Rob Witwer

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Rob Witwer

Rob Witwer

@robwitwer

Fmr CO State Rep; co-author https://t.co/cSeyzVT7ID; HS🥍 coach; @UChicagoLaw. “Wm. Carlos Williams on Steroids”- Joyce Carol Oates. Personal views

Half mile above Mile High City Inscrit le Temmuz 2011
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Rob Witwer
Rob Witwer@robwitwer·
If one by one we counted people out For the least sin, it wouldn't take us long To get so we had no one left to live with. For to be social is to be forgiving. - Robert Frost
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Denver Westword
Denver Westword@denverwestword·
"This is my 43rd edition of the Best of Denver; it's also my last Best of Denver: On July 1, after 49 years(!), I’ll be retiring as editor. Know that Westword will be left in excellent hands." Read Westword Editor Patricia Calhoun's full article: westword.com/opinion/patric…
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
The most profitable seat on a 787 isn't in business class. It's three economy seats with a $40 mattress pad. I've flown the original version on Air New Zealand. United just figured out the math. A Polaris suite takes the footprint of roughly four economy seats. At $4,000 one-way on a transatlantic route, that's $1,000 per seat-equivalent of revenue. A Relax Row takes three economy seats, sells for $3,000 to $5,000 as a unit, and requires zero cabin reconfiguration. That's $1,000 to $1,700 per seat-equivalent with almost no incremental cost. The margins on a mattress pad and adjustable leg rests versus a lie-flat suite with a privacy door, dedicated galley, and premium meal service aren't even comparable. Air New Zealand proved this in 2011. Called it Skycouch. Same seat. Same concept. Fifteen years of booking data showing parents choose flat over reclined at almost any price. United licensed the design and locked North American exclusivity. The timing maps to a ceiling in their premium strategy. United posted $59.1 billion in revenue last year. Premium cabin revenue grew 11% while economy flatlined. But there are only so many rows you can convert to Polaris before you've hollowed out the cabin. At some point you need the 300 economy passengers to fund the aircraft. Relax Row threads that needle. 200 widebody aircraft. Up to 12 sections per plane. 2,400 units fleet-wide on routes where families will pay anything to let a toddler sleep horizontal for 14 hours. Dynamic pricing at American willingness-to-pay levels on a product Air New Zealand sells for $200 to $1,500. Six fare classes on a single widebody now: Basic Economy, Economy, Relax Row, Premium Plus, Polaris, Polaris Studio. Each tier reframes the next as reasonable. They wrapped it in a plushie because "highest-margin seat in commercial aviation" doesn't fit on a boarding pass.
United Airlines@united

The entire row is alllllll yours. Welcome to United Relax Row, three adjacent United Economy seats with adjustable leg rests that can each be raised or lowered to create a cozy lie-flat space for stretching out... You'll also get a mattress pad, blanket and two pillows. If you’re traveling with kids, a plushie too! United Relax Row will be available starting next year on more than 200 of our 787s and 777s, each with up to 12 of these brand-new rows. united.com/Elevated

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Ajit Pai
Ajit Pai@AjitPai·
A terrific meeting with @SenFettermanPA! Enjoyed the discussion about the wireless industry's work across Pennsylvania and the country, @CTIA Catalyst Program grants to entrepreneurs using wireless tech to promote mental health, and the importance of courage in public service.
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sylvie longeron
sylvie longeron@sylvie_longeron·
Wim Wenders Kids in Butte, Montana, 1978
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Greg Cello
Greg Cello@dissidntdad·
I just want the 1990 Eddie Bauer Ford Explorer type of America back.
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Gray Connolly
Gray Connolly@GrayConnolly·
The Greeks have played this crisis perfectly - even closer to the US, close to the Israelis, close to the Arabs ... one expects the internal Greek planning nomenklatura to be called Project Themistocles or Operation SALAMIS
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

BREAKING: Greece just shot down two Iranian ballistic missiles over Saudi Arabia. A NATO member that signed no declaration of war against Iran used a Patriot battery operated by Greek soldiers on Saudi soil to intercept missiles targeting the SAMREF oil refinery in Yanbu on the Red Sea coast. Greek Defense Minister Dendias confirmed the engagement. Prime Minister Mitsotakis called it strictly defensive. It is the first time Greek military personnel have fired a weapon in combat since the battery was deployed under a bilateral agreement with Riyadh in November 2021. A European democracy that borders Turkey just entered the Middle East’s largest war to protect a refinery jointly owned by Saudi Aramco and ExxonMobil. The target tells the story. SAMREF is not a military installation. It is a 400,000-barrel-per-day refinery on Saudi Arabia’s western coast, far from the Strait of Hormuz, far from the front lines of Operation Epic Fury. Iran fired ballistic missiles and at least one drone at it. The missiles were intercepted by the Greek Patriot PAC-3. The drone impacted the complex with what Saudi authorities described as minor damage. Iran is no longer limiting its retaliation to Hormuz or the Gulf coast. It is reaching across the Arabian Peninsula to the Red Sea, targeting refineries that supply Europe and Asia through the Suez Canal rather than the strait. The geography of Iranian retaliation just doubled. This happened on March 19, the same day 23 nations signed a joint statement condemning Iran’s Hormuz closure and pledging readiness to ensure safe passage. Greece is not one of the 23 signatories. Greece did not sign the statement. Greece fired the interceptor. The country that pledged nothing on paper did more in three seconds of missile engagement than 23 signatures accomplished in three pages of diplomatic language. Readiness is a word. A Patriot launch is a verb. Trump told the world on March 21 that Europe, Japan, Korea and China will have to get involved in policing the strait. Greece got involved before he asked. It got involved not through a statement or a pledge or a fund but through a missile defence battery that has been sitting in Saudi Arabia for four years waiting for a moment that arrived on March 19 at the speed of an Iranian ballistic warhead. The bilateral agreement that put Greek soldiers in Yanbu was signed for exactly this scenario. The scenario arrived and the agreement held. The implications cascade. A NATO member has now engaged Iranian weapons in combat. Greece frames it as defensive, bilateral, and unrelated to the broader war. But the missile it intercepted was fired by the same IRGC that launched two intermediate-range ballistic missiles at Diego Garcia the following day. The same IRGC that hit Ras Laffan in Qatar. That hit Mina Al-Ahmadi in Kuwait twice. That put a cluster munition through a daycare roof in Rishon Lezion this morning. Greece intercepted missiles from an organisation that is simultaneously attacking six countries. The word defensive becomes complicated when the attacker’s target list includes half the region. Twenty-three nations signed a statement. One nation fired a Patriot. The question nobody is asking yet is which model scales. If Iran continues expanding its target geography from the Gulf to the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean, the 23-nation statement will need to become a 23-nation engagement. Greece did not wait for the statement to tell it what to do. It had a battery, a mandate, and a missile inbound. It fired. The refinery is still standing. The precedent is now set. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Rob Witwer
Rob Witwer@robwitwer·
@AjitPai So you’re saying we’ve got another 23 years of this?
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Ajit Pai
Ajit Pai@AjitPai·
In this month in 1922, Hiroo Onoda was born. In 1945, as a Japanese Army officer, he went into hiding after action in the Philippines. Convinced the war was ongoing, he held out until found—and his ex-commanding officer ordered him to surrender at last, in this month in 1974.
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Taylor Lorenz@TaylorLorenz

If you’re traveling to Cuba or any impoverished community, or just generally, you should be wearing a mask. We’re 6 years into an ongoing pandemic and airborne disease is real no matter how many “leftists” want to scream and stomp their feet and shout RFK talking points

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Rob Witwer
Rob Witwer@robwitwer·
Saw the Eagles Friday. First and probably last time. Amazing.
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Jonathan Haidt
Jonathan Haidt@JonHaidt·
In addition to phone-free schools, there seems to be one more area where left and right can agree: Pervasive frictionless heavily advertised gambling is a scourge. States that legalized it are harming their own citizens and especially their young adults.
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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
This is sad. I know as a politician these companies are going to spend a billion dollars against me for saying it but 🤷🏽‍♀️ Pervasive gambling is not good for society. It turns life into a casino, traps people in addiction & debt, surges domestic violence, and fosters manipulation.
Polymarket@Polymarket

We’re honored to announce MLB has named Polymarket as their Exclusive Prediction Market Exchange Partner. Polymarket 🤝 MLB

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🇺🇦13Spaceghost13🇺🇦
@robwitwer @ThrillaRilla369 Great game! I was most impacted by the two laserdisc games: Cliffhanger (which used animation from famous Japanese cartoon Lupin) and Dragon Quest. Summer camp at UNC in Greeley and off-campus 7-11 had both. For more trad vid game: Galaga.
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Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
For those who played video games between 1985 and 1995, what's the video game from that time that sticks with you the most, and why
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