America angrily demanding that their HALAL food pantry be restocked. Not food. HALAL food - a sharia food system funded by the U.S. taxpayer. Halal is not “cultural cuisine.” Halal is civilization enforcement through supply chains - a Sharia-compliant food system imposed on Western markets by pressure, litigation, and corporate cowardice. People think halal is ancient. It isn’t. The global halal industry was engineered in the 1970s–80s, after the 1979 Iranian Revolution, when Iran and Saudi Arabia — competing to export political Islam — partnered with Western multinationals like Nestlé to create a certification empire that pushes Sharia norms into non-Muslim economies by stealth. Now that same system sits inside our welfare state - enforced with your money. And spare me the claim that “illegals aren’t on SNAP.” Remove illegal-alien households, mixed-status loopholes, and fraud and the cost would collapse - 70% of this system exists only because the foreign population is bankrolled. If all benefits were cut off, they would leave. Is this your American Dream? Because it is not mine. Stop subsidizing your own replacement. Stop feeding people who despise the hand that feeds them. Stop normalizing Sharia in American supply chains. Boycott halal. End welfare for non-citizens. No more Sharia pantries on U.S. dollars. America has had enough.

English
450
8.5K
21K
1.1M
DanielSwick.X retweeted
Nick shirley
Nick shirley@nickshirleyy·
🚨 Here is the full 42 minutes of my crew and I exposing Minnesota fraud, this might be my most important work yet. We uncovered over $110,000,000 in ONE day. Like it and share it around like wildfire! Its time to hold these corrupt politicians and fraudsters accountable We ALL work way too hard and pay too much in taxes for this to be happening, the fraud must be stopped.
English
46.4K
220.8K
682.6K
143M