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Bryan

@TheBryanLink

Dallas, TX 参加日 Ekim 2012
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Bryan
Bryan@TheBryanLink·
@grok @souly9999 @claudeai Grok, how have auditors used this? Give me the top 5 proven use cases that are as easy as Claude claims it is.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Sure thing! This is Anthropic's new "Claude Managed Agents" launch. It's a platform to build/deploy production-grade AI agents fast. You describe what you want (e.g., "analyze acquisitions, research companies, draft memos"), and it auto-generates the agent with: - Sandboxed code execution - Error recovery & retries - Persistent memory/checkpoints - File handling, web search, tools - Full session dashboard for monitoring Pairs Claude's smarts with infra so you skip ops headaches and go prototype-to-launch in days. Public beta now on Claude Platform. Video shows it building a real M&A analyst agent live. Cool for scaling agent workflows!
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Introducing Claude Managed Agents: everything you need to build and deploy agents at scale. It pairs an agent harness tuned for performance with production infrastructure, so you can go from prototype to launch in days. Now in public beta on the Claude Platform.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Trump just posted two messages within minutes of each other. Read them together or you miss everything. The first declares productive regime change, no uranium enrichment, nuclear dust removal under Space Force surveillance, sanctions and tariff relief for Iran, and many of 15 points already agreed. The second threatens 50 percent tariffs on any country supplying military weapons to Iran, effective immediately, no exclusions, no exemptions. The first is the carrot for Iran. The second is the stick for China. Together they form the architecture of the most ambitious great-power negotiation since Bretton Woods. Trump did not name China. He did not have to. Russia supplies weapons to Iran but annual US-Russia trade is under $500 million and already sanctioned into irrelevance. A 50 percent tariff on Russian goods costs America nothing. North Korea’s trade with the US is zero. The only country where a 50 percent blanket tariff on all goods sold to the United States inflicts catastrophic economic damage is China, which trades over $500 billion annually with the US and has been proven to be shipping military-grade chemicals to Iran during this war. Five Iranian-flagged vessels departed Gaolan Port in Zhuhai, China between late February and early April carrying sodium perchlorate, the critical oxidiser precursor for solid rocket propellant used in every Iranian ballistic missile. The ships are the Hamouna, Barzin, Shabdis, Rayen, and Zardis. The cargo is sufficient to reconstitute hundreds of ballistic missiles. The same missiles that hit Israel, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar after the ceasefire was signed. The gCaptain shipping report, the Telegraph investigation, and the Institute for the Study of War all confirmed the shipments. Trump’s intelligence briefings contain the same data. The tariff post is not about Iran. It is about Beijing. This is the card Bessent carries to the mid-May summit. The architecture is now visible. At Islamabad on Friday, Vance and Witkoff negotiate the Iran ceasefire terms: nuclear dismantlement, proxy cutoff, sanctions relief. On April 19, the Treasury waiver on 140 million barrels of Chinese-bound Iranian crude expires. If Trump lets it lapse, every Iranian barrel afloat becomes sanctioned cargo and Chinese teapot refineries face secondary sanctions. Now, on top of the waiver, comes the 50 percent tariff threat on military supplies. China is squeezed from three directions simultaneously: its ghost fleet faces the waiver, its arms pipeline faces the tariff, and its rare earth monopoly faces the Bessent negotiation. The question Xi must answer before mid-May is whether the cost of continuing to arm Iran and operate the ghost fleet exceeds the cost of trading those assets for tariff relief, rare earth agreements, agricultural purchases, and a framework that preserves Chinese access to the American market for another decade. Trump is not asking China to abandon Iran. He is pricing the relationship. And the price just became 50 percent of everything China sells to America. The molecule crisis connects these two posts at the atomic level. Sodium perchlorate molecules from Gaolan become missile propellant in Isfahan. Petrochemical molecules from destroyed Iranian crackers become the reconstruction that sanctions relief would fund. Rare earth molecules from Chinese processors become the chips, magnets, and motors that justify MAG7 valuations. Every molecule passes through a chokepoint that one of the two presidents controls. Two posts. Two targets. One table. And the price of every molecule on earth just changed. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

Read this post seven times. It is the most consequential presidential statement on Iran since the hostage crisis. Trump, amplified by the official White House account, just declared that the United States has determined Iran has gone through a very productive regime change. He claimed there will be no enrichment of uranium. He announced the United States will work with Iran to dig up and remove all of the deeply buried nuclear material hit by B-2 bombers. He said it is under Space Force satellite surveillance and nothing has been touched since the strikes. He confirmed talks on tariff and sanctions relief. And he stated that many of the 15 points have already been agreed to. Every sentence requires decoding. Productive regime change. No election was held. No new government was installed. What changed is that Ali Khamenei was killed on February 28, Mojtaba Khamenei is reportedly unconscious in Qom, and the IRGC military council now runs the country through Mosaic Defence. Trump is framing this as regime change because the theocratic chain of command that connected the supreme leader to every institution has been severed. The entity he is negotiating with is not the Islamic Republic as constituted. It is whatever the IRGC junta has become. That reframe is deliberate. It allows Trump to claim he changed the regime without occupying the country or installing a government. The regime changed itself through the structural consequence of decapitation. No enrichment of uranium. If this is agreed, it is the most significant nuclear concession since the original JCPOA, and it goes further. The JCPOA allowed limited enrichment. Trump is claiming zero. Iran’s 10-point counter-proposal explicitly demanded recognition of enrichment as a sovereign right. If enrichment is actually off the table, the 10-point proposal is dead. If it is not actually agreed and Trump is framing aspirationally, then Islamabad on Friday becomes the most dangerous negotiation in decades, because Iran will arrive believing enrichment is still on the table and Trump will arrive believing it is not. Nuclear Dust. The B-2 strikes hit deeply buried facilities. The material that remains is radioactive debris from centrifuge cascades and enriched uranium stockpiles. Trump is proposing a joint US-Iran excavation and removal operation under Space Force satellite monitoring. This is unprecedented. No nation has ever invited the adversary that bombed its nuclear programme to jointly excavate and remove the remains. If Iran accepts, it is an implicit admission that the programme is destroyed. If Iran rejects, the material stays buried and becomes the basis for reconstitution. Fifteen points. Iran proposed ten. Trump is now referencing fifteen. The US sent its own maximalist framework to Iran via Pakistan in late March. The leaked contours included nuclear dismantlement, zero enrichment, IAEA access, uranium handover, missile limits, proxy cutoff, permanent Hormuz reopening, and phased sanctions relief. Trump claims many are agreed. Iran’s Council claimed nearly all objectives of the war have been achieved. Both sides are declaring victory over a framework that neither has published. Sanctions and tariff relief. This is the carrot that makes everything else possible. Without sanctions relief, Iran’s rial continues collapsing, its water crisis deepens, and the IRGC junta has no economic foundation. Trump is offering the lifeline. The price is the nuclear programme. The deal of a lifetime or the bluff of a century. Friday will tell. Full analysis on Substack. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
Look, I get it, Dems. You think buying Greenland is dumb. You think trash-talking NATO is dumb. You think Hegseth firing generals is dumb. You think bombing Iran is dumb. Fine. Maybe you’re right. Maybe you’re wrong. I’ll buy you a beer and we can argue about it. But that’s not the point. Every administration in American history has done dumb things. Jefferson had an embargo that tanked his own economy. LBJ had Vietnam. Carter sold the Panama Canal for $1. W. had “Mission Accomplished.” Obama had…. where do I even begin? Dumb is bipartisan. Dumb is American. Dumb is fine. DC runs on dumb decisions. What NONE of them ever did, what is truly, mind-melting, pants-on-head, clown-car-fire, galaxy-brained, lead-paint-chip-eating, 50-IQ-Neanderthal-ripping-a-bong dumb, was pay NGOs by the busload to smuggle tens of millions of people, including actual convicted criminals, across a border we spent trillions pretending to defend, then hand them free four-star hotels, free cell phones, free ATM cards, and a court date in 2031 they were never going to show up for. That is not a policy. That is a SNL cold open someone forgot to write a punchline for. A five-year-old with a juice box could tell you that was Bozo-the-Clown-on-crack, Weekend-at-Bernie’s-running-DHS, “hold-my-beer-I’m-gonna-try-something” levels of stupid. My golden retriever could have run a tighter border. A Magic 8-Ball would have outperformed the entire Biden interagency. That’s the new threshold, Democrats. That’s the low-water mark. That’s the floor. That is the Mariana Trench of public policy and you personally rented the Titan submersible. Argue all you want about the Strait of Hormuz. Write your op-eds. Go on cable TV with Tom Nichols. Clutch your pearls about Greenland. But until Trump proposes something even half as mind-bendingly, bone-crushingly, civilization-forfeitingly brain-dead as what Biden and Kamala did with our borders, I genuinely do not care. Zero F’s given by me.
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Bryan
Bryan@TheBryanLink·
@WerderEdNFL Thank you Ed for giving comments based on what any reasonable person would say…
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Jeff Burkhart
Jeff Burkhart@jeff_burkhart·
A lot of people in KC woke up to some cold news this morning. Love you all. Better times ahead
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Bryan
Bryan@TheBryanLink·
So many great points here….”When you tax people past the point where the math makes sense, they leave. When they leave, the burden falls on everyone who doesn’t have the resources to relocate.”
Steven Fiorillo@stevenfiorillo

My post on Friday regarding the estate tax proposal in New York got 600,000+ views, so clearly this struck a nerve. Some individuals asked me to back up what I said so I am going to discuss what happens when states push tax policy past the breaking point. Here is what the data shows and it’s worse than most people realize. According to IRS migration data, New York has lost $111 billion in net adjusted gross income over the last decade from residents moving to other states. That’s not hypothetical, that’s $111 billion in taxable income that used to fund schools, subways, police, and infrastructure that is now funding those things in Florida and Texas rather than New York. California lost $102 billion over the same period. Florida gained $196 billion. Texas gained $54 billion. That’s not a coincidence, it’s a pattern. Between 2018 and 2024, 561 companies relocated their headquarters across the country. The San Francisco Bay Area lost 156 corporate headquarters. Los Angeles lost 106. New York City lost 27. Meanwhile Dallas alone gained 100, Austin gained 81, and Nashville gained 35. This didn’t come to a halt in 2025 or 2026. Palantir $PLTR which was the largest publicly traded company in Colorado, announced in February that it was moving its headquarters from Denver to Miami. It was PLTR’s second move in six years after leaving Silicon Valley in 2020. The governor of Colorado said he found out through a social media post. ExxonMobil’s $XOM board unanimously recommended that shareholders approve reincorporating the company from New Jersey to Texas after 144 years at the vote in May. Exxon has physically operated out of Texas since 1989, and its CEO said Texas has created a policy environment that allows them to maximize shareholder value. Chevron $CVX completed its move from California to Houston. In-N-Out Burger is opening a 100,000-square-foot eastern headquarters near Nashville and is leaving California. These aren’t outliers anymore as this is becoming the new normal. It’s not just corporate headquarters moving. Entire financial ecosystems are relocating. Citadel, one of the most profitable hedge funds in the world, moved its headquarters from Chicago to Miami in 2022 and has been building out aggressively ever since. They’re constructing a massive new waterfront headquarters in Miami’s Brickell financial district. Elliott Management moved to West Palm Beach. Carl Icahn moved Icahn Enterprises from New York to Sunny Isles Beach. Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment Management relocated to St. Petersburg. Goldman Sachs $GS is building a $500 million campus in Dallas designed to house over 5,000 employees. JPMorgan Chase $JPM and Wells Fargo $WFC have both invested hundreds of millions into massive new campuses in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Wells Fargo is also moving its wealth management division from San Francisco to West Palm Beach. NYSE Texas a reincorporation of the 143-year old Chicago Stock Exchange officially launched in Dallas in early 2025. The Texas Stock Exchange which is a brand new national securities exchange backed by over $160 million from BlackRock $BLK , Citadel Securities, and Charles Schwab $SCHW is set to begin trading by the end of this year. Nasdaq has also expanded its Texas presence with operations in Irving. When you have that level of financial infrastructure being built in a single metro area, that’s not a trend it’s an ecosystem being constructed from scratch to compete directly with New York. Each of these moves represents not just a company but thousands of high-paying jobs, billions in local economic activity, and a signal to every other firm still on the fence that states with competitive rather than restrictive policy are creating enticing operating environments. Currently over 1 million residents have left New York for other states since 2020 according to the latest Census estimates. International immigration has partially offset the population headcount, but it hasn’t replaced the tax base. The people leaving earn significantly more on average than the people arriving. Almost 1,700 millionaires changed their address out of New York in 2024 alone. Millionaires paid 44.6% of all personal income tax collected in the state last year. The proposed response to this fragility is to drop the estate tax threshold from $7.1 million to $750,000, raise the top rate to 50%, add a new 2% income tax surcharge on millionaires, increase corporate taxes, and add a capital gains surcharge. Under these proposals, the combined federal, state, and city top marginal rate on high earners in New York City would approach 54%. That’s a policy framework that ignores everything the last decade of data has told us. The Dallas mayor just publicly predicted an “avalanche” of NYC financial firms heading to Texas under these policies. Florida realtors are seeing a surge of inquiries from wealthy New Yorkers. Cities like Miami, Austin, and Nashville are building entire ecosystems including schools, cultural centers, and financial services clusters which are designed specifically to attract the people New York is pushing out. Ken Griffin and Stephen Ross just launched a $10 million campaign called “Ambitious Accelerated” to recruit more businesses to what they’re calling Florida’s “Tech Gold Coast.” They’re not waiting for New York to figure it out. They’re actively recruiting our talent, our capital, and our tax base. That’s what makes this moment so critical. We are in the middle of the most competitive environment for jobs, businesses, and investment that this country has ever seen. States are actively building infrastructure to attract employers and high earners. This is the time to compete, not to double down on the same policy approach that has been pushing wealth and businesses to lower-tax states for a decade. Texas entered its latest legislative session with a $24 billion surplus while having no personal or corporate income tax. Think about that for a moment, no personal or corporate income tax and they have a $24 billion surplus. Florida added more new businesses than any other state in 2024, with over 266,000 formed in a single year. These states didn’t create an attractive business landscape out of thin air. They made deliberate policy choices to create environments where businesses want to operate, where employers want to hire, and where working people can actually build something without the ground shifting underneath them every budget cycle. This matters because of what it means for everyday people. When a company relocates its headquarters, it doesn’t just move a sign, the entire company leaves, from the executive team to the support staff. It doesn’t stop there because that's only internal. Externally, all of the trades that may do work for the company will no longer receive those phone calls. The restaurants will no longer see those repeat customers. The tax revenue from those paychecks won’t be collected, and future job growth in the community from that company will cease to exist. When Dallas gained 100 corporate headquarters over six years, that meant tens of thousands of new jobs, new residents spending money, new homes being purchased, new small businesses opening to serve those people. That’s how local economies actually grow. That’s how neighborhoods stay alive, and when a corporate headquarters leaves a city, the exact opposite happens. The jobs thin out, the spending dries up, the small businesses that depended on that foot traffic start closing, and the tax base that funded public services shrinks. New York has every natural advantage in the world. The talent, infrastructure, culture, and institutions are all here, but it won’t be enough if the policy environment drives away the employers and investors who create opportunities for everyone else. The states that are growing right now aren’t growing by accident. They made a decision to be competitive. They kept tax burdens manageable, they created regulatory clarity for businesses, and they built an environment where employers want to expand and hire. New York has every tool to do the same thing. The question is whether the people making the decisions recognize that we’re in a competition and right now, we’re not acting like it. Here’s the part nobody in Albany wants to hear. The people who leave don’t just take their tax returns with them. They take their fundraising networks, philanthropy, job creation, and spending to a new economy. A city that once attracted the world’s most ambitious people risks becoming a place they leave once they’ve made it, or worse, a place they never lay down roots. That’s not ideology. It’s an economic reality that the IRS, Census, and corporate relocation data have been telling us. I said it in my first post, and I’ll say it again. When you tax people past the point where the math makes sense, they leave. When they leave, the burden falls on everyone who doesn’t have the resources to relocate. It’s time to take a common-sense approach to policy and make the great state of New York competitive again. New York has a decision to make. Either it continues down this path and alienates more taxpayers or it becomes more competitive. I love this state, but I am extremely worried for it’s future. We should be building a thriving ecosystem with an abundance of opportunities for New Yorkers, but instead we are pushing entrepreneurs and businesses to states that are more competitive with policy. Is this really the path we want to take not only for the current residents but for the next generation? @amitisinvesting @basispointpod @chamath @Jason @BillAckman @kevinolearytv @patrickbetdavid @PBDsPodcast

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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
Save our elections. It’s common sense. PASS THE SAVE AMERICA ACT! 🗳️
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Brian Harrison
Brian Harrison@brianeharrison·
I single-handedly did more for border security than the rest of the entire Texas government last year. That’s why the Austin swamp is trying to take me out with open border RINOs! Help me defeat them and keep fighting for LIBERTY! Please donate today: secure.anedot.com/texans-for-bri…
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ThePersistence
ThePersistence@ScottPresler·
@SenMcConnell Can you explain to 84% of Americans that support photo ID why you are blocking the SAVE America Act?
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Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
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Scot Pollard
Scot Pollard@ScotPollard31·
Dedicated three decades of my life to basketball and if I could walk, I could play. Sprains, illness, broken bones, etc. I’m no hero it’s all about how much you love something. This applies to anything in life. Do you want it?
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Harambe
Harambe@harambeksu·
It’s about getting these guys to be good husbands and fathers, not just what we do on the court -Jerome Tang
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TOP G
TOP G@menscoach1·
Shaving your balls is how you become successful. That's what a wise man once told me. Because when you're shaving your balls, you're 100% invested in the present and not focused on how they're going to look after or who's going to see them. You need to apply the same to your work, relationships, and goals. Focus not on the result, but on the right now.
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Heroes Of Mount Oread
Heroes Of Mount Oread@HeroesOfMtOread·
“Drive that f*cker!” - Bill Self, with an all-timer live on ESPN!
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