Chuck Will

991 posts

Chuck Will

Chuck Will

@Chuckwill

Just your average Snapchat avatar

Michigan, USA 参加日 Haziran 2015
2.2K フォロー中240 フォロワー
Chuck Will
Chuck Will@Chuckwill·
Dr. Brian L. Cox@BrianCox_RLTW

Hi there, Rep. Khanna. Retired Army JAG here & current prof of int'l law. And you are way out of your depth. You should consider sticking to legislating & leaving #LOAC commentary to actual specialists. Like me. Allow me to explain. First off, if a power plant is "dual use," then attacking it is, by definition, NOT an "indiscriminate bombing." Here's why. As DoD Law of War Manual notes, this term is often "used to describe objects that are used by both the armed forces and the civilian population, such as power stations" (pic 1). The Manual also correctly points out this term has no legal significance. Either something qualifies as a military objective such that directing an attack against it is permitted, or it's a civilian object such that it may not be made the object of attack. See the problem yet? That's right! If something is "dual-use," it qualifies as a military objective...and directing an attack against a military objective is, by definition, NOT "indiscriminate" (pic 2). Back to pic 1, the Manual also notes that when attacking "dual-use" objects, "it will be appropriate to consider in applying the principle of proportionality the harm to the civilian population expected to result from the attack on such a military objective." You might notice I emphasized "proportionality" & "expected" there, and I did so because it's a preview to your next massive error. Here's what you claim about proportionality in your 🧵: "Proportionality forbids attacks where expected incidental civilian harm including effects like loss of hospital power, water pumps failing, food spoilage or extreme heat or cold exposure. This is excessive compared to the concrete military gain per Article 51(5)(b)." We'll get to your selection of source (AP I) later. For now, let's focus on how badly you botched the proportionality rule. To describe what the actual rule is supposed to look like, let's go back to the Manual. As it observes, personnel engaged in hostilities "must refrain from attacks in which the expected loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, and damage to civilian objects incidental to the attack would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage expected to be gained" (pic 3). Now, I added bold text to the "expected" at the beginning & end because this highlights your next mistake. Yes you correctly note expected incidental harm is part of the equation, but you left out "expected" on the military advantage component. This is a massive error because you need to be able to tell what the expected incidental harm is & the expected (or anticipated) concrete & direct military advantage is for each attack in order to assess whether the former was "excessive in relation to" the latter. And, do you have any intel indicating what degree of incidental harm AND concrete & direct military advantage is for each attack you purport to be addressing? No, of course you don't. As such, you're not conducting a legitimate proportionality assessment. Which, is easy if you don't properly articulate law. Hell, you can make pretty much anything seem illegal if you can come up with any bullshit articulation of the legal standard you feel like fabricating. But we're not allowed to do that in actual practice. And so, you shouldn't either in public discourse, or else you're creating a false impression that potentially lawful conduct is illegal. And another thing - I noticed you left off the direct part of "concrete & direct military advantage" in your bullshit version of proportionality. That matters because remote harms need not be factored (pic 4). Some prospective harms you mentioned probably are direct enough, but others...not so much. Finally, I also noticed you claim AP I binds 🇺🇸 "as customary international law." But not all of AP I is customary, which is why I draw from the Manual instead. I'll finish off with a simple pro tip: stay in your lane. Leave LOAC analysis to @DeptofWar. And actual experts...like me.

QME
0
0
1
23
Ro Khanna
Ro Khanna@RoKhanna·
(Thread) Indiscriminate bombing of Iran’s power plants would violate core principles of the laws of war rooted in the Geneva Conventions and Additional Protocol I which bind the U.S. as customary international law.
English
655
945
4.9K
496.2K
Chuck Will
Chuck Will@Chuckwill·
@GuyAdami My God. He’s dead. RIP. Can we just move on please?
English
3
0
2
6.2K
Guy Adami
Guy Adami@GuyAdami·
Married to his wife of 60 years Princeton graduate , NYU Masters, UVA Law, US Marine Captain, Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Navy Commendation Medal, South Vietnam Gallantry Cross, … a Patriot
English
792
522
7.2K
643.1K
William Shatner
William Shatner@WilliamShatner·
At 95, I'm still smokin'! 😝 I’ve learned two things: Never waste a good cigar. Never trust anyone who says you should ‘act your age.’ 😉👍🏻
William Shatner tweet media
English
14.2K
22.1K
234.6K
7.2M
Chuck Will がリツイート
Akhilesh Mishra
Akhilesh Mishra@livingdevops·
Dennis Ritchie created C in the early 1970s without Google, Stack Overflow, GitHub, or any AI ( Claude, Cursor, Codex) assistant. - No VC funding. - No viral launch. - No TED talk. - Just two engineers at Bell Labs. A terminal. And a problem to solve. He built a language that fit in kilobytes. 50 years later, it runs everything. Linux kernel. Windows. macOS. Every iPhone. Every Android. NASA’s deep space probes. The International Space Station. > Python borrowed from it. > Java borrowed from it. > JavaScript borrowed from it. If you have ever written a single line of code in any language, you did it in Dennis Ritchie’s shadow. He died in 2011. The same week as Steve Jobs. Jobs got the front pages. Ritchie got silence. This Legend deserves to be celebrated.
Akhilesh Mishra tweet media
English
645
5.4K
26.7K
912.2K
Kaito | 海斗
Kaito | 海斗@_kaitodev·
5 minutes ago, @karpathy just dropped karpathy/jobs! he scraped every job in the US economy (342 occupations from BLS), scored each one's AI exposure 0-10 using an LLM, and visualized it as a treemap. if your whole job happens on a screen you're cooked. average score across all jobs is 5.3/10. software devs: 8-9. roofers: 0-1. medical transcriptionists: 10/10 💀 karpathy.ai/jobs
Kaito | 海斗 tweet media
English
976
1.8K
12.2K
3.5M
Dear Son.
Dear Son.@DearS_o_n·
What’s a “boring” skill that secretly gives a man huge advantage in life?
English
2K
202
5.4K
2.5M
Ben the Sage
Ben the Sage@ben_sage_1788·
@michaeljburry This is interesting and mostly accurate, but it overlooks two important factors. 1) A lot of those 401k redemptions will stay in the market, in taxable accounts. 2) Many US equity investors have nowhere else to go, ESPECIALLY if the Feds bankrupt the government circa 2030.
English
4
1
26
8.8K
Chuck Will
Chuck Will@Chuckwill·
@mich_enjoyer @Charlieleduff Nice video, but perhaps a little disingenuous because I’m sure you know they’re staying in Detroit and moving to the Hudson building.
English
1
0
0
356
Michigan Enjoyer
Michigan Enjoyer@mich_enjoyer·
We're Not Allowed in the Ren Cen Anymore GM moved out, keeping a skeleton crew at the new Hudson's building, while Dan Gilbert and GM angle for $350 million in public money to redevelop the complex By Charlie LeDuff @Charlieleduff Detroit — One of my favorite things to do in Detroit on a drizzly spring afternoon is to drop into the food court at the Renaissance Center. Normally, I will shake off the cold and relieve myself before ordering a cup of coffee and a moist cinnamon bun dripping with glaze and watch the fishermen troll for walleye along the river. So imagine my surprise earlier this week to find that the Renaissance Center is now completely closed to the public. Locked in perpetuity. The cafe is gone. The Burger King. The tables. The napkins. The salt shakers. General Motors has removed its name plate from the facade, and its rotating display of classic cars has been towed away. “Where you going?” barked a sleepy-eyed security guard. “It’s closed. Can’t you read the signs? Unless you’re going to the hotel or Joe Muer’s, but they’re not open yet.” “How about the Italian consulate?” I said somewhat hopefully. The remaining tenants in the Renaissance Center, besides the Marriott and three restaurants, are the Italian and Japanese diplomatic attachés. Apparently, no one told the Italians and the Japanese that the war was over. “Okay, but you can’t take no professional video,” he warned. We ignored him. The cultural impact of an icon abandoned in the middle of the night simply required documentation. Imagine walking up on the Empire State Building or the St. Louis Arch and being told to pound cement. It’s no secret that the building’s owner, General Motors, beat it out of its five towered headquarters on the Detroit River. With much fanfare, the 117-year-old automobile company announced last month that it had moved its world headquarters into a veritable broom closet of suites in Dan Gilbert’s half-finished, publicly financed Hudson’s Tower complex just a few blocks up on Woodward. GM has all but turned its back on the Motor City. The company has collected billions of dollars over the years from the state to keep its employees in Michigan. To smother the criticism, General Motors is keeping a skeleton crew of a few hundred employees downtown so the locals don’t feel disrespected. Executives with General Motors and Gilbert’s development team have convinced the public that they are going to transform the 5 million-square-foot riverfront property into condominiums, retail space and open parkland just as long as the public kicks in $350 million. Gilbert and GM are lobbying Lansing hard for the cash and prizes but a spokesman for Matt Hall, the speaker of the Michigan House who holds the dice in this game of Municipal Monopoly, was surprised to learn the public has been locked out of the building. “That’s the first we’re hearing of it,” the spokesman said. Representatives for General Motors did not immediately respond to questions. The Renaissance Center, financed with private money, took four years to build and opened in 1977. The public was always welcome to ride the 700-foot outdoor elevator. As a comparison, the Hudson two-tower complex—financed in part with public money—broke ground nine years ago. Even so, the main 49-story tower still lacks pipes and walls. The shorter block, where GM now rents four floors, is closed to the public. Unable to get an audience with either Consul General, we left the Renaissance Center with security tailing us at a respectful distance. Over at the GM headquarters, a security guard snapped our photograph through the plate glass window.
English
81
398
1.2K
138.3K
Nick Huber
Nick Huber@sweatystartup·
One of my life goals is to leave a lot of money to my children. I frankly can’t imagine any other way to think about it.
English
128
6
464
72.5K
Captain Mark Kelly
Captain Mark Kelly@CaptMarkKelly·
It took Trump 10 days to create an energy crisis reminiscent of the 1970s, replace Ayatollah Khamenei with Ayatollah Khamenei, and weaken our alliances worldwide. He put American servicemembers in harm’s way, resulting in seven deaths. None of this made you safer or better off.
English
7.9K
10.4K
44.4K
961.7K
Chuck Will
Chuck Will@Chuckwill·
@MalcolmJess @sweatystartup If the democrats were smart they would just concede the point and take the issue off the table, robbing the republicans of a position that resonates with most Americans.
English
0
0
0
95
Jessica
Jessica@MalcolmJess·
And how is it that so many still don’t understand that identity is still verified and cross-checked in states without strict ID law through other methods such as voter registration and signature verification… undocumented immigrants don’t qualify for federal welfare, and gender-related decisions for minors involve complex medical, legal, and parental oversight.
English
5
0
8
1.3K
Nick Huber
Nick Huber@sweatystartup·
I wish we could vote on issues instead of politicians. 90%+ of Americans would agree people should have an ID to vote. And that immigrants shouldn’t get welfare. And that the fraud is ridiculous. And that kids shouldn’t be able to change sexes. It sucks!
English
150
66
1.4K
49.2K
Kevin Dahlstrom
Kevin Dahlstrom@Camp4·
“Dara has dinner with his family every night. 6 to 8pm is protected. But he's back on email at 9:30pm. And again at 5:30am.” And on his deathbed, he can tell epic stories of late-night emails. Then they can bury him under a pile of cash.
Ricardo@Ric_RTP

The CEO of Uber just revealed his controversial way of running his company. His principle: Hard work is a learned skill. And if you haven't developed it by now, you probably never will. Dara Khosrowshahi went on Diary of a CEO and dropped something most executives would NEVER admit publicly... He was asked a simple question: "Have you ever seen someone who wasn't a hard worker become a really hard worker?" His answer: "No. No one occurs to me." Not one person. In decades of building billion dollar companies. Then he explained why: "The most important skill in life is the skill of working hard. It's not something you can turn on and off. It's a LEARNED skill. That's not something you're born with." Read that again. He's not saying hard workers are special or gifted. He's saying they LEARNED it. Developed it. Trained it like a muscle. And the people who never learned it? They stay that way forever. This is the guy who turned Uber from bleeding $3 billion a year into printing $10 billion in free cash flow. The guy who took Expedia from $2B to $9B in revenue. And his entire thesis on success comes down to one skill most people never bother developing. Here's how he runs Uber: "You come to Uber, you're going to work your ass off. If you're not performing, we're going to let you know. And if you don't fix it, we're going to push you out." He sends emails on Saturdays. If no response by Sunday, he follows up with just "?" When HR told him he was "scaring people" early in his tenure, he said: "Then they can leave." And here's what separates this from toxic hustle culture nonsense: Dara has dinner with his family every night. 6 to 8pm is protected. But he's back on email at 9:30pm. And again at 5:30am. It's not about grinding yourself to death. It's about the refusal to be outworked. "I'm not going to let anyone outwork me. They may be smarter, more talented. But I'm not going to let anyone outwork me." He studied the elites. Ronaldo. Jordan. The pattern is always the same... Talent gets you in the room. But the thing that separates the best from everyone else? "They work their asses off. They're disciplined. They're structured. They're relentless." That's learned behavior. Not genetics. The uncomfortable truth here is that most people had their chance to develop this skill. And they didn't. Now they spend their energy debating whether hard work is "toxic" instead of building something. The question isn't whether this is "fair" or "healthy" or whatever cope people want to throw at it. The question is which SIDE you're going to be on. The people who learned to work? Or the people who learned to make excuses?

English
34
10
397
260.9K
Chuck Will
Chuck Will@Chuckwill·
@MCCCANM Your posts provide but a glimpse of how painful this must be for you. My sincere condolences. God bless you.
English
0
0
0
8
KC-10 Driver ✈️ 👨‍✈️ B-737 Wrangler
Deanna Evans, 46, passed away Tuesday after a lengthy battle w/ cancer. She leaves a son, 12. She wouldn’t want you to be sad. She’d want you to try that Michelin restaurant & order a Negroni. I loved her. She deserved more life & has taken most of my heart with her.
KC-10 Driver ✈️ 👨‍✈️ B-737 Wrangler tweet mediaKC-10 Driver ✈️ 👨‍✈️ B-737 Wrangler tweet media
English
2.1K
485
18.7K
604.3K
FOUNDRYFUTURES
FOUNDRYFUTURES@foundryfutures·
If Wall Street were “cooked” because someone ran 100 hours of prompts through a public chatbot, the exchanges would’ve shut down years ago. The reality is institutions sit colocated next to matching engines shaving microseconds, deploy trillions in balance sheet firepower, hire the top quant PhDs on earth, ingest proprietary tick-level and alternative data you’ll never see, and run domain-specific AI models that aren’t available on a subscription plan. Speed, capital, execution quality, and information asymmetry still matter, and they matter a lot. If 15 copy-paste prompts on X truly produced institutional alpha for free, that edge would be arbed into oblivion before your browser tab even refreshed. Retail can win in tight niches, but the idea that Wall Street is suddenly outgunned by a public LLM is pure grift
English
4
0
10
1.3K
Chidanand Tripathi
Chidanand Tripathi@thetripathi58·
Wallstreet is so cooked.. I spent 100+ hours stress-testing the new Claude Opus 4.6 models on live market data. Here are 15 insane prompts that give you institutional-level Alpha for free:
English
39
175
1.6K
420.1K
Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
Unhinged lady at Seven Oaks Elementary School in Washington state approached and harassed a sheriff's deputy who was parked at the school, claiming he was "scaring families" by being there. She then criticized the deputy, saying he should be the "defending line between us and f*cking fascism." Props to the deputy for handling this insane leftist Karen so well.
English
6.3K
7.9K
48K
1.6M